Passenger 57
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Passenger 57 | |
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Film poster for Passenger 57 |
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Directed by | Kevin Hooks |
Produced by | Dan Paulson Lee Rich Dylan Sellers |
Written by | David Loughery (screenplay) Stewart Raffill (story) Dan Gordon (story and screenplay) |
Starring | Wesley Snipes Bruce Payne Tom Sizemore |
Music by | Stanley Clarke |
Cinematography | Mark Irwin |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date(s) | November 6, 1992 |
Running time | 84 min. |
Country | US |
Language | English |
All Movie Guide profile | |
IMDb profile |
Passenger 57 is a 1992 action film starring Wesley Snipes and Bruce Payne.
Contents |
[edit] Synopsis
The film opens with international terrorist Charles Rane (Bruce Payne) about to undergo plastic surgery to change his appearance in order to evade the law. Outside, federal agents and SWAT teams close in to arrest him. It becomes apparent that the plastic surgeon and his staff are in on the plan. Rane becomes suspicious and makes his escape, killing the surgeon in the process. After a harrowing chase through the city streets, Rane is finally apprehended.
Haunted by the shooting death of his wife in a robbery, former police officer John Cutter (Wesley Snipes) has taken a job training flight attendants and security personnel in how to deal with dangerous situations including terrorists. During this particular session, his student is Marty, an attractive flight attendant. When Marty disobeys his instructions, the pair have a brief confrontation.
After class, Cutter sees an old friend, Sly Delvecchio (Tom Sizemore), who is there with a job offer: vice-president for the anti-terrorism unit at Atlantic International Airlines, a major carrier. Cutter is at first reluctant, but Delvecchio and one of the company executives manage to win him over during lunch.
Cutter boards Atlantic International Flight 163 to Los Angeles... and his new job. By coincidence, one of the flight attendants on this flight happens to be Marty. Also on board is Rane, in FBI custody, headed to Los Angeles to stand trial for his terroist activities in the past.
With the help of several henchmen stationed aboard the plane, Rane breaks free from his FBI escorts during the flight and takes the plane's passengers hostage. Cutter, in the lavatory during the takeover, emerges and manages to overpower one of Rane's men. Rane, however, responds by executing one of the passengers, making Cutter feel responsible for the man's death. During the confrontation, Cutter and Marty manage to escape, taking the elevator to the plane's lower deck. After a brief fight with one of Rane's men down there, Cutter initiates a fuel dump which forces the Lockheed L-1011 to land at a small Louisiana airfield.
Cutter manages to escape from the plane, but Marty is captured by another of Rane's men. On the tarmac, Cutter is quickly apprehended by local sheriff's deputies, in a scene that hints at racism.
Meanwhile, Rane has made contact with the local sheriff, Chief Biggs. Rane promises to release half the hostages in return for fuel and takeoff clearance. Rane also tells Biggs that Cutter is one of his men, a deserter. When the deputies bring Cutter before Chief Biggs, Biggs orders him taken into custody.
As the passengers are being released, Rane and two of his men make their escape. Cutter overpowers the sheriff's deputies, frees himself from his handcuffs and gives chase on a police motorcycle. Meanwhile, a team of FBI agents arrive, headed by Dwight Henderson, who angrily informs Chief Biggs of Cutter's true identity.
At the fair, Cutter manages to kill one of the henchmen and as engage Rane in a fight just as police reinforcements arrive. Rane, however, tells the FBI and police that his remaining men aboard the plane will begin to execute the rest of the hostages if he is not returned to the plane and granted takeoff clearance.
Cutter, Henderson, and Chief Biggs work out a plan for FBI snipers to take down Rane as he boards the plane, upon which FBI teams will storm the plane and deal with his remaining men on board. As Rane boards the plane with an FBI escort, Cutter gives the order to fire. However, the sniper bullets hit Rane's FBI escort, not Rane. It is revealed that Rane's second henchman has taken the place of (and presumably killed) the FBI snipers, and he begins firing at the assembled police and agents. During the confusion, this henchman is killed, but not before Rane makes it safely aboard and the plane begins to take off.
With the help of Chief Biggs, Cutter barely manages to get aboard the moving plane via its landing gear. Once aboard, he quickly dispatches Rane's remaining two henchmen, then engages Rane in a prolonged fistfight. Gunfire in the cabin causes an explosive cabin decompression, resulting in the main cabin door exploding outward, leaving the cabin open to the elements. This open door suction results in Rane plunging to his death.
The plane lands safely at the Louisiana airfield for the second time that day. Amid congratulations and celebration, Marty and Cutter make their quiet escape into the distance hand in hand.
Subplots
Subplots in the film include Sly Delvecchio's attempts at dealing with the impending public relations crisis that will befall Atlantic International if the situation is not resolved well, the sexual tension and frustration between Marty and Cutter, and Rane's (unrequited) sexual interest in Marty.
[edit] Trivia
- A young Elizabeth Hurley plays a major supporting role in this film.
- The film was shot entirely in Orlando, Florida, back when the town was becoming Hollywood East. Portions of the airport in Sanford, FL were used for most of the exterior shots in the film.
- In one scene, John Cutter is seen reading a copy of Sun Tzu's The Art of War. Snipes would later star in a 2000 film of the same name.
- Some of the lines and plot devices in this film are similar or identical to 1997's Air Force One.
- This film's trailer features the famous one-liner, uttered by Snipes, "always bet on black."
- Passenger 57 was scheduled to air on a Starz Entertainment Group channel the night the September 11, 2001 attacks. The broadcast was subsequently cancelled.
- Passenger 57 was the first film to feature a hijacked Lockheed "TriStar" L-1011.
[edit] External links
- Passenger 57 at the Internet Movie Database
- Passenger 57 at All Movie Guide
- Passenger 57 at Rotten Tomatoes
- Passenger 57 at Box Office Mojo
- Passenger 57 at Yahoo! Movies
[edit] Fan sites
- Charles Rane page on Bruce Payne fan site
- Passenger 57 on Bruce Payne fan site
- Charles Rane fan page on on Bruce Payne fan site