Metro (1997)
Facts
| Directed by | Thomas Carter (II) |
| Cast | Eddie Murphy, Kim Miyori, Art Evans, James Carpenter (III), Michael Rapaport, Denis Arndt, Trevor Denman, Carmen Ejogo, Donal Logue, Paul Ben Victor and Michael Wincott |
| Theatrical Release | January 17, 1997 |
| DVD Release | March 25, 1998 |
| Running Time | 117 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 717951000248 |
| Buy this item | $9.99 at Amazon.com As of Jul 18 0:27 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Walt Disney Video, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Letterboxed, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 5.1), French (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo), Spanish (Subtitled) Or 49 new from $2.45, 67 used from $0.48, 1 collectible from $11.49 |
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- Art.com - Search for Metro posters.
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Underrated Action Flick! |
| Well Worth What I Paid |
I paid about half of what Amazon is selling this movie for so I don't feel cheated at all. I bought this for little more than the price of a rental so I went in with few expectations. With Eddie Murphy in it I figured I wasn't taking much of a chance. I was glad to see I was right. There are several other recognizable people in the cast. Picture and sound quality was excellent. The directing, sets, and music are all as good as you will see in most movies. I imagine if it had just a little better story with more Murphy comedic antics it might have been a hit. This is pretty much a serious role. I bought it thinking I would probably watch it once and give it away, but I ended up sticking it on my shelf for future reviewings. July 7, 2004
| The Johnny Appleseed of Handguns |
| Boring and predictable action flick |
Basically, a "This Time It's Personal!" thriller about a hostage negotiator who turns homicide detective -- breaking all the ...uh...rules, pissing off his boss, etc. -- when his partner is killed by a master jewel thief (Michael Wincott). There is a hint of something interesting (maybe in an earlier draft of the script?) when the jewel thief is initially introduced as a kind of gentleman crook,a mild-mannered jazz buff and for about five minutes you think that maybe something clever and sophisticated will develop here. But the thief quickly metamorphized into a psychotic killer who stages his theft as an ordinary smash-and-grab event with lots of carnage and hostages taken. (Think about how STUPID this is, to draw this kind of attention to your crime and how it just about ensures you will not make a clean getaway and that the police will pursue you endlessly.)
After the thief is captured, he makes an improbable escape and goes after Murphy's beautiful girlfriend, although there is not the slightest way he could have known who Murphy was dating, let alone where she lived. A dumb, silly plot device and one that has been used and used and used, especially on TV, so it's REALLY tired in a big budget film.
Similarly, hints that Murphy's character has a gambling problem and money problems are presented and then disappear as if they also belonged to earlier (and better) drafts of the script.
Trust me, you will forget this one even before your VCR finishes rewinding. A COMPLETE waste of an otherwise talented cast. You won't miss missing this one. October 5, 2003
| unbelievable action |
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