Speed 2: Cruise Control | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jan de Bont |
Produced by | Jan de Bont Steve Perry Michael Peyser |
Screenplay by | Randall McCormick Jeff Nathanson |
Story by | Randall McCormick |
Based on | Characters created by Graham Yost |
Starring | Sandra Bullock Jason Patric Willem Dafoe Temuera Morrison Glenn Plummer |
Music by | Mark Mancina |
Cinematography | Jack N. Green |
Editing by | Alan Cody |
Studio | 20th Century Fox Blue Tulip Productions |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date(s) | June 13, 1997 |
Running time | 121 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $110 million[1] |
Box office | $164,508,066 |
Speed 2: Cruise Control is a 1997 action–thriller film, and a sequel to Speed (1994). The film was produced and directed by Jan de Bont, and written by Randall McCormick and Jeff Nathanson, based on a story by de Bont and McCormick. Sandra Bullock stars in the film, reprising her role from Speed, while Jason Patric and Willem Dafoe co-star. The film was released by 20th Century Fox in June 1997.
The plot involves couple Annie (Bullock) and Alex (Patric) taking a vacation in the Caribbean aboard a luxury cruise ship, which is hijacked by a villain named Geiger (Dafoe) by hacking into the ship's computer system. As they are trapped aboard the ship, Annie and Alex work with the ship's first officer (Temuera Morrison) to try to stop the ship, which they discover is programmed to sail into an oil tanker.
De Bont came up with the idea for the film after he had a recurring nightmare about a cruise ship crashing into an island. Speed star Keanu Reeves was initially supposed to reprise his role for the sequel, but decided not to commit and was replaced by Patric prior to filming. Production took place aboard Seabourn Legend, the ship on which the film is set. The film's final scene, where the ship crashes into the island of Saint Martin, cost almost one quarter of the film's $110 million budget, and set records as the largest and most expensive stunt ever filmed. Many interior scenes aboard the ship were shot on soundstages in the Greater Los Angeles Area. The film's soundtrack featured mostly reggae music, and Mark Mancina composed the film score, which was released as an album 13 years after the film's release.
Critics had mostly negative reception towards the film, criticizing its poor acting, unrealistic story, and boring characters. One major criticism was that the film's setting on a slow-moving cruise ship was much less thrilling than Speed's setting on a fast-moving bus. The film was a box office bomb, earning less than half of its budget in the United States, and earned less than $165 million worldwide. It was nominated for eight Golden Raspberry Awards, and won the award for "Worst Re-Make or Sequel".
Contents |
Alex Shaw (Jason Patric), is on a motorcycle chase after a vehicle with stolen goods. He eventually catches the driver of the vehicle, and his girlfriend Annie (Sandra Bullock) runs into him during her driving test (which she fails). She finds out that Alex is on the SWAT team after he lied and told her he was a beach cop. As an apology, Alex surprises her with a trip to the Caribbean, on the cruise ship Seabourn Legend.
Aboard the ship, passenger John Geiger (Willem Dafoe) places explosives throughout the ship, and sets them off to destroy the ship's communication systems. The following evening, he throws the captain overboard, then hacks into the ship's computer system to stop the ship. He sets off additional explosives, then calls the bridge to tell the first officer, Juliano (Temuera Morrison), that the captain is dead and Juliano is now in charge. He is ordered by Geiger to evacuate the ship, during which Geiger steals jewelry from the ship's vault. As passengers evacuate, Drew (Christine Firkins), a young deaf girl, becomes trapped in an elevator, and group of people become trapped behind locked fire doors in a hallway filling up with smoke. Annie and Alex try to board the last lifeboat; however, the ship starts moving and the winch lowering the lifeboat gets jammed. Alex jumps onto the boat to rescue the passengers, and Annie and Juliano use the ship's gangplank to get the passengers back onto the deck.
