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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Tense, Fast Paced Thriller
Who would expect a screenplay/story by Carl Ellsworth ('Buffy the Vampire Slayer') directed by horror master Wes Craven to be an intelligent thriller? Yet RED EYE is precisely that. This a tight conversational duet for two actors with accompaniment that slips up on the viewer so surely that the terrifying climax is somewhat of a relief from the preceding tension...
Published on January 17, 2006 by Grady Harp

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11 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars THIS FLIGHT IS GROUNDED; TAKE THE BUS!

You know a movie is in trouble - big trouble - when the very premise that it is built upon is logically flawed. From the moment the thinking viewer realizes that there is no real justification for anything that is happening on the screen, the drama is gone; the tension is immediately released like the rushing of air through a pierced balloon, and from that moment...
Published on September 17, 2006 by STEPHEN T. McCARTHY


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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Tense, Fast Paced Thriller, January 17, 2006
By 
This review is from: Red Eye (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
Who would expect a screenplay/story by Carl Ellsworth ('Buffy the Vampire Slayer') directed by horror master Wes Craven to be an intelligent thriller? Yet RED EYE is precisely that. This a tight conversational duet for two actors with accompaniment that slips up on the viewer so surely that the terrifying climax is somewhat of a relief from the preceding tension.

Rachael McAdams as the heroine proves she can sustain a fine character development from first appearance through the suspense to the last screen frame. Likewise, Cillian Murphy uses not only his talent as an actor but also his clear blue-eyed innocence to foreshadow the evil underneath. Since the majority of the film takes place aboard an airplane in flight (the red eye from Texas to Miami), the tension for the story rests heavily with these two actors. They succeed in every way, as does Craven in turning his directorial skills to intellectual rather than physical terror. Well done! Grady Harp, January 06
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61 of 81 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars 3 1/2 star thriller from director Wes Craven, August 22, 2005
By 
thornhillatthemovies.com (Venice, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
Lisa (Rachel McAdams, "Wedding Crashers", "The Notebook"), the manager of the Lux Atlantic hotel in Miami, is very late for her plane in Dallas. Shaking the rain off, she stands in line at the airport terminal and meets Jackson (Cillian Murphy, "Batman Begins", "28 Days Later"). Jackson calms a tense situation with another passenger and then introduces himself, telling Lisa that he will be in the bar, waiting for the plane, if she cares to join him. She politely begs off but does end up having a drink with him. As Lisa boards the plane, she finds that she is sitting next to Jackson. The plane takes off and Lisa becomes nervous, because she hates to fly prompting Jackson to try to calm her, by getting her to talk about her dad, Joe (Brian Cox). After the plane has lifted through the turbulence, he reveals that he knows a lot more about Lisa than he should and he simply needs Lisa to make a phone call. If she does, her dad will not be harmed by the man sitting outside of his house.

"Red Eye" directed by Wes Craven ("Cursed", the "Scream" films, "Nightmare Before Elm Street") is a very good example of the thriller genre.

I think the first trailer released for this film is a brilliant piece of marketing. The trailer paints the film as a nice, romantic drama featuring a chance meeting between Lisa and Jackson. They meet in the airport, they have a snack together, then, lo and behold, they find they are sitting next to each other. The flight will be a pleasant affair. Just as the trailer has convinced you of this, a title card appears announcing "A Film by Wes Craven", in red lettering, and the music becomes ominous. The trailer is so brilliant, because it so completely convinced me that the film would be a romantic drama before switching gears, that my hopes were raised for this film.

"Red Eye" has a lot going for it. Not the least of its attributes is that the film is very brisk and clocks in at about 85 minutes long. This provides Craven with little room for lingering on anything and he keeps things moving. The subplot, which begins before we even meet Lisa, is introduced with a series of brief shots depicting the machinations of a group who need Lisa's help. These shots are quick, informative and interesting. Then the main story kicks in and we leave this group for a while.

When we meet Lisa, you might think the film would seem to slow down a little, but upon reflection, I realized that every scene has at least two purposes in the plot. The initial encounter between Lisa and Jackson, in line at the ticket counter, would seem to serve only one purpose, to introduce the two characters to one another. Later in the film, one of the characters involved makes a brief reappearance. In fact, many of the minor characters are introduced and we learn a little bit about their characters. In some way or fashion, they will all have another moment or two to either help or complicate the journey of Lisa and Jackson.

Because all of these minor characters are given a `history', the film rises above the rest of the pack. Most films don't even bother with minor characters, using them simply as window dressing. In "Red Eye", they become a part of the story. An older flight attendant complains to her co-worker about a broken coffee pot and the company stealing her pension from her. A little girl is flying alone for the first time. An elderly woman strikes up a conversation with Lisa about the Dr. Phil book her father loaned her. A woman flirts insistently with Jackson asking for his help with her bag. All of this may seem like busy work, but Craven and the writers, Carl Ellsworth and Dan Foos tie it all back to the plot and make them a part of the story. Because of this level of detail, the film is, ultimately, stronger.

