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Collateral review

Posted : 7 years, 1 month ago on 13 March 2017 02:43

one of my favorite movies, collateral has a sense of creativity to it and doesn't rely on action scenes so bombastic that they break you're brain after two minutes.

this is one of the most perfectly directed movies I've ever seen. there's no shaky cam and during the handheld shootout scene in the nightclub, you can see what's going on perfectly.

the dialogue is FLAWLESS. there's not a boring and/or unnecessary scene in this movie. this movie also marks the only time I felt bad for the bad guy when he dies and from the way the scene is shot and the use of the score, it seems like your supposed to feel that way.

it's an instant classic with no flaws to be found.


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A very good movie

Posted : 7 years, 7 months ago on 12 September 2016 12:48

What the hell happened to Michael Mann?!? Indeed, during the last 10 years, he has directed only 3 movies, ‘Miami Vice’ which was really disappointing, ‘Public Enemies’ which I have probably seriously overrated and finally ‘Blackhat’, easily one of the worst movies released in 2015. It is really sad because, before that, Mann was probably one of the most exciting directors around. I guess most people would say that ‘Heat’ was and still is his best directing effort but this movie was definitely not far behind. Indeed, it was one hell of a thriller and it was one of the very few examples that, if Tom Cruise goes outside his comfort zone, the guy can be actually pretty terrific. Indeed, his character here was so much more fascinating than his usual boring heroes. Furthermore, the whole thing looked terrific and Mann managed to create here a spellbinding mood. To be honest, I don’t think the story really made sense though. I mean, why would a hit-man spend the whole night with a cab-driver like this? I mean, to use a cab to do a quick job, sure, why not, but to spend a whole night with the very same guy resulted for something quite entertaining but not really realistic. Still, this was a minor issue, it remains probably one of the best thrillers out there and it is definitely worth a look, especially if you like the genre. 



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Collateral review

Posted : 11 years, 3 months ago on 2 January 2013 12:50

Michael Mann's films are among the coolest films in Hollywood history. Take a look at Last of the Mohicans, Heat, Manhunter and Public Enemies. The last film may not be his best achievement, but it is cool nonetheless. The calm, cool attitude of Johnny Depp rivaled the likes of Neil MacCauley and Hawkeye. This film's antagonist, Vincent, is probably the greatest of Mann's characters. Masterminded by Stuart Beattie and brilliantly played Tom Cruise, Vincent is a character who you don't want in your backseat or next to you but cannot help but be fascinated by the things he does and says.

Onto the film: A Delorean may need 88mph (and 30 minutes) to show some serious shit, but Collateral does that within a-minute-and-a-half. You know things are gonna be awesome when Tom Cruise bumps into Jason Statham. The 5 second less-than-brief meeting tells us volumes about Cruise's character, and paves the road to which all the other players drive onto. The turns are not dangerous, just unexpecting. The film introduces us to the character, Max, an ordinary taxi driver with extraordinary dreams. When he drops Annie at her location, and after when she gives him her company card - actually a secret way to saying to him "call me" - Max enjoys a rare moment of "Ah! It's good to be alive". But that is quickly silenced when Vincent gets in his taxi and gives him $600 to drive him to five locations. From the first kill onwards a new level of cat-and-mouse game starts, with the cat controlling the mouse and keeping his cheese at bay. If the mouse fails to do his bidding, then he will never get the cheese... or see the sunrise.

Some of the moments are just top-notch with a heavy foreboding atmosphere covering it. When Max and Vincent meet Daniel Baker, the scene was so impressively done that it was the first of the many times you're transfixed to the screen. The action, the tense-factor and the polar-distant characters of Max and Vincent all get brightly highlighted within the next 1 hour, only losing focus for a short period of time. Vincent is a loose bull on the streets of Spain, or in this case L.A. When he looks at Max, who is the sort of the person who wouldn't even swat a fly, he sees a person wasting his life. Vincent sees the others as people who are always running, either from someone or something, while he considers himself as just a guy "with a job attached to", making him not only an effective killer but also who is human enough to understand the other but not human enough to understand himself. Max, on the other hand, is Max. An ordinary taxi-driver thrown into an extraordinary adventure. Also, who says the final girl cliche is limited to horror films only? The 5th and final victim happens to be Annie, and Max saves her - obviously. Max not only turns from an ordinary citizen to a saviour but also has an (spiritual? psychological?) awakening along the way.