Alex realizes Geiger is controlling the ship and goes with Juliano to Geiger's cabin armed with skeet guns, but Geiger remotely sets off explosives inside the room. Annie and Dante (Royale Watkins), the ship's photographer, notice the people trapped behind the fire doors, and Annie uses a chainsaw to cut the door open and let them out. Meanwhile, Alex orders the navigator, Merced (Brian McCardie), to flood the ship and slow it down by opening the ballast doors. As the ship floods, Alex sees Drew on a monitor after she climbed out of the elevator, and runs to save her. Alex notices Geiger exiting the vault and holds him at gunpoint, but Geiger escapes by closing the fire door in front of Alex. Using the ship's intercom, Geiger explains that he designed the ship's autopilot system and is taking revenge against the cruise line after getting fired once he got sick from copper poisoning. Geiger again escapes from Alex by attaching a grenade to a door.
The crew realize that Geiger has set the ship to crash into an oil tanker near Saint Martin. Alex decides stop the ship by diving underneath it and jamming the propeller with a steel cable. Geiger realizes Alex is trying to stop the ship, so he jams the cable winch while Alex is underwater, causing it to break off the ship and free the cable. Geiger takes Annie hostage and escapes with her on a boat from the back of the ship.
To avoid collision with the oil tanker, Alex and Dante go into the bilge pump room and use the bow thrusters to turn the ship. After the ship turns, it heads straight into a marina and crashes into an island, which slows the ship down and eventually brings it to a halt. Alex jumps off to rescue Annie and hijacks a speed boat from Maurice (Glenn Plummer), forcing him to chase after Annie. Geiger takes Annie onto a seaplane and Alex shoots it from the boat with a speargun and reels himself in through the water. Alex climbs onto the plane and rescues Annie, and both escape from the plane on one of its pontoons, which falls off into the water. Geiger loses control of the plane and crashes into the oil tanker causing it to explode. Annie and Alex travel back to shore in Maurice's boat, and Alex gives Annie a wedding ring, asking her if she will "wear it for a while", and she accepts and they kiss.
Back in LA, Annie is once again taking her driver's test, with the same instructor. She starts to pull out into traffic, but she holds up as a bus goes screaming by. "That bus was going WAY too fast," she comments (which is a nod to the original Speed).
Speed was released in June 1994, and starred Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock, who were paid $1.2 million and $500,000 for their roles, respectively.[2] Director Jan de Bont felt the film was a "one-time story" with no sequel potential,[3] and distributor 20th Century Fox made no obligations for the actors to appear in a follow-up film.[4] However, after Speed's initial box office success, the Chicago Sun-Times announced Fox's plans for a sequel, one week after the film's release.[4] Fox senior executive vice president Tom Sherak mentioned the possibility of the sequel beginning with Reeves and Bullock's characters being married.[5] De Bont was contractually obligated to direct Speed 2,[5] and was paid $5 million.[2] Fox expected Reeves and Bullock to reprise their roles without obligation,[6] and negotiations with the actors began later that year.[5]
Speed screenwriter Graham Yost had an idea for a film involving a boat, with a Vietnam War-era vessel loaded with weapons that would explode if its ammunition came in contact with water. He also had an idea for a story about a plane that has to fly through the Andes mountains, but cannot ascend above 10,000 feet (3,000 m).[7] Neither Yost nor Speed producer Mark Gordon were asked to participate in the sequel, although Yost received a "characters created by" credit and Gordon was credited as executive producer for Speed 2.[8] Randall McCormick was hired to write the sequel in 1994 following the release of Speed.[6] De Bont had an idea for the sequel based on a recurring nightmare he experienced about a cruise ship crashing into an island.[9] DeBont wrote the story with McCormick, and McCormick adapted it into a screenplay with Jeff Nathanson,[3] working backwards from the idea based on de Bont's nightmare.[10] Writers Kevin Peterka and Greg Chabot provided additional uncredited work to the screenplay.[3]
