Con Express

Con Express is a 2002 direct-to-video action film with a political edge, starring by Arnold Vosloo, Sean Patrick Flanery, and Tim Thomerson. It was written by Paul A. Birkett and Terry Cunningham and directed by Cunningham. The movie uses film footage from Runaway Train (1985) and Cliffhanger (1993).[1]

Con Express
Film Poster
Directed byTerry Cunningham
Produced byVince Ravine
Written byPaul A. Birkett
Terry Cunningham
StarringArnold Vosloo
Sean Patrick Flanery
Tim Thomerson
Music bySean Murray
CinematographyDavid Bridges
Edited byDavid Byron Lloyd
David H. Lloyd
Production
company
Distributed byArtisan Entertainment (DVD, 2002)
20th Century Fox Home Entertainment (DVD, 2003)
CineTel Films (non-USA)
Release date
  • July 23, 2002 (2002-07-23)
(USA)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

US Customs officer Alex Brooks uncovers the plot of Russian arms dealers who planned to smuggle nerve gas into the U.S. In order to avoid publicity, the boss of the small customs station in Alaska decides that the dangerous barrels should be sent to a safe compound by train. Meanwhile, the Russian terrorist responsible for the smuggling, Simeonov, is being delivered via plane to Washington until a group of his henchmen rescue him. Brooks and the Russian agent Natalya are the only people capable of stopping Simeonov and his group of terrorists from keeping control of the train carrying the deadly nerve gas.

Cast

Reception

Comeuppance Reviews gave it three stars and stated: "This is one of the last movies produced by PM entertainment. It looks like they spared no expense (except the stock footage of Runaway Train, 1985). The action scenes are well-shot. The stand-out is the gunfight in the cabin. Flanery, Karven, and Vosloo put in good performances for the silly material."[2]

Robert Pardi from TV Guide gave the film two out of five stars and wrote: "The stunt crew earn their pay in this action-packed exercise in unorthodox heroics. Unfortunately, the excitement is undermined by a screenplay that crosscuts between hopped-up flashbacks to colorless present-day scenes."[3]

References

  1. "Connections". IMDB. Retrieved July 4, 2017.
  2. "Con Express (2002)". Comeuppance Reviews. Retrieved July 4, 2017.
  3. Pardi, Robert. "Con Express". TV Guide. Retrieved July 5, 2017.

See also

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