Non-Stop (DVD REVIEW)
Non-Stop
DVD Review by Kam Williams
Air Marshal Rises to Occasion in Passenger Plane Hijack
Thriller
Bill Marks’ (Liam Neeson) life went
into a tailspin after his young daughter lost her battle with childhood
leukemia. The inconsolable police officer has since sought solace in a bottle of
alcohol, an addiction which cost him his marriage and career.
Today, the ex-cop is lucky to be
employed as an air marshal, a job he decided to take despite a terrible fear of
takeoffs. On this particular evening, he’s been assigned to protect a packed
transatlantic flight from New York to London.
The trip starts out uneventfully
enough, with Bill hiding his identity while making the acquaintance of the
attractive passenger (Julianne Moore) sitting next to him. However, a crisis
arises over the middle of the ocean soon after he receives a text from an
anonymous caller claiming to be in the cabin and threatening to murder a
passenger every 20 minutes unless $150 million is deposited into an offshore
bank account.
Initially, he dismisses the message
as a prank on the part of the only colleague (Anson Mount) aboard the plane,
since a breach of the supposedly-impenetrable federal network is almost
impossible and a criminal offense to boot. Nevertheless, once the first victim
does indeed die, Bill realizes he has an urgent emergency on his hands.
Who might the hijacker be? The
Muslim (Omar Metwally) sporting a skullcap? The trash-talking black teenager
(Corey Hawkins) reluctant to surrender his cell phone? A sweet stewardess
(Oscar-winner Lupita Nyong’o)? Somebody else? Of course, the actual perpetrator
won’t be easy to pinpoint in this ever-escalating, deadly game of cat and
mouse.
Directed by Jaume Collet-Serra,
Non-Stop is yet another adrenaline-fueled vehicle featuring Liam Neeson. The
surprising success of Taken, has belatedly turned the rugged Irishman into an
action star, as reflected in subsequent similar outings in The A-Team, Taken 2,
Unknown, and the upcoming Run All Night.
Here, Neeson safely sticks close to
the Taken formula, starting with his character’s name (Bill Marks as opposed to
Bryan Mills) and his playing a broken soul in need of redemption. Again, he
rises to the occasion in tough, two-fisted fashion, though also exhibiting a
vulnerability certain to move you to tears by the time the closing credits roll.
Besides an engaging premise and a
satisfying resolution, Non-Stop is blessed with an inscrutable plot which
delicately ratchets up the tension as it winds its way towards an unpredictable
denouement. Thus, the picture unfolds less like a mob scene disaster flick than
a cleverly-concealed whodunit where everybody with a phone is a suspect.
Cells on a plane!
Excellent (4 stars)
Rated
PG-13 for sensuality, profanity, intense violence and drug use
Running
time: 107 minutes
Distributor:
Universal Studios Home Entertainment
Blu-ray/DVD
Combo Pack Extras: Two behind-the-scenes featurettes, “Non-Stop Action” and
“Suspense at 40,000 Feet.”
To
see a trailer for Non-Stop, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nODrjQUR5YU
To
order a copy of the Non-Stop Blu-ray/DVD Combo Pack, visit:
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