De Bont produced Speed 2 with his company Blue Tulip Productions and producer Steve Perry.[11] Producer Michael Peyser later joined the project during production in late 1996 after joining Blue Tulip as de Bont's partner.[12] De Bont began working on the film's pre-production prior to the release of his previous film, Twister (1996).[13] He started location scouting in the Caribbean in May 1996 and chose Saint Martin as the primary filming location because he felt it was unlikely to be subjected to a hurricane, as it was struck by a hurricane the previous year for the first time in 100 years.[14][15] De Bont wanted a cruise liner that was luxurious enough to possibly have millions of dollars of jewelry aboard and that was sleek enough for the film's poster. He learned about Seabourn Legend in a hotel brochure, and chose the ship for the film after visiting ships from other cruise lines.[16][17]
Prior to production, details about the film were kept secret, and de Bont refused to confirm rumors about the film taking place on a ship,[13] although he did state that the sequel would be "funnier".[18] Patric said that details were kept secret because "people do tend to steal other people's ideas", but said the sequel is a "very complex movie" and would have "bigger sequences".[19]
Actor | Role | |
---|---|---|
Sandra Bullock | ... | Annie Porter |
Jason Patric | ... | Alex Shaw |
Willem Dafoe | ... | John Geiger |
Temuera Morrison | ... | Juliano |
Glenn Plummer | ... | Maurice |
Bullock agreed to star in the sequel to get financial backing for the 1998 drama Hope Floats,[20] and was paid $12.5 million to reprise her role as Annie.[2] Reeves was offered $12 million to reprise his role as Jack Traven, but turned it down as he did not like the script and was financially secure from the success of the first film.[21] Reeves later went on tour with his band, Dogstar, and stated that Fox was "furious" with his decision and falsely reported that he turned down the role because he was more interested in touring with his band.[22] De Bont said that the character in the sequel was not specific to Reeves and could be played by any young actor, as long as he could have chemistry with Bullock.[23]
Bullock initially suggested Matthew McConaughey to replace Reeves, who passed up the role to star in Contact (1997).[24][25] Jon Bon Jovi,[26] Patrick Muldoon,[24] and Christian Slater,[9] were also considered for the role. Bullock also suggested Jason Patric, whom she had wanted to work with since seeing his performance in After Dark, My Sweet (1990). De Bont was skeptical of featuring a relatively unknown actor, but was reminded by the studio that Bullock and Reeves were also relatively unknown prior to Speed.[27] De Bont eventually chose Patric based on his role in Sleepers (1996).[28] Patric was paid $4.5 million for appearing in Speed 2,[2] and after accepting the role, he stated that he never saw Speed or had any intentions of seeing it.[15] Reeves said he was looking forward to seeing Patric in the sequel and that it was "going to be entertaining with another actor".[29] After Reeves declined to appear in Speed 2, the screenplay was rewritten to remove his character from the story, which De Bont wanted to deal with "right away" in the film.[30] His absence is explained in the first scene, where Annie talks about how her relationship with Jack did not work out, and mentions her current relationship with Alex (Patric), before his character is introduced in the film.[23]
Gary Oldman turned down the role of the villain, Geiger, and instead chose to star as another villain in Air Force One (1997).[31] Willem Dafoe was cast as Geiger after Dafoe wanted to star in a "big movie" and once again play a villain.[32] De Bont cast Temuera Morrison as Juliano based on his role in Once Were Warriors (1994).[33] Glenn Plummer was cast as a character named Maurice whose boat gets hijacked by Alex, reprising his role from Speed as a Jaguar owner whose car gets hijacked by Jack.[34][35] To add comic relief, de Bont cast comedian Tim Conway as Bullock's character's driving instructor, and hoped it would be a comeback role for Conway.[36][37] R&B singer Tamia was cast as Sheri Silver because de Bont wanted a singer who could also act.[38] Tamia did not plan on doing any film acting that early in her career, as she had yet to release her debut album, but said the part was "too perfect for [her] to resist".[39] Joe Morton reprised his role from Speed as SWAT lieutenant "Mac" in a brief, uncredited cameo appearance in the beginning of the film.[34]
