Unstoppable (2010) [Blu-ray]
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close  Unstoppable (2010) [Blu-ray]
Rated:  PG-13 
Starring: Denzel Washington, Chris Pine, Rosario Dawson.
Director: Tony Scott
Genre: Action | Drama | Thriller
DVD Release Date: 02/15/2011

Hang on for the ride of your life as Oscar Winner Denzel Washington and Chris Pine (Star Trek) team up for the year's most electrifying action-thriller. A runaway train, transporting deadly, toxic chemicals, is barreling down on Scranton, Pennsylvania, and only two men can stop it: a veteran engineer (Washington) and a young conductor (Pine). Thousands of lives hang in the balance as these ordinary heroes attempt to chase down one million tons of hurtling steel and prevent an epic disaster. Helmed by visionary director Tony Scott (Man On Fire), this story inspired by true events delivers excitement and suspense that are - Unstoppable!

Storyline: A runaway train carrying a cargo of toxic chemicals puts an engineer and his conductor in a race against time. They're chasing the runaway train in a separate locomotive and need to bring it under control before it derails on a curve and causes a toxic spill that will decimate a town. Written by secret_agent

Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Casey Broadwater on February 15, 2011 -- As the director of big-budget, highly commercial action fare—from Top Gun and Enemy of the State to Man on Fire and Déjà Vu—Tony Scott may not be an artist or auteur, but he's certainly one hell of a craftsman. One of the characters in Scott's new film, Unstoppable, has a catchphrase that sums up the British director well: "It's all about precision." And indeed, Scott's movies seem less handmade than laser-guided and machine-tooled, factory-assembled from the raw cinematic essentials. His stories are streamlined, with characters defined in three traits or less and kept in constant motion, jumpstarted by rapid series of events and propelled by Scott's characteristically breakneck camera movements. In Unstoppable, the director has constructed what might be his purest, most efficient action movie yet. The plot can be summed up in three short sentences. 1.) There is a train. 2.) It seems to be unstoppable. 3.) Our heroes have to stop it. Does it get any simpler than that?

The rest is just details. Eager to get on to the full-steam-ahead action, Scott and screenwriter Mark Bomback lay the story's tracks quickly. Conductor-in-training Will Colson (Star Trek's Chris Pine) isn't having the best week. He recently separated from his wife (Jessy Schram), he misses his kid, and when he shows up for his first day at the Alleghany and West Virginia Railroad, the veteran engineers instantly hate him. He's the green, young, unionized new guy—the nephew of the company president—and they're all about to be forced into early retirement. So it goes. Will is paired with longtime railroader Frank Barnes (Denzel Washington), a single dad with two college-aged daughters—who work at Hooters, no less—and a no-nonsense pragmatist with one rule: "If you're gonna do something, do it right. If you don't know how to do something, you ask me." Washington is dependable in his usual "highly skilled everyman" role, and while Pine has yet to develop a real screen presence, he's good as the straight-man to Denzel's naturally attention-grabbing charisma. It's a classic odd-couple, buddy-film setup—unbeknownst to these two head-butting, mutually reluctant coworkers, they're about to be thrown into a survival scenario that will test their collective mettle and turn them into unlikely friends.

On the other side of the state, an incompetent railyard hostler (My Name Is Earl's Ethan Suplee) accidentally sends an unmanned, half- mile-long freight train barreling down the main line at full throttle. But wait, there's more. The airbrakes have been disconnected, eight of the tanker cars are carrying highly explosive molten phenol, and the train is chugging at 70mph toward the town of Stanton, Pennsylvania, where an elevated curve in the track—smartly located immediately over a fuel depot, of course—will cause an almost certain derailment and potentially town- obliterating explosion. As one character exclaims with breathless hyperbole, "We're not just talking about a train. We're talking about a missile the size of the Chrysler Building." And just when we think things can't possibly get any more ridiculously dangerous, we learn that this out-of-control- volatile-skyscraper-on-wheels is also rocketing headlong towards a passenger train carrying 150 field-tripping grade school kids. The purpose of their field trip? To learn about train safety, naturally. Oh, the irony.

In an attempt to keep the film from seeming too linear—this is, after all, a literally one-track story—Scott covers the ongoing action from several angles. We go inside the railroad equivalent of mission control, where yardmaster Connie Hooper (Rosario Dawson) makes a lot of desperate phone calls while a federal inspector (Kevin Corrigan) looms over her shoulder. Periodically, we pop into the plush railroad company boardroom to see Connie's supervisor, Oscar Galvin (Kevin Boss), sweat bullets and give updates to his boss, a corporate prick who's too busy with his golf game to care about the lives at stake. (After the big BP disaster last summer, the film has timely themes of money-grubbing corporate indifference.) In Tony Scott's typical media-obsessed fashion, we also fly over the scene in news helicopters, broadcasting live, as-it-happens coverage of the events below. I won't get into the details of how Will and Frank attempt to stop the track-bound behemoth, but let's just say there's lots of well- researched technical jargon, much speculation on whether it'll all work, and more close shaves than a particularly busy barbershop.

