Breakdown


Director: Jonathan Mostow.

Starring: Kurt Russell, J.T.Walsh, Kathleen Quinlan, M.C.Gainey, Jack Noseworthy, Rex Linn.

This movie actually received quite a number of good reviews. Reviewers whose opinion I often agree with gave Breakdown the two thumbs up. It's movies like this that make me start to question my judgement but I will say, in my defence, that I saw this movie with five other people, four of whom agreed with me: Breakdown sucked.

Where to start? It's not the worst movie I've seen and Mr. Kurt Russell (Jeff Taylor) looks quite attractive as the everyman character. Right, that's the good points out of the way.

What sort of movie was this meant to be? A thriller? But we find out exactly what's going on very quickly in Breakdown. There's very little suspense and even less confusion. An action movie? There were way too many standing-by-the-side-of-the-road, eerie-foreboding-music, Mr.-Kurt-Russell-close-ups to sustain the action. Whatever it was meant to be, Breakdown turned out to be dull. Towards the end of the 95 minutes (and it's not even all that long!), I was continually looking at my watch. The only reason I stayed till the end was because I was with people and would have had to wait outside. Plus, I'm an optimist. I kept hoping that the movie would get better, or at least throw in a surprise.

My favourite scene of the movie was the car chase when Jeff and his wife, Amy (Ms. Kathleen Quinlan), are being pursued by the bad guys in three different vehicles. While he drives and brandishes a gun about, trying to fend them off from all directions, Amy sits in the passenger seat, screaming! This from a movie that uses Greensperson and Foreperson in the credits.

The baddies are bad and the goodies are good. In fact, we are even given an explanation of why these basically poor but honest folk are driving such a nice car. I guess we can't have sympathy for rich people but in my book, the explanation provided just makes them dumb people.

Breakdown is slow, tedious and lacking in any surprises. The plot twists are non-existent, tense moments are few and far between and this stuff has been done better before, most notably in Duel. Even the American version of The Vanishing had me more in its grip. I really didn't care about the fate of Jeff and Amy, or perhaps I knew all too well how it would turn out. Either way, the most suspenseful moment was waiting for the credits.

Rating: F


© Nikki Lesley 1997