Filming took place aboard the Seabourn Legend for six weeks,[40] which provided accommodations for the film's cast and crew, and housed the makeup and wardrobe departments.[38] The Seabourn Legend's captain and other crew members appear as extras the film.[41]
The evacuation sequence was among the first scenes filmed on the ship, and was shot in Key West, Florida. Several days after shooting began, the National Hurricane Center issued an alert for Hurricane Lili, which was predicted to be headed towards the Florida Keys. Shooting the evacuation scene was put on hold, and the ship was forced to sail to safe waters. The producers rearranged the shooting schedule and shot additional scenes on the ship's bridge while sailing towards Cuba. As Hurricane Lili approached Cuba, the ship's violent movements caused seasickness among those on board. The ship was again forced to relocate, and sailed from Cuba towards the Gulf of Mexico, and returned to the Keys three days later. The filming of the evacuation sequence continued and took place over the next two weeks. Approximately 30 hoses and the ship's fire sprinkler system were used to simulate heavy rainfall in the scene.[42]
The scene where Alex swims underneath the ship to try to jam the propeller was filmed underneath a propeller-less barge. The barge's hull was designed to resemble that of the Seabourn Legend, and a propeller was added into the scene using computer generated imagery (CGI) during post-production. To provide a sense of velocity to the scene, the barge was towed by tugboats at one and a half knots. The production crew did not have a winch system available for the underwater shoot as depicted in the scene, so a pulley system was created by feeding Patric a rope that was attached to the axle of a car that drove along the barge.[43]
De Bont said that during shooting, he learned to "never film a boat from a stationary point of view". To make the ship appear faster, all exterior shots of the ship were filmed from a moving vehicle.[44] Following the production at sea, de Bont said that filming on water "was 100 percent more difficult than [he] imagined".[45]
De Bont persuaded Bullock and Patric to perform most of their own stunts, as opposed to using stunt doubles, so the scenes would appear more realistic. Bullock had to overcome her fear of water she developed almost drowning at age 14 while learning to surf.[15] While filming in the middle of the ocean, Bullock was smacked into the ship several times and was saved by Patric from decapitation by the ship's rudder. According to Bullock, she performed all of her own stunts "except for a quarter of one stunt";[46] her stunt double worked for only three days during production.[42]
Stunt coordinator Dick Ziker was so impressed with Patric's physical stunts in the film and said that Patric "is so physical he probably could be one of the top stunt men in the world, if he wanted to."[42] During a motorcycle stunt, Patric flew off the bike 30 feet (9 m) into the air, and Bullock said the incident was so dangerous that "[Patric] should be dead".[40] De Bont said the most frightening incident was when a stunt woman was hit in the face by a boat cable and required reconstructive surgery.[47]
The finale scene where the ship crashes into the island was filmed in Marigot, Saint Martin.[41] During filming in Marigot, an obsessed fan of Bullock employed as an extra in the film attempted to kidnap her. Bullock was later assigned bodyguards for the duration of filming.[48] Production designer Joseph Nemec III designed a set that extended the town's architecture,[38] which included 35 buildings and was built in six months for $5 million.[49] Despite de Bont's reason for chosing Saint Martin for filming, a hurricane struck the town and destroyed the set during construction, which had to be rebuilt with hurricane-proof buildings.[47]
