Speed 2: Cruise Control 1997

Rush hour hits the water.

4.592 / 10   1559 vote(s)
PG-13
Action Adventure Thriller

A disgruntled former employee hijacks the Seabourn Legend cruise liner. Set on a fixed course, without any means of communication and at the mercy of the hijacker, it's up to the one cop on vacation, and his soon to be fiancé (hopefully) Annie, to regain control of it before it kills the passengers and causes an environmental disaster. Insurmountable and daunting tasks awaits them on their perilous journey throughout the ship trying to fend off the hijacker and save the passengers.

Release Date 1997-06-13
Runtime 2h 5m
Directors Jan de Bont, Jack N. Green, Dan Olexiewicz, Robert J. Bacon, Denis L. Stewart, Doug Corring, Maggie Murphy, David Hallinan, David Drzewiecki, Alexander Witt, Craig A. Pinckes, Dawn Snyder, Robert Woodruff, Michael Salven, John Elmore, Daniel Ross
Producers Jan de Bont, Mark Gordon, Steve Perry, Michael Peyser, Glenn Salloum, Kim Bromley
Writers Graham Yost, Jan de Bont, Randall McCormick, Jeff Nathanson, Randall McCormick

Keanu Reeves presumably had better things to do than star in this really far-fetched sequel. Sandra Bullock, however, reprises her role as "Annie", this time dating hunky cop "Alex" (Jason Patric). She isn't best pleased when she discovers his career is only marginally less dangerous than her ex (Reeves), so he decides to placate her by going on a luxury cruise. Unfortunately, it's the self same cruise that the belligerent "Geiger" (Willem Dafoe) has decided to wreck as he has quite some grudge with the shipping company. With relative ease, he manages to hijack the controls of the liner and set it on a collision course with a fully laden oil tanker. Can "Alex" and "Annie" thwart this dastardly plan? The story is just preposterous, and the acting talents of Patric would comfortably fit in an already full ashtray. Dafoe offers a reasonable degree of mania with his performance, but Bullock - except for quite a fun scene taking her driving test - takes very much a back seat during most of this rather fanciful yarn. The ending is actually quite exciting for a few moments but ends in a fashion that seems to elicit joy from a solution that I found quite hard to celebrate. Entirely forgettable from start to finish, this, I'm afraid.

CinemaSerf