Non-Stop - Movie Review
Director: Jaume Collet-Sera
Genre: Action
Run Time: 106 minutes
Release date: February 28, 2014 (United
States)
Cast:
- Corey Hawkins as Travis Mitchell
- Scoot McNairy as Tom Bowen,
- Lupita Nyong'o as Gwen Lloyd,
- Liam Neeson as William "Bill" Marks,
- Julianne Moore as Jen Summers,
- Michelle Dockery as Nancy Hoffman,
- Anson Mount as Jack Hammond,
- Omar Metwally as Dr. Fahim Nasir,
- Jason Butler Harner as First Officer Kyle Rice,
- Corey Hawkins as Travis Mitchell,
- Frank Deal as Charles Wheeler,
- Shea Whigham as Agent Marenick,
- Bar Paly as Iris Marianne,
- Jon Abrahams as David Norton,
- Quinn McColgan as Becca
Review: "Non-Stop" is a suspense
thriller formula on
a plot to hijack a plane.
The film begins in a very serious project marks unambiguous law (Liam Neeson) sipping whiskey in the parking lot before entering the grounds of the airport. An indication of his mood is led by a photograph of a young girl who has decorated his dashboard. It seems to be in a state of disarray, threatening her head and biting strangers.
The camera follows unstable. Winds capture the arbitrary action of the passengers until finally settles on the plane, a British transatlantic flight from New York to London.
On the plan, the bill is shown to have the jitters off. He's so stressed and packing tape around her panic chance palm and woman sitting next to her, Jen Summers (Julianne Moore) has to calm him during takeoff.
But once the flight took off, the body language changed the bill, he enters the bathroom, smoke masks. The story is interesting. It is installed in the toilets of a breath, but before he shows her that Air Marshall badge "and gun.
And while he blows a text on your mobile phone, you receive. "Are you ready to do their duty Marshall?" Astonished, he thinks it's a joke, because he is on a secure network.
But gradually, text messages are in danger. "I'll kill one of the passengers in 20 minutes at least 150 million related to a bank account" is a number.
Bill dutifully informs the pilot and look around for suspicious passengers.
Then, with the help of an attendant Nancy (Michelle Dockery) and Julianne Moore, whose character was curious to bag a seat near the marks in the class, including the development of a list of suspects; coarse bald man, a clear Muslim doctor, a monster with glasses and a few others. The executioner, who knows something about Bill and certainly knows his way.
Gradually, someone ends and another after. It also appears that the bank account is in the name of the bill. As the plot thickens, the card trick played by writer John W. Richardson, Chris Roach and Ryan Engle pointing directly to the bill, which, presumably on board to protect passengers against any debt.
Is the board layout makes the tick. Our suspicions before balance back until things reach a point in an explosive end that is not only reassuring, but absurd.
Liam Neeson to 61 seems too tired to play an Air Marshall, but his backstory gives you enough room for this emote and camouflage, and lost the world-ve. He is agile and able to shine in the limited space of the aircraft.
Julianne Moore, Michelle Dockery, with all other suspects to give a decent performance.
Lupita Nyong'o, after a brilliant performance in "12 Years a Slave" is lost in this film as a stewardess irrelevant.
Director Jaume Collet-Serra, Flavio Labiano photography and designer Alexander Hammond Production skillfully manages to keep his attention on the drama set tense scene. Cryptic criminal text messages layers 24:59 persistent series plans passengers and crew made an exciting visual experience.
In general, the logic of the fine winding frame. This, along with the misleading start, flips "non-stop" notches below the display scale.
The film begins in a very serious project marks unambiguous law (Liam Neeson) sipping whiskey in the parking lot before entering the grounds of the airport. An indication of his mood is led by a photograph of a young girl who has decorated his dashboard. It seems to be in a state of disarray, threatening her head and biting strangers.
The camera follows unstable. Winds capture the arbitrary action of the passengers until finally settles on the plane, a British transatlantic flight from New York to London.
On the plan, the bill is shown to have the jitters off. He's so stressed and packing tape around her panic chance palm and woman sitting next to her, Jen Summers (Julianne Moore) has to calm him during takeoff.
But once the flight took off, the body language changed the bill, he enters the bathroom, smoke masks. The story is interesting. It is installed in the toilets of a breath, but before he shows her that Air Marshall badge "and gun.
And while he blows a text on your mobile phone, you receive. "Are you ready to do their duty Marshall?" Astonished, he thinks it's a joke, because he is on a secure network.
But gradually, text messages are in danger. "I'll kill one of the passengers in 20 minutes at least 150 million related to a bank account" is a number.
Bill dutifully informs the pilot and look around for suspicious passengers.
Then, with the help of an attendant Nancy (Michelle Dockery) and Julianne Moore, whose character was curious to bag a seat near the marks in the class, including the development of a list of suspects; coarse bald man, a clear Muslim doctor, a monster with glasses and a few others. The executioner, who knows something about Bill and certainly knows his way.
Gradually, someone ends and another after. It also appears that the bank account is in the name of the bill. As the plot thickens, the card trick played by writer John W. Richardson, Chris Roach and Ryan Engle pointing directly to the bill, which, presumably on board to protect passengers against any debt.
Is the board layout makes the tick. Our suspicions before balance back until things reach a point in an explosive end that is not only reassuring, but absurd.
Liam Neeson to 61 seems too tired to play an Air Marshall, but his backstory gives you enough room for this emote and camouflage, and lost the world-ve. He is agile and able to shine in the limited space of the aircraft.
Julianne Moore, Michelle Dockery, with all other suspects to give a decent performance.
Lupita Nyong'o, after a brilliant performance in "12 Years a Slave" is lost in this film as a stewardess irrelevant.
Director Jaume Collet-Serra, Flavio Labiano photography and designer Alexander Hammond Production skillfully manages to keep his attention on the drama set tense scene. Cryptic criminal text messages layers 24:59 persistent series plans passengers and crew made an exciting visual experience.
In general, the logic of the fine winding frame. This, along with the misleading start, flips "non-stop" notches below the display scale.