Two mock-ups of the Seabourn Legend were constructed in Florida and towed to Saint Martin for production.[40] The first mock-up, dubbed the "bridge ship", was a reconstruction of the bow and bridge built atop the hull of the Sturgeon Atlantic cargo ship. 60 short tons (54 t) of steel were used to construct the bridge ship mock-up, which was 18 percent smaller than the original.[38][50] The bridge ship was used in first part of the finale when the cruise ship is crashing into boats in the harbor prior to hitting the island. A cargo ship was used for the scene because the actual Seabourn Legend could not navigate in the harbor's shallow waters.[42]
The second mock-up was a full-scale replica of the Seabourn Legend's bow, known as the "rail ship", and was used in filming the finale scene.[38] The rail ship was 150 feet (46 m), about one-third the length of the Seabourn Legend, and weighted 300 short tons (270 t). A 1,000-foot long (300 m) rail was built 60 feet (18 m) underwater, and the rail ship was placed on top and sat on 50 wheels.[10] It was powered by four diesel engines and pulled by a large chain at a speed of 18 miles per hour (29 km/h).[49]
Filming the scene with the rail ship was initially delayed because it could not be hoisted onto the track due to large waves caused by the hurricane.[15] The scene was filmed using 14 cameras,[47] with the rail ship traveling 50 feet (15 m) at a time into the set, with debris from the destruction cleared between each take.[51] The three planned collisions in the scene were aided by explosives and hydraulics to ensure the set's structures collapsed precisely. Concrete was also removed from the buildings and replaced with sand-coated balsa wood so the buildings would "crumble" more effectively after being hit by the rail ship.[49] In the scene's final shot, the ship had to stop within a 6-inch (15 cm) area, and was completely successfully on the first take.[49] The five-minute scene cost $25 million to produce, roughly one quarter of the film's entire budget,[10] and set record as both the largest and the most expensive stunt ever filmed.[38][52] The remaining two-thirds of the ship was added into the film during post-production by Industrial Light & Magic using computer-generated imagery (CGI).[49] Nemec said that creating the entire scene in CGI would have cost $500 million.[10]
Interiors of the ship were filmed at Warren Entertainment Studios in Valencia, California and Sony Studios in Culver City. The additional scenes were initially supposed to be filmed at Palm Beach Ocean Studios in West Palm Beach, Florida,[53] but plans for shooting there were cancelled due to "scheduling problems".[54] Full-scale replicas of the ship's atrium, cabins, and engine rooms were constructed at the soundstages where production took place for over a month. The scene where Alex rescues Drew while the ship is being flooded was filmed by camera operators wearing wet suits inside a tank at Sony Studios. The set inside the tank was constructed with plywood and included a hydraulic lift that gave the effect that the water level was rising.[52] Part of the seaplane scene was filmed outdoors in Valencia. The seaplane was suspended from a crane, with its engines and fuel tanks removed to ease its lift, and large fans were used to simulate wind. The outdoor shoot was filmed in one day for a brief, "one- or two-second" shot in the film, according to Nemec.[55]
To go along with the film's Caribbean setting, the soundtrack consists of mostly reggae music.[56] De Bont also wanted musicians to appear in the film as entertainers on the cruise ship. A cameo appearance for reggae band UB40 was written into the script after the filmmakers heard a demo of their song "Tell Me Is It True", and wanted them to perform it in the film.[57] De Bont chose singer Carlinhos Brown to also be featured as a performer on the ship because he wanted music that was "lively" and felt that Brown's music was "full of energy".[38] Tamia worked with de Bont and musician Quincy Jones to choose a song for her character to perform in the film, and selected "Make Tonight Beautiful",[38] which was written by Diane Warren.[58]