Performance-wise, Tom Cruise's grip on his character was as fierce as an eagle on a fish. An aggressively precise performance with a cool, calculated voice. I can't imagine anyone else replacing him. Jamie Foxx was equally good, too. His character had depth, and Foxx impressively fleshed it out, but he didn't really seem connected to it - There was a loose wire somewhere. Not to say it wasn't a great performance, - the way he passed off himself as a normal person had me impressed - but he didn't really altogether connect between him and his character, or at least that's how it felt to me. Mark Ruffalo is an actor, who after watching him in 13 Going On 30, became one of my favourite on-screen figures, but I must say, what the hell happened here? The dude was acting like as if he was missing out his favourite show and wanting to go to the bathroom at the same time. He just mumbled his way to his death. Maybe it really wasn't a good time to do a Marlon Brando impression!

In all, Collateral is an intense-filled thriller with unexpecting turns and some great focus on the 2 lead characters. And is it me or did Vincent's death seem... emotional?!?! Am I losing my marbles?

8.0/10


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Collateral review

Posted : 11 years, 9 months ago on 1 August 2012 07:49

Hitmen have be on drugs to go through so many crashes and hits without feeling anything and get up to run immediately! And the fake blood on Vincent (Cruise), both his face and shirt, sucked a lot I think.


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Neo-noir perfection

Posted : 11 years, 10 months ago on 28 June 2012 02:35

Crisp, neo-noir perfection, masquerading as a summer action flick but with a dark and existential core. Tom Cruise plays against his type as an assassin, a lone grey fox named Vincent sent to make five hits in a single night using any means necessary... and cab driver Max (Jamie Foxx) happens to be that means. Deftly directed by Michael Mann--who knows every nook and cranny in L.A. and the perfect angle to shoot them--he is able to breathe Stuart Beattie's poetic screenplay to life, keeping Foxx incredibly nuanced and bringing Cruise to his cold and empty peak.

"Someday my dream will come. One night you'll wake up and you'll discover it never happened. It's all turned around on you and it never will. Suddenly you are old, didn't happen and it never will, 'cause you were never going to do it anyway."

There is a lot to like about this film, but what really catches my eye is the cool lighting colors and the crisp HD film style. It makes the whole experience rather dreamlike yet jarringly vivid, and it helps elevate those action moments--you actually believe that characters can be hit by bullets, and that there are real consequences to where these bullets end up. After a long night, the sun starts to rise. The sky has an eerie glow, shadows seem lighter, and Vincent wonders aloud: "Think anyone will notice?"



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Collateral review

Posted : 12 years, 11 months ago on 6 May 2011 01:21

The movie, according to me, is just average..Nothing explosive or out of the ordinary. Worth a peek, but nothing more. Might have been I had high expectations for it due to the publicy and almost cult status around it. 5/10


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Brilliant, challenging thriller for a mature crowd

Posted : 13 years ago on 7 April 2011 11:18

Max: "I can't drive you around while you're killing folks. It ain't my job!"
Vincent: "Tonight it is."


Collateral was released in the summer of 2004, emerging amidst an onslaught of big-budget, special effects-laden blockbusters. Yet, Collateral does not adhere to the standard summer season template - rather than a brain-dead action fiesta for the mainstream crowd, it's a challenging thriller for mature audiences, puppeteered by the boundlessly talented Michael Mann (Heat, Ali). As was the case with Heat, Collateral exhibits a sense of stark realism rarely witnessed in ordinary Hollywood productions. The film is escapist entertainment at its core, but Mann perpetually insists upon plausible scenarios and a gritty tone to ensure the film never drifts too far into the realm of fantasy. Most commendably, Collateral is a summer picture that eschews big explosions and gunfights for suspense, intrigue, plot twists, and an understated cinematic style.