The relationship between Lisa and Jackson is intriguing and interesting to watch. Lisa isn't the normal helpless heroine. She reveals that she may be a little tougher than Jackson hoped and ultimately becomes a more interesting adversary to him. Jackson is also quietly menacing, quick to smile to someone on the plane who may have noticed them, to assuage their concerns, to make them invisible again. Speaking in low tones, he makes it clear that he will carry out his threats.

The movie becomes a bit more standard after the plane lands in Miami. Part of the reason the film works is that the two characters are in the middle of a sea of people in a confined airplane chamber. Once the plane lands, their world expands and there are many other influences upon each of their actions. The finale is pretty standard for thrillers and less than spectacular, dragging the rest of the film down. But thankfully, this section is also very briskly paced and over quickly.

"Red Eye" suffers from a lackluster final 10 minutes, but it is still far above average for a film in this genre. Definitely worth a bargain matinee.
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11 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars THIS FLIGHT IS GROUNDED; TAKE THE BUS!, September 17, 2006
By 
STEPHEN T. McCARTHY (a Mensa-donkey in Phoenix, Airheadzona.) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Red Eye (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)

You know a movie is in trouble - big trouble - when the very premise that it is built upon is logically flawed. From the moment the thinking viewer realizes that there is no real justification for anything that is happening on the screen, the drama is gone; the tension is immediately released like the rushing of air through a pierced balloon, and from that moment on, ya...just...don't...care. You can't pretend that any of the action is really happening because you know that in truth it wouldn't be.

The art of moviemaking is meant to temporarily suspend a viewer's reality and substitute an alternate scenario; to draw him or her into a foreign, but plausible situation that will provide a kind of "voyeuristic" thrill. There's a lot more flexibility and less demand on a filmmaker who is presenting a story that is "preposterous" to begin with - the audience comes in without the expectation that anything will conform to what is considered a standard understanding of the real world. But when the director is trying to create drama that revolves around a reasonably valid potentiality, the premise had darn sure better be cogent. One cannot build a fortress in the sky and expect anyone to believe in it. There must be a sound foundation for it. And that's the first - and most egregious - of the many crimes committed by RED EYE. The problem is that this "flight" never even takes off because it wasn't on solid ground to begin with.

Here's the setup: A hotel manager is "abducted" on an airplane, and unless she agrees to call and use her authority to have the director of America's Homeland Security department and his family moved to a suite other than the one they ordinarily occupy when visiting the hotel, an assassin is going to do his nasty work on her unsuspecting dad. The team of (supposedly) highly professional hitmen behind this complex plan - who arranged the spying on this hotel manager to learn her habits and background and who are behind her "skyjacking" - want the Homeland Security director moved so they can fire a missile through his window and blow him to pieces. The movie becomes a game of cat-and-mouse between the hotel manager and her abductor.

Now here are some obvious questions: How did the team of killers know in advance that the room they were targeting would be vacant at the time of the director's arrival? Why did they need the director in THAT room? Did the suite he normally occupied not have any windows? I've never been in a hotel room without windows. Have you? Why go to all this trouble? Was this sophisticated assassination squad not capable of hiding itself on some nearby rooftop long before the director's arrival and taking him out with that missile the moment he and his family emerged from their limousine at the hotel? In other words, the whole abduction scenario was unnecessary, and the moment you realize that fact the entire movie becomes unreal. I've only gotten started here; there are several other reasons RED EYE is a bad movie. Should you spend your time and money on this? I've already answered that. The real question that needs to be asked is:

What's the difference between dog poop and RED EYE?

And the answer is:

Thirty thousand feet.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Takes off and nosedives, March 11, 2011
This review is from: Red Eye (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
If ever an assassin, where would be the most discreet
place to carry out your diabolical plan? Why, in the
coach section of a major airline of course! It's a
no-brainer really; an ideal location where your threats,
headbutts and menacing aisle stares will go completely
unnoticed amid post 911 passengers.

These terrorists are bold however, and don't give a
second thought to firing off a rocket launcher in broad
daylight, blatantly surveilling your lavish home,
assaulting your father and then clumsily chasing your
daughter around with a 12" knife.

But thank God for the TSA and their intrusive body
scanners with saved images and pat-downs though,
helping to at least minimize these sly, ubiquitous
airport terrorists.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Middle of the road, December 3, 2006
By 
A. Vegan (Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Red Eye (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
I wanted to like this. I generally love Wes Craven. I generally love suspense. And while this was "an action packed thrill ride". It was a very flawed movie.
I did enjoy it. It's not by any means unwatchable, but it is implausible to the point where I couldn't stop laughing at the insane twists by the end of the film. Unfortunately, since the first 2/3 or so of the film were set up so well - very gritty, realistic, suspenseful, and very evocative of helplessness, that made the last part of the movie that much stupider. Suddenly we've gone from a creditable Hitchcock pastiche to a Warner Brothers cartoon. If it had been goofy all the way through, it would have been better than switching styles in mid-stream.