The Speed 2: Cruise Control Original Motion Picture Soundtrack was released by Virgin Records on June 20, 1997, about one month before the film's release. The soundtrack album featured 12 songs, all of which were featured in the film, and five of the songs were distributed to radio stations for promotion.[59] In addition to UB40 and Brown, the album features reggae music from Jimmy Cliff, Common Sense, Maxi Priest, Shaggy, Rayvon, and Betty Wright. Shaggy wanted to feature his cover of the Erma Franklin song "Piece of My Heart"; however, because the song was being using in an upcoming Janis Joplin biopic, he instead featured his song "My Dream".[59] Priest was assigned to cover a song in his style for the soundtrack after contributing to the soundtrack for Jungle 2 Jungle (1997),[60] and Common Sense's appearance on the soundtrack led to a recording contract with Virgin the following year.[61] Speed 2 score composer Mark Mancina wrote a dance-rage track for the soundtrack based on the score,[62] which was produced by Japanese musician Tetsuya "TK" Komuro, who made his debut in the United States performing the track, called "Speed TK Remix".[63]
Mancina wrote the film score for Speed 2 after previously composing the scores for Speed and Twister. He started composing the music on March 1, 1997, which was later scored at the end of April. He began by creating themes and melodies, then working them into the film where he felt they would fit. Specific action cues were scored on the piano down to each second of film. Noting how the film was set in the Caribbean and had a different, slower pace than Speed, Mancina gave the score a "Jamaican/Latin feel"[59] by incorporating reggae music in between action sequences.[62] Some of the themes from Speed were included in the score between sections of the newly written material. He wrote a new heroic and love theme for Annie and Alex because he felt the original themes written for Reeves' character would not work well with Patric. After viewing the scene where Geiger attaches leeches to his body to cleanse his blood, Mancina felt the scene was "so gross" that he wrote a "slimy theme" for the character, which is distinctively different from the rest of the music.[62] He mixed the score at the same time the film was being edited,[59] which caused the music to be constantly re-edited into the film. Following the release of the Speed 2, Mancina said in an interview that keeping up with the editing of the film was the "hardest thing [he had] ever done".[62]
Over 100 minutes of score are present in Speed 2, more than Mancina wrote for Speed and Twister combined. After it was written, Mancina created a demo of the entire score on a synthesizer to play for de Bont. While the score for Speed only used strings, French horns, and percussion, Speed 2 used a wider variety of instruments including trombones, large woodwinds, bass clarinets, and contrabassoons. Mancina, himself, played a nylon string guitar on several cues. The reggae music featured a band with 15 steel drums, in addition to Cuban drums and Latin percussion. The orchestra had over 100 players, which was significantly larger than the orchestra of 63 players that performed the score for Speed.[62] Music was recorded on an Electro-Voice microphone that allowed the music to be recorded directly to a computer without the need for equalization or compression, due to the microphone's high clarity.[64]
Mancina's score was initially not released on CD to avoid competition with sales of the soundtrack album. De Bont made a deal with Virgin Records that the score could not be released until at least six months after the release of the soundtrack.[62] An official release of the score was not made until 13 years after the film's release. La-La Land Records released the Speed 2: Cruise Control Original Motion Picture Score on June 15, 2010 as a limited edition of 3000 units.[65] The album features 70 minutes of music across 14 tracks, and according to La-La Land, the it also features a "notable amount of music" that was not used in the film, due to the film's constant re-edits prior to its release date.[66] Daniel Schweiger of Film Music Magazine said that Mancina's score was "arguably a better one than Speed", praising the album's "thrilling themes", "epic orchestrations", and "Jamaican-style grooves".[67] Filmtracks gave the release four out of five stars, saying the album was "perhaps [La-La Land's] finest offering of a previously unreleased score", although stated that "[s]ome of the action and suspense material in the latter half of the score becomes a bit generic."[68]
Speed 2: Cruise Control Original Motion Picture Score track listing | |||||||||
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No. | Title | Length | |||||||