A cursory glance over the film's bullet points—runaway train, explosive chemicals, working class protagonists—may call to mind masterful cinematic antecedents like Buster Keaton's locomotive-centric The General or Henri-Georges Clouzot's nitroglycerine nail-biter Wages of Fear, but Unstoppable is little more than Grade-A, big-budget action, with little in the way of lasting significance. The characters are thinly drawn, the underlying motivations are exceedingly simple, and there's not much here that could be deemed substance. Sure, you could read the train as a metaphor for the recent economic recession threatening to destroy small-town American life, but I think we could all agree that's a bit of a stretch. That said, the film knows exactly what it is, and Tony Scott delivers what his audience expects—a tense, edge-of-your-seat experience that rarely relents. A horse trailer stuck on the track is reduced to a twisted hunk of metal. A cop car trying to keep up spins out and flips in endless barrel rolls. Will dangles precariously, Frank hops from freight car to freight car, and Scott's camera captures it all in ever-careening swoops and revolutions. As the film can't keep still for more than a few seconds at a time—quick cutting is another Scott staple—Unstoppable proves to be an apt title. By the ticket, take the ride, I say, but make sure you've got some popcorn to enjoy with this one—even if you leave with your brain empty, at least your stomach will be full.

Ever-so-loosely "Inspired by Real Events" that occurred in Ohio in 2001, Unstoppable is a man versus machine action epic that rapidly builds momentum and, once at top speed, rarely slows. It may be instantly forgettable after it's all over, but the ride is definitely worth it. I'd suggest a rental, but if you're the sort who's easily swayed to a purchase by a terrific A/V presentation, Fox's frequently stunning Blu-ray might convince you to add Unstoppable to your collection.

[CSW] -4- An absolutely thrilling ride. Add the motion of D-Box and this becomes an unforgettable experience. The user comment above says it all except for the excellent motion codes which add an even greater degree of realism. I may just have to get this one.
[V4.5-A5.0] MPEG-4 AVC - D-Box 10/10.
Cast Notes: Denzel Washington (Frank), Chris Pine (Will), Rosario Dawson (Connie), Ethan Suplee (Dewey), Kevin Dunn (Oscar Galvin), Kevin Corrigan (Inspector Werner), Kevin Chapman (Bunny), Lew Temple (Ned Oldham), T.J. Miller (Gilleece), Jessy Schram (Darcy Colson), David Warshofsky (Judd Stewart), Andy Umberger (Janeway), Elizabeth Mathis (Nicole), Meagan Tandy (Maya), Dylan Bruce (Michael Colson [as Dylan L. Bruce]).

IMDb Rating (07/31/14): 6.8/10 from 118,701 users
IMDb Rating (03/15/11): 6.9/10 from 26,713 users

Additional information
Copyright:  2010,  20th Century Fox
Features:  Audio Commentaries: There are two tracks here. First up is a solid solo excursion with director Tony Scott, who discusses all the usual details about the development of the project from script to finished product. The most interesting inclusion, though, is Tracking the Story: Unstoppable Script Development, which is a recording of Tony Scott and writer Mark Bomback discussing each scene in the script, parsing out the problems, adding details, and making clarifications. A must-listen for aspiring screenwriters.
The Fastest Track: Unleashing Unstoppable (1080p, 29:41): An excellent making-of documentary that covers story development, research, location scouting, stuntwork, and Tony Scott's insistence on wanting to shoot everything as real as possible, with minimal CGI.
Derailed: Anatomy of a Scene (1080p, 10:01): Here, we see how Scott shot a real train derailment, completely in camera. Pretty cool.
Hanging Off the Train: Stunt Work (1080p, 14:25): A dissection of all the dangling, running, and jumping involved in the production.
On the Rails with the Director and Cast (1080p, 13:25): A trackside conversation with Ridley Scott, Denzel Washington, Chris Pine, and Rosario Dawson, who discuss the process of making the film.
Theatrical Trailer (1080p, 2:26)
Sneak Peak (1080p, 5:01): Includes trailers for Machete and Casino Jack, and a promo for the FX network.
BD-Live Exclusive: Feeling the Heat - Unstoppable Pyrotechnics (720p, 3:02)
IMDb Live Lookup
Subtitles:  English SDH, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Cantonese, Chinese
Video:  Widescreen 2.40:1 Color
Screen Resolution: 1080p
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Audio:  ENGLISH: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
SPANISH: Dolby Digital 5.1
FRENCH: Dolby Digital 5.1
PORTUGUESE: Dolby Digital 5.1
Time:  1:38
DVD:  # Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1
UPC:  024543716679
Coding:  [V4.5-A5.0] MPEG-4 AVC
D-Box:  Yes
Other:  Producers: Tony Scott, Mimi Rogers, Julie Yorn, Eric McLeod, Alex Young; Directors: Tony Scott; Writers: Mark Bomback; running time of 98 minutes; Packaging: HD Case. Rated PG-13 for sequences of action and peril, and some language.

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