
This is no different and although it is quite goofy at times, has eye-rolling one-liners and incredibly short clocking in at only ~75-minutes (sans opening and end credits), it’s still a fun little flick that reminded you why Wesley Snipes was such a star back in then.

Passenger 57 cast movie#
Quick Hit Review: Passenger 57 is the typical 1990s action flick where every studio attempted to ride the coattails of the surprise 1988 hit, Die Hard so every other movie was Die Hard on a/in a *insert mode of transportation*. Cutter and Rane of course spar with some nifty 90s one-liners, including the most quoted, “Always bet on black.”
Passenger 57 cast skin#
You can guess the rest: Rane takes over the plane while Cutter jumps into action to save the passengers, his own skin and a potential love interest in Marti Slayton (ALEX DATCHER), the flight attendant Cutter scolded earlier for stopping the fake hijacking. Meanwhile, and unbeknownst to the airline or Cutter, the FBI is transporting notorious terrorist, responsible for at least four bombings, Charles Rane (BRUCE PAYNE) headed for, you guessed it, good Los Angeles! As you can guess, Rane has something up his sleeve and this includes a new stewardess (ELIZABETH HURLEY), a couple planted thugs and a luggage handler (MARC MACAULAY) who manages to bring aboard numerous weaponry in yet another example of a pre-9/11 world, oh heck, I’d be hard-pressed to think this could have happened in the 90s either. It’s an opportunity to make some money and hopefully move on from his wife’s tragic murder. where he’s to meet for the airline company’s annual meeting. At first Cutter is reluctant to take the job but ultimately says yes and is put on a plane for L.A. I had to smirk at this as today there’s no doubt what should be done…įollowing the exercise, Cutter gets a visit from old pal Sly Delvecchio (TOM SIZEMORE) with an offer for the Chief of Security. In one of the time capsules for a pre-9/11 world, we had a scene in which a flight attendant manages to get the gun away from Cutter and disarmed with the help of a passenger to which Cutter scolds her and says she should always follow the terrorist’s orders. Plot Outline: John Cutter (WESLEY SNIPES) is an ex-cop – quit because he blamed himself for the merciless death of his wife during a botched store robbery – now working for an airline company teaching what to do if a terrorist were to hijack the plane. Theatrical Release Date: November 6, 1992Īudio: English (DTS-HD MA 5.1), French (Dolby Digital 5.1), Spanish (Dolby Digital 5.1)


Writer(s): Stewart Haffill and Dan Gordon (story), David Loughery and Dan Gordon (screenplay)Ĭast: Wesley Snipes, Bruce Payne, Tom Sizemore, Alex Datcher, Bruce Greenwood, Elizabeth Hurley But outside of a couple of lines, it’s fairly forgettable. Passenger 57 is a silly action film typical of the 1990s era but between Wesley Snipes kick-ass nature and Bruce Payne’s delightfully ham-filled villainous performance, it makes for at least a fun viewing even if it doesn’t offer anything new to the genre.
