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Cliffhanger (Collector's Edition) by Renny Harlin
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DVD detailsActor: Janine Turner, John Lithgow, Michael Rooker, Rex Linn, Sylvester Stallone Director: Renny Harlin Brand: STALLONE,SYLVESTER Writer: Sylvester Stallone Producer: Alan Marshall Producer: David Rotman Producer: Gene Patrick Hines Producer: James R. Zatolokin Writer: John Long Writer: Michael France DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Unknown), Dolby Digital 5.1; English (Subtitled); Portuguese (Subtitled) Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, NTSC, Special Edition, Subtitled, Widescreen Picture Format: 2.35:1 Running Time: 112 minutes Published: 2000-06-01 DVD Release Date: 2000-06-13 Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
DVD Reviews of Cliffhanger (Collector's Edition)DVD Review: Flaws aplenty...but the action is so solid that it makes this film well worth a look! Summary: 4 Stars
It's been a dozen or more years since I last saw CLIFFHANGER, but on a whim the other night, I took a new look at it. Boy, times have sure changed!
This exciting action-adventure was made before backgrounds could be computer generated. I remember that when it came out, it seemed fresh, gritty and realistic. Now it is painfully easy to see how many of the scenes are played against fake backgrounds made of Styrofoam, or worse yet, against blue screens. When characters are flying in helicopters, we see that the landscapes outside the open doors are really just movies of mountains going by. And yes, that is more distracting than I care to admit...I've become spoiled by the far more seamless effects that are possible today. Chances are, you will be too.
But this does not make CLIFFHANGER a bad movie. It's such a clear, simple story that it still works tremendously well. In a nutshell...some bad-guys (led by John Lithgow...more on him later) cause a plan full of money to crash into a mountain range. They go to recover the money and essentially force one "search and rescue" kind of guy (Michael Rooker) to track their money for them. They are followed by Rooker's colleague (played by Sylvester Stallone), who knows that once these guys have their money, they will kill Rooker. Stallone works to thwart their plans by killing the bad guys off one by one.
It's a simple enough story, but what elevates it is the enormously successful opening sequence of the film. We see Rooker and his girlfriend have climbed a mountain and are now kind of stuck on their high precipice. While Rooker is an experienced climber, his girlfriend is not out of her league. So these two need a little rescuing of their own. A helicopter with Stallone, HIS girlfriend (Janine Turner) and their boss (Ralph Waite) lands on a mountain-top across from them, and a robe is passed between the two spots. Rooker easily slides across the space, not fearful of the mile-long plunge below him. But his girlfriend is understandably fearful, and Stallone persuades her to try the crossing. She gets halfway across and then has trouble with her gear. She is moments from death...so Stallone comes after her, and in a heartpounding, heartbreaking few moments, he is unable to save her...and she falls to her death.
In five minutes, we have established the main "good" guys, gotten us all well and truly to the edge of our seats, and created a dynamic between the two men that will haunt much of the rest of the film. Stallone blames himself (and Rooker blames Stallone) for the death...even when we know that this woman had no business being up where she was, except that Rooker wanted to show off.
The film features many outstanding rock and mountain climbing sequences...and lots of snow. No one ever seems to suffer from the cold...but other than that, it's a blunt, brutal, fast-paced film. Each encounter between the good guys and bad guys is a little, exciting set-piece of its own. The bad guys are a very typical cast-of-characters...frankly, they are taken almost directly from DIE HARD...a film which obviously greatly inspired CLIFFHANGER. Stallone is like Bruce Willis' John McClane...capable of absorbing so much damage and still bouncing back. However, Stallone is actually amazingly convincing in the role, both physically and as an actor. He looks like a guy who could actually pull of the things he does...yet he plays it as a man unaccustomed to brutality. He does what he does to save himself and his estranged friend. As the movie progresses, he clearly comes to relish his role as "avenger"...particularly after Lithgow and his crew pull a particularly sneaky stunt on Ralph Waite.
The DIE HARD comparisons continue with Lithgow's performance. He is clearly modeled on Alan Rickman's Hans Gruber from that film...and unfortunately, he comes across as nearly laughable. His performance is so over-the-top and his accent so hard to pinpoint that Lithgow falls short of being a criminal mastermind, but mostly comes off as a petulant little boy. A psychopathic little boy, to be sure, but he doesn't quite generate the chills he is clearly meant to. I often like Lithgow...but sometimes his oddness and acting-style do NOT serve the movie. Such is the case here.
Rooker is perfectly fine in his role, and he gets a couple of good fight scenes in himself. As with Stallone, he's also believable as a mountain climber. He's also a noble guy, and we really empathize with him throughout. Janine Turner, popular at the time for "Northern Exposure", looks convincing too with her short hair...but is really given little to do. Carolyn Goodall, as Lithgow's girlfriend, plays the villainous role more convincingly than Lithgow. Ralph Waite is always a pleasure to see...he radiates warmth and kindness.
But director Renny Harlin stages the action sequences so well, and Stallone gives one of his three or four best performances...and that's what makes the film hold up today. The effects are "old school," but the solid filmmaking overcomes this. (A few years ago, VERTICAL LIMIT, a similar movie with far superior effects came out. It sure looked great...but it totally missed the boat on creating genuine excitement.) I think today's audience might have a hard time accepting the cheese-factor of CLIFFHANGER...although if anyone can get through the opening scene without breaking a sweat, I'd be surprised. So, despite its flaws, I'm very glad I went back and took another look at this minor action classic.
More Cliffhanger (Collector's Edition) reviews: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Description of Cliffhanger (Collector's Edition)A mountain climber who has lost his nerve finds himself on a rescue mission involving millions of stolen Treasury dollars and ruthless criminals. Genre: Feature Film-Action/Adventure Rating: R Release Date: 2-MAY-2006 Media Type: DVD Cliffhanger was a 1994 comeback of sorts for action hero Sylvester Stallone, this time thanks to director Renny Harlin (Die Hard 2 and Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master) and some spectacularly rugged and vertigo-inducing high-mountain terrain. The opening sequence alone delivers what the title promises, and there's a doozy of an airplane stunt that was later reprised, with modifications, in Air Force One. Stallone, looking as tough and craggy as the mountains themselves, is a rescue climber who finds himself going after a gang of crooks (headed by John Lithgow in his bad-guy mode) who've hijacked a U.S. Treasury plane and crash landed in the Rockies (played by the Italian Dolomites) with millions of bucks. --Jim Emerson
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