1. | "Twentieth Century Fox Fanfare (composed by Alfred Newman) / Motorcycle Chase" | 4:18 | |||||||
2. | "Alex and Annie / Carribean [sic] Cruise" | 4:42 | |||||||
3. | "Engine Room" | 5:02 | |||||||
4. | "Overboard" | 8:40 | |||||||
5. | "Last Lifeboat" | 7:01 | |||||||
6. | "Goodbye Alex" | 4:06 | |||||||
7. | "Reunion" | 2:43 | |||||||
8. | "Tanker Turn" | 5:02 | |||||||
9. | "Gieger [sic] Grabs Annie" | 1:48 | |||||||
10. | "Escape" | 7:31 | |||||||
11. | "The Harbor" | 7:16 | |||||||
12. | "Final Chase" | 7:23 | |||||||
13. | "Underwater Rescue" | 1:46 | |||||||
14. | "Cruising" | 2:58 | |||||||
Total length:
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70:24 |
The film was generally regarded as a critical disaster and received mostly negative reviews. It is also considered to be one of the worst movie sequels of all time. Sandra Bullock herself mocked this movie's performance and has admitted to regretting being a part of it. Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 2% based on reviews from 28 critics.[69] According to the video release cover, Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert gave it "Two Thumbs Up," while Sky Magazine said that it was "Brilliant in all the ways that a disaster movie should be". Despite the poor reviews most critics did award some praise for the film's ending. In the years since, Roger Ebert has claimed in reviews that he enjoyed Speed 2 more than Bullock.[70][71][72] Speed 2 was listed on About.com's "Top 9 Cruise Ship or Ocean Liner Movies", which said it had "[g]ood shots of the ship and a spectacular ending", but also described the plot as "lame".[73]
Time said that Patric's character was "fundamentally uninteresting", but blamed de Bont and the screenwriters for "not providing their actors with stuff to act".[74] Many critics stated that a major issue was the film was the lack of thrill due to the setting of the slow-moving ship. Entertainment Weekly heavily criticized the lack of story and said the film is "as slow-moving as a garbage scow".[75] According to the Los Angeles Times, even children who saw the film felt it was strange that it took place on a ship "not capable of going more than a few knots per hour", and claimed that Speed was "much more logical".[76]
In 2010, New York featured an article on Speed 2 that described it as the "Worst Sequel of All", mainly due to the film's explanation for the absence of Reeves' character.[77] The film has also been listed among the worst sequels by MSN,[78] Comcast (ranked 38th),[79] Entertainment Weekly (ranked ninth),[80] Moviefone (ranked ninth),[81] Total Film (ranked fifth),[82] and Complex (ranked first).[83]
The film grossed only $48 million in the United States, and made a total gross of $164.5 million worldwide.[84] Moviefone and Time have both ranked the film among the biggest box office bombs of all time.[85][86]
The film received eight nominations out of 12 possible categories at the 18th Golden Raspberry Awards, and had the second-highest number following Batman and Robin (1997), which had 11 nominations. Speed 2 won the award for "Worst Remake or Sequel", but lost the award for "Worst Picture" to The Postman (1997).[87]
Award[87] | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|
Worst Picture | N/A | Nominated |
Worst Actress | Sandra Bullock | Nominated |
Worst Supporting Actor | Willem Dafoe | Nominated |
Worst Screen Couple | Sandra Bullock, Jason Patric | Nominated |
Worst Remake or Sequel | N/A | Won |
Worst Director | Jan de Bont | Nominated |
Worst Screenplay | Randall McCormick, Jeff Nathanson, Jan de Bont | Nominated |
Worst Song | "My Dream" (written by Orville Burrell, Robert Livingston, Dennis Haliburton) | Nominated |
The 1998 episode of the of the British/Irish sitcom Father Ted titled "Speed 3" involves a bomb planted on a milk float that will explode if the float travels under 4 miles per hour (6.4 km/h). While the plot is a parody of Speed, writers Graham Linehan and Arthur Mathews got the idea for the episode after asking themselves how they would make a "worse sequel than Speed 2".[88] The Simpsons episode "Bye Bye Nerdie" features a scene on a racing school bus where character Milhouse Van Houten says "It's like Speed 2 only with a bus instead of a boat!"[89]
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