Working the streets of downtown Los Angeles at night with his taxi, Max (Jamie Foxx) is a soft-spoken man with big ambitions tragically stuck in his dead-end job. After meeting beautiful U.S. Justice Department prosecutor Annie (Jada Pinkett-Smith) during his shift one night, a mysterious fare enters Max's cab in the form of Vincent (Tom Cruise). Vincent explains he has five appointments to attend and a plane to catch in the morning, and offers Max $600 cash if he agrees to be Vincent's personal chauffeur for the night. Seeing this as an opportunity to jump-start his dreams, Max hesitantly agrees. Shortly afterwards, it is revealed that Vincent is, in fact, a contract killer travelling around the city to put several targets on ice. Max is unwittingly pulled into Vincent's world of systematic murdering for this single night, leaving the frightened cabbie with no means of escape.


The narrative is not particularly groundbreaking, and it's predictable to a certain degree, but Stuart Beattie's clever script and Mann's sharp-eyed direction compensate for this. Collateral is not a surface-level flick - there are intelligent layers and nuances to both the story and the characters, which take multiple viewings to pick up. For example, it's initially unclear why Vincent wants Max as his chauffer, but character interaction reveals he is just looking for someone to frame - in one scene, Detective Fanning (Mark Ruffalo) tells his colleagues a story about a cabbie who supposedly killed three people before committing suicide, implying that this is Vincent's plan for Max. On top of this, exploring real ideas and themes is also on Mann and Beattie's agenda. For instance, Vincent ruminates on his personal philosophies about the world and on the insignificance of a single human being. Similarly, Max aspires to start his own limousine company and insists his taxi job is temporary despite being a driver for twelve years, and this relates to the way people realise that their lifelong dreams are slipping out of their grasp through cruel passages of time and inertia. Indeed, Collateral is far more than an excuse for exploitative violence in the name of entertainment.


Of all his directorial characteristics, Mann is perhaps best known for his attention to detail - he makes environments into characters and stages down-to-earth gunfights that are not glamorised but instead based on realistic scenarios, tactics and training. This remains unchanged for Collateral. Predominantly lensing the picture with digital cameras, Mann and his two cinematographers (one cinematographer quit after three weeks, and a second one took over) permeate the film with an immersive authenticity and neglect the typical Hollywood sheen. Indeed, Mann centres his attention on developing atmosphere, building suspense and manipulating tension. Through using digital photography and as much natural lighting as possible, Mann achieves the verisimilitude he clearly strives for, transforming what could've been a cartoonish blockbuster into a masterfully realistic and gripping action movie. Additionally, the soundtrack mixes pop, rock, jazz, and classical tunes to match the mood of each scene. Michael Mann is the furthest thing from an ordinary action director - he is an expert craftsman, and the result is spellbinding.


Another of Mann's strengths here is pace; he clearly understands the need for humanity and character building without boring viewers to death. It is possible to care about Max's predicament after watching some innately human moments between him and Annie, with these scenes efficiently developing Max as a nuanced three-dimensional human being. The extended scene inside Max's cab that depicts Max and Annie's initial meeting is so expertly conceived, natural and charming that it could easily stand as a short film on its own. Beattie's script is another asset in this sense since it gives the characters some sharp, honest dialogue. Likewise, the interactions between Vincent and Max are never anything less than enthralling, and there are appreciable moments of levity throughout to lighten the mood. Also commendable is the fact that this is a Hollywood production where no characters seem safe, no matter how renowned the actors are. The ending may seem pat and clichéd, but it is pitch-perfect; it's ultimately ironic, it underscores themes introduced throughout (such as Vincent mentioning Darwin's theory of evolution and the need to adapt and improvise), and it brings closure to the character arcs.


Though the script is magnificent and the filmmaking is top-notch, Collateral ultimately works due to the pair of performances courtesy of Foxx and Cruise, both of whom disappear into their roles. Embracing the opportunity to flex his antagonistic muscles, Cruise pulls off the complex requirements of the part to fantastic effect - his performance as Vincent is riveting, career-best work for the actor. Likewise, the usually comically-oriented Foxx delivers a superb, warm, understated performance that earned the star a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination. Both performances also reflect Mann's insistence towards realism - Cruise underwent extensive firearms training and, in turn, demonstrates outstanding pistol-handling skills throughout, while Foxx comes across as a run-of-the-mill everyman. In the supporting role of Annie, Jada Pinkett-Smith is absolute dynamite - she has never been more charming than she is here. Mark Ruffalo, Peter Berg, and Bruce McGill are also highly engaging in the more minor roles of the investigators hot on Vincent's trail.


