Breakdown

1997

Action / Crime / Drama / Mystery / Thriller

53
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 83% · 58 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 69% · 25K ratings
IMDb Rating 7.0/10 10 66215 66.2K

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Plot summary

On their cross-country drive, a married couple, Jeff and Amy Taylor, experience car trouble after their SUV breaks down. Stranded in the New Mexico desert, the two catch a break when a passing truck driver offers Amy a ride to a nearby café to call for help. Meanwhile, Jeff is able to fix the car and make his way to the café, but Amy isn't there. He tracks down the trucker -- who tells the police he's never seen Jeff or his wife before. Jeff then begins a desperate, frenzied search for Amy.

Top cast

Kurt Russell as Jeff Taylor
Rex Linn as Sheriff Boyd
Kathleen Quinlan as Amy Taylor
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU 720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
855.77 MB
1280*544
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 33 min
Seeds 18
1.72 GB
1920*816
English 5.1
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 33 min
Seeds 21
854.38 MB
1280*538
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 33 min
Seeds 6
1.72 GB
1904*800
English 5.1
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 33 min
Seeds 29

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by palle 7 / 10

Great thriller with good performances

"Breakdown" is a twist of a thriller and a horror-movie. The story is very good, and you keep asking yourself, what will happen next. Russell and Walsh are making stunning performances, and the movie keeps you attracted for every second.
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Reviewed by Quinoa1984 8 / 10

"It could happen to you", the tag-line reads: not quite, but it is a white-knuckled ride all the way

Jonathan Mostow, before he went on to helm the big-budget U-571 and the even bigger budgeted Terminator 3, brought out this taut little thriller and cemented a reputation he's yet to really live up to (though some would disagree about that). His film has that tag-line, but it's not entirely accurate, even though it has a very familiar and eerily recognizable threat at the core: the outsiders coming in to a territory that is very close knit and practically inbred, where one wrong step could cost you and/or your loved ones lives. In this case, Kurt Russell and Kathleen Quinlan are the married couple caught in the cross-hairs of kidnapping, blackmail, and ultimately vengeance. They're moving from Massachusets to San Diego, and driving on through the desert they get side-swiped by a car, then later on after a near-altercation at a pit-stop, they move on only for the couple's car to breakdown. Help comes in the form of a trucker, who offers help for to drive the wife to get a tow-truck. No need for the truck, anyway, because the car didn't have much wrong with it...but what about the wife, Amy?

From there on in, Mostow takes Breakdown into the realm of paranoid thriller, then into just full-on chase/action/revenge/chase again picture. One might wonder if there could be a more noirish quality to it if the wife actually left for a reason other than abduction, though the path that Mostow takes the story is fine as it is. He keeps things simple in the story sense, with elements of the Western thrown in, but also makes it very much character-based as well. Russell's performance as Jeff Taylor is kind of the opposite of his recent turn as Stuntman Mike in Grindhouse: starting off as the average-Joe who tries to be polite, albeit from a yuppie background, he gets put to the test by the enormity of the situation, and finally becomes a real take-no-prisoners hero. Towards the very end it almost reaches the point of being TOO much of hitting over the head with payback, and there are little things regarding the nature of Red Barr (JT Walsh, great villainous presence in a real sinister, calm way) and his ties to the town as to whether or not things are really as controlling as they might be (i.e. the bank scene, which is perfectly acted, though not entirely feasible in the paranoid sense).

But all this aside, what Breakdown remains ten years after is a competent, un-pretentious thrill-ride where the dialog is never too heavy, the action is packed with real stunts and few special effects, and some of the brighter moments for Russell in recent years (or rather, the last ten). It knows what it is, and has the professional temerity of a cult effort.

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