Also, while I like Wes Craven, he's got some serious issues - for one thing, the main two characters look AND ACT almost exactly like Sydney and Billy from Scream, and the dichotomy (she good/he bad) is identical, it just becomes clear a lot earlier. Wes needs to play with his own stereotypes and make a BAD brunette GIRL for a change.

RED EYE is the kind of movie that fails, but has enough talent and good charm. It tries hard with very little and in the end will probably be considered one the most riveting and yet forgettable movies of 2005.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A 'Hollywood formula' movie with a little bit of originality thrown in..., January 31, 2006
By 
Todd Bovair (Wynantskill, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Red Eye (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
Red Eye is pretty much a formula movie. It follows the standard 'thriller/ suspense' formula of heroine facing impossible situation, coming up with a clever way out, and then a showdown with the badguy. The ending in particular is SO formulatic, I guessed EXACTLY what would happen 15 minutes before it happened!!!
There are a few original elements to the film, though. The 'badguy' is not a formula villian, and the heroine is a very able character, not the typical 'scream helplessly' type you see in most horror movies. This helps the film from becoming a total Hollywood thriller stereotype. In addition, Wes Craven does milk some nice suspense out of the fairly cookie-cutter script.
Basically, Red Eye is entertaining as long as you don't expect too much from it. If you just want a fun short (85 minutes) little movie, Red Eye is a good choice.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars ReD eYe, August 30, 2005
A Kid's Review
red eye is so amazing. it's so well put together, and such a good thriller. two totally gorgeous actress n actor star in this pyschological thriller. rachel mcadams plays her pretty damsel in distress part so well, you can't even tell she's acting. cillian murphy is perfect and colder than ice, and when his icy eyes dart around it's so creepy. A+ all the way.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Tense Psychological Thriller, April 23, 2009
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Red Eye (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
SOME SPOILERS INCLUDED.

In this taut suspense-thriller, Murphy plays a charming stranger that our protagonist, Lisa, meets on a Red Eye flight to Miami. Their chemistry is immediate and she finds herself drawn to the attractive guy with the intense blue eyes. The first part of the movie misleads the viewer into letting down their guard and joining in their flirtation.

But their meeting was not happenstance instead it's part of a larger plot involving a political assassination that Murphy's character "Jackson Rippner" (yes, even Jackson is in on the joke) has orchestrated as a "manager" of government overthrows and high profile assassinations.

What follows in the second half is an intense mind game/power struggle between Lisa and her tormentor, all on-board an airplane. This claustrophobic scene plays particularly well and both actors should be commended on their performances. They are so real that the instances of violence really shock. (particularly the knock-out scene)

The last part of the movie amps up the action and pushes our characters into a showdown. While at this point it becomes less realistic, it does offer some fun action including an explosion thrown in for good measure.

While I fully expected Murphy's suave, arrogant character to get the beat-down that he so deserved, I did find the shift from the ultra-controlled, condesending assassin to the less than effective killer to be a bit "off" but I was the only one in my family that noted it so it just must be me. (yeah, yeah, he was stabbed and shot, that will put anyone off their game)

Don't let the PG13 rating put you off.. it's tense. The violence isn't over-the-top gore but it is effective. The film's short running time keeps everything in motion. And I liked Rippner's ambiguous end. Perhaps they had a sequel in mind?

Also, just for fun note Cillian's character (Jackson) states that he never lies.. if that's true then check out the subtle way he side-steps Lisa's question when she asks him if he is a hitman...
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Laughable....yes...suspenseful...EYE don't think so..., April 22, 2006
This review is from: Red Eye (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
This is one of those movies that start off great with the promise of suspense,action,and thrills. It started off pretty good(first 30 minutes or so)and then it gets too boring,unrealistic,and buffonish.
Why oh why was this plot to kill the head of homeland security...does anyone care that much about him?
Since when does the head of homeland security get the Presidential treatment..let alone suite,then travels with this BIG entourage along with his family?? By the way Colby Donaldson from Tvs Survivor plays one of the security agents in the entourage.
Jack (Cillian Murphy)was creepy at first and then turns into a total amatuer making stupid mistakes one after the other.
The movie starts to turn into one of those bad Steven Seagal movies. Nothing spectacular happens on the plane other than Jack making idol threats and roughing up Rachel McAdams character...then HER stabbing him in the windpipe with a pen...what a wimp he was! Then on the DVD box it says it's "1 hour 26 minutes"....WHERE?!?!?! The movie is only 1 hour and 15 minutes what a rip-off!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This movie should have been straight to video and was not worthy of a theatrical release.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Predictable!, April 20, 2006
By 
sara "Sara" (Sacramento, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Red Eye (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
This is one of the most predictable movies I have seen in a long time. It did not play up to it's potential and the previews made it look much better than it actually was. The acting was good, but I wouldn't waste my money with buying this movie.
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