Chases and choreographed fights set to rock music take up most of the running time and the movie is like To Catch a Thief remade by a hack follower of John Woo.
The Transporter (2002)
Runtime: 1 hr 32 mins
Synopsis:
Ex-Special Forces operator Frank Martin lives what seems to be a quiet life along the French Mediterranean, hiring himself out as a mercenary "transporter" who moves goods - human or otherwise - from one place to another. No questions asked.
Carrying out mysterious and sometimes...
Ex-Special Forces operator Frank Martin lives what seems to be a quiet life along the French Mediterranean, hiring himself out as a mercenary "transporter" who moves goods - human or otherwise - from one place to another. No questions asked.
Carrying out mysterious and sometimes dangerous tasks in his tricked-out BMW, Frank adheres to a strict set of rules, which he never breaks. Rule One: Never change the deal. Rule Two: No names - Frank doesn't want to know whom he's working for, or what he's transporting. Rule Three: Never look in the package.
Frank's newest transport seems no different from the countless ones he's done in the past. He has been hired by an American known only as "Wall Street" (see Rule Two) to make a delivery, but when Frank stops along route, he notices his "package" is moving. Violating Rule Three, Frank looks inside the bag, finding its contents to be a beautiful, gagged woman.
Frank's steadfast adherence to his other two rules - which make up his basic code of survival - also quickly falls, hurtling him and his new companion on a road leading to shocking secrets, deadly complications, and the last thing Frank ever expected to come to believe: that rules are made to be broken. -- © 20th Century Fox
Genre: Action/Adventure
Starring: Jason Statham, Shu Qi, Matt Schulze, Francois Berleand, Richard Young
Screenwriter: Luc Besson, Robert Mark Kamen
Producer: Steven Chasman, Luc Besson
Composer: Stanley Clarke
DVD Info
Release:
Jan 4, 2008
DVD Features:
- Region 1
- Keep Case
- Dual Side - Dual Layer
Audio:
- Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
- Dolby Surround - Spanish
Additional Release Material:
- Audio Commentaries - Jason Statham - Star, Luc Besson - Producer
- Disc 1/Side 1: THE TRANSPORTER - Widescreen
- Anamorphic Widescreen - 2.35
Additional Release Material:
- Deleted Scenes (15 Mins; Unrated)
- Disc 1/Side 2: THE TRANSPORTER - Full Frame
- Full Frame - 1.33
Additional Release Material:
- Behind the Scenes - Making of THE TRANSPORTER
- Trailers - Original Theatrical Trailer
Reviews
The acting might be shoddy, the plot nonsense and the dialogue clunky, but the fighting is exquisitely done. Inventive, athletic, fun, stylish and tight, it's everything the rest of the film isn't.
Statham impresses in a movie that is simultaneously the best (the fight scenes) and worst (everything else) action movie of the year. Destined for drunken Friday night rental heaven.
Statham employs an accent that I think is supposed to be an attempt at hardass American but sometimes just lapses into unhidden British.
If Hollywood's looking for a new action hero, then Jason Statham's their man.
'The Transporter isn’t a movie, it’s a catastrophe. Statham looks like a thug and he acts like a tree.'
It's still enjoyably watchable and surprisingly unpredictable, with just enough silliness to keep us laughing at it, not with it.
This gang mastermind, gym body Italian import psycho neck wringer Gianni (Alessandro Gassman, son of famed Vittorio), has concocted likely the most convoluted mass murder scheme ever to hit the theaters.
A ridiculous and confusing mess of overwritten dialogue, nonsensical plot contrivances and impossible, overlong action sequences.
Mais uma vez, Luc Besson (que aqui exerce as funções de produtor e roteirista) ignora a narrativa em prol da ação inconseqüente (e inócua, já que ninguém sequer sangra). O que aconteceu ao responsável pelo ótimo O Profissional?
A serviceable Euro-trash action extravaganza, with a decent sense of humor and plenty of things that go boom — handguns, BMWs and seaside chateaus.
A post-modern take on the "heroic bloodshed" genre that already had one foot in self-satire.
British actor Jason Statham injects The Transporter with a healthy dose of clout, charisma and kickboxing skill.
The Transporter cares about nothing other than entertaining its audience for 90 minutes and taking their minds off the outside world. In this regard, it’s largely a success.
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