Jeff and Amy Taylor are moving to California and must drive across the country. When they find themselves stranded in the middle of a desert with hardly anyone or anything around, their trip comes to a sudden halt. Amy had taken a ride with a friendly trucker to a small diner to call for help, but after a long time, Jeff becomes worried. He finds that no one in the diner has seen or heard from his wife. When he finds the trucker who gave Amy the ride, the trucker swears he has never seen her. Now Jeff must attempt to find his wife, who has been kidnapped and is being held for ransom. But who can he trust? —IMDb
A director and screenwriter who quickly established himself as a purveyor of action-oriented films that have a deeper psychological investigative base, Jonathan Mostow made his feature debut with 1997’s “Breakdown”. This taut thriller, with Kurt Russell as a man whose wife seems to have vanished in the desert, proved to be a surprise box-office hit. Mostow went on to co-found a production company with former executive Hal Lieberman and signed a four-year deal with Universal.
A graduate of Harvard, Mostow also trained at the American Repertory Company and NYC’s Lee Strasberg Institute. He helmed several short films and documentaries as well as music videos before making his first feature, the direct-to-video release “Beverly Hills Bodysnatchers” (1989) which owed a passing debt to “Re-Animator” (1985) as both dealt with attempts to bring people back from the dead. Mostow landed the Showtime film “Flight of the Black Angel” (1991), about a colonel who trains fighter pilots and… read more
Disfruté enormemente de esta película desbordante de tensión y suspenso. Me quito el sombrero ante el ajustadísimo y conciso guión y la efectiva puesta en escena del señor Jonathan Mostow. Una verdadera lección de cómo hacer cine de género sin contar con un presupuesto especialmente elevado. Para mi gusto, está a la altura de The Hitcher y Duel en cuanto a thrillers de carretera se refiere.