Terminal Velocity | |
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Film poster |
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Directed by | Deran Sarafian |
Produced by | David Twohy Ted Field Robert W. Cort |
Written by | David Twohy |
Starring | Charlie Sheen Nastassja Kinski James Gandolfini Christopher McDonald |
Music by | Joel McNeely |
Cinematography | Oliver Wood |
Editing by | Frank J. Urioste |
Studio | Interscope Communications PolyGram Filmed Entertainment Nomura Babcock & Brown |
Distributed by | Hollywood Pictures |
Release date(s) | September 23, 1994 |
Running time | 102 min. |
Language | English |
Budget | $50,000,000 US (est.) |
Box office | $16,478,900 (USA)[1] |
Terminal Velocity is a 1994 action movie starring Charlie Sheen as a daredevil skydiver who becomes mixed up with Russian spies. It was written by David Twohy and directed by Deran Sarafian. Originally, Sheen's role was written for Tom Cruise, although William Baldwin was also considered. The script itself sold for US $500,000. The musical score was composed by Joel McNeely.
Contents |
A Boeing 747 lands in the middle of a desert. A young Russian woman is tortured by getting dunked in the aquarium of her apartment until she drowns dreadfully. Skydiving instructor Richard 'Ditch' Brodie (Charlie Sheen) takes on a new client, Chris Morrow (Nastassja Kinski), who on her first jump does not open her parachute and apparently dies.
Brodie discovers that Morrow faked her death and that she is really a Russian spy trying to recover a shipment of gold. Brodie uses all of his skydiving skills to outwit the villains and to stay alive.
The final stunt - with Sheen at the wheel of a Cadillac Allanté falling to earth - was a mixture of bluescreen and camera work, as a real car was suspended beneath a helicopter and then a reverse zoom made it seem as if it were in free-fall.
The movie was met with a mostly negative reception.[2][3]
The movie debuted at No.2 at the box office behind Timecop.[4]