I had no idea what Unstoppable was about when I went to see it. My mother told me it had Denzel Washington and the guy from Star Trek (Chris Pine) and that it was good — and I took her word for it.
Well, my mother told me the truth, because Unstoppable was awesome.
When I heard that it was called Unstoppable and that it had Denzel in it, I imagined a sequel to Man on Fire and that Denzel would be, um, “unstoppable” in it. But when the film started and I saw that it was about trains, I almost yawned, fearing that I would get something closer to The Taking of Pelham 123 (please, no more!).
Fortunately, Unstoppable was nothing like either film. “Unstoppable” is a reference to a runaway train, and Denzel and Chris Pine are the two ordinary railway workers who are caught up in the mayhem. It also has a very “regular” looking Rosario Dawson and a dickish Kevin Dunn (the dad from the Transformers movies), and is directed by Tony Scott, who, coincidentally, directed both Man on Fire and The Taking of Pelham 123.
I don’t want to give away too much, but what I will say is that Unstoppable is probably the best Tony Scott film since Enemy of the State. It’s extremely solid from a technical perspective, with a strong plot anchored by its two likable stars, seamless special effects and an unlikely sense of realism for a popcorn movie.
But what I loved most about it was the the pace, which is absolutely frenetic. After an initial build-up, the film races along at break-neck speed right down to the very end, with one nerve-wracking event after another. Just when you thought things would be okay, another incident comes and “derails” (pardon the pun) everything.