Whereas most summer movies are action pictures with slight traces of drama and character development, Collateral is an intense, character-oriented drama-thriller with traces of action. And it is directly because of the drama and character development that the movie works so well. Collateral is intelligent, mature and involving, and it is also the best motion picture of 2004, bar none.

10/10



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Collateral review

Posted : 13 years, 5 months ago on 5 November 2010 05:58

COLATERAL - Max (Jamie Foxx) trabalha como motorista de táxi há 12 anos, já tendo levado os mais diversos passageiros a todos os locais de Los Angeles. Porém, em uma noite aparentemente tranquila, ele encontra Vincent (Tom Cruise), um homem que pega o táxi como se fosse um passageiro qualquer. Porém Vincent é um assassino de aluguel, que está na cidade para completar o plano de um cartel do narcotráfico, que está prestes a ser condenado por um júri federal. Vincent precisa matar 5 testemunhas-chave do processo e conta com Max para fugir da polícia local e do FBI, logo após cometer os assassinatos. Obrigado a seguir as ordens de Vincent, Max precisa ainda lidar com a possibilidade de ser morto por seu passageiro a qualquer momento, já que Vincent pode usá-lo para proteção pessoal.


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Mann Magic! Cruise Control!

Posted : 15 years, 7 months ago on 2 September 2008 11:37

''You killed him?''

''No, I shot him. Bullets and the fall killed him.''

A cab driver finds himself the hostage of an engaging contract killer as he makes his rounds from hit to hit during one night in LA. He must find a way to save both himself and one last victim.

Tom Cruise: Vincent

Brilliant inventive film. Tom cruise and Jamie Foxx make an electrifying combination, slick camera work and LA looks amazing. Literally sets the mood hands down.
Michael Mann always does a great job of getting exceptional performances from multiple actors in his films and here is no different. Tom Cruise gives a nomination worthy performance. Mark Ruffalo gives the best performance of his less-than-stellar career. Javier Bardem has one scene and he hits it out of the park. Jamie Foxx is a muse of Mann's. He was amazing in this role, giving us every day cab driver. He has his shining scenes, but when he's on screen, Tom Cruise is on screen, Javier Bardem is on screen, and those two just hit their performances into orbit.

Cruise is excellent and surprisingly intense. Michael Mann seems to make films with great dialogue, but its the moments where he goes in close and uses extended shots of his actors eyes as they witness something powerful. Mann will set a scene in the quite or with growing background music, and let the actors emotions pour through their eyes and not a word will be said. The moment in Collateral, when two coyotes run across the street. Vincent (Cruise) just gets done telling Max (Foxx) how his father died and how he would be beat him after he got drunk. This scene symbolizes Vincent's apparent loneliness and the coyotes that travel in pairs hunt for other prey. Vincent is the coyote and he's looking for a partner to hunt with. Since he has no one, he uses cab drivers as a means. He attempts to connect with Max and profess his ideals on life, which ultimately changes Max's own outlook on his life.
Add into this cosmic mix of grandeur class support Actors as mentioned previously, like Mark Ruffalo (Music on the Scene where he finds the apartment of the first hit, is so energised, love it.), Javier Bardem, Jada Pinkett Smith & Barry Shabaka Henley and you have a firecracker of furious fast paced fun.

The location is also one of the main attraction of the film aside from the starry casting and legendary directing.
Action sequences are handled nicely also. Superb camera work and editing. They are loud, fast, swift and brutal. The best example of such a scene is the last chase of Collateral.
The direction is class. Michael Mann adds another classic movie to his belt. Here he adds into the mix, elements that made another masterpiece Heat a definitive classic. Overall, he really injects an infusion of life and credibility into the proceedings, giving gritty realism and flair throughout.

Cinematography beautiful. Mann shot the film in HD so that we would be able to see night-time Los Angeles in all its glory. Add a haunting score by James Newton Howard, and you have an atmosphere that is gritty, urban, and most of all, realistic.


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Brilliant

Posted : 16 years, 6 months ago on 12 October 2007 07:03

It surprised me, I thought it would be pretty bad but I watched it anyway. And you know what? I'm gonna give it 4.5 stars. Pretty good eh?
..Tom Cruise and Jamie Foxx together in this exciting thriller just makes it even more exciting. Its sort of a strange, but to me original story that I really should see again sometime!


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