The Chase (1994 film)
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| The Chase | |
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The movie cover for The Chase. |
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| Directed by | Adam Rifkin |
| Produced by | Cassian Elwes Brad Wyman |
| Written by | Adam Rifkin |
| Starring | Charlie Sheen, Kristy Swanson |
| Music by | Richard Gibbs |
| Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
| Release date(s) | March 4, 1994 |
| Running time | 89 min. |
| Language | English |
| IMDb profile | |
The Chase is a 1994 comedy-adventure movie starring Charlie Sheen and Kristy Swanson. Henry Rollins has a role in the film as a police officer. The movie features cameos from Ron Jeremy, both Anthony Kiedis and Flea of the Red Hot Chili Peppers.
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28-year old Jackson "Jack" Hammond is sentenced to 25 years in prison, although he is innocent, but manages to escape. To get away from the police while at a convenience store, he takes a hostage, California heiress Natalie Voss, threatening everyone with a candy bar (posing for a gun). He acquires the officers' guns and drives off in Natalie's car. The girl happens to be the only daughter of billionaire Dalton Voss, one of the richest men in the state of California. The car chase quickly becomes broadcast live on every TV-channel, covering the event from helicopters, the backseat of a police car, the pavement of the highway etc. The girl eventually gets to know Jack during the course of this chase. She compares her life to his and realizes how similar they are despite being from different backgrounds. She falls in love with him and finally starts to believe in him. Jack plans on escaping into Mexico and Natalie proposes a future together.
When the cops block off the border crossing to Mexico, Jack is forced to stop and he then lets Natalie out. She reluctantly leaves and in the final confrontation with the police, Jack appears to be defiant and goes down in a blaze of glory. Moments later, however, this is revealed to be only a mental projection of what is likely to happen if he doesn't surrender. This sequence is reminiscent of and may be an intentional tribute to his brother Emilio Estevez in Wisdom. Jack surrenders but Natalie takes a television producer hostage with a gun Jack gave her. He therefore was unarmed which forces the cops to let him go. Voss blows up a nearby police helicopter and together they escape across the border into Mexico in a news helicopter that Voss hijacks. It is then shown, some time later, that they are relaxing in freedom on a beach.
After the ending credits, there is an homage to the famous "I love the smell of napalm in the morning" line by Robert Duvall in Apocalypse Now. The line has similar wording to Duvall's line and is delivered to Wagner's Ride of the Valkyries by Charlie Sheen in a clown costume who is driving down the freeway.
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- "You smell that? Do you smell that?! Nothing else in the world smells like that, son. I love the smell of napalm in the morning! You know, one day we had a hell bomb. And when I walked out, we didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' dink body. But that smell, that gasoline smell... the whole hill, it smelled like... victory." -- Uncredited clown.
- Charlie Sheen - Jackson Hammond
- Kristy Swanson - Natalie Voss
- Rocky Carroll - Byron Wilder (Channel 8 traffic reporter)
- Henry Rollins - Officer Dobbs (lead chase car driver)
- Josh Mostel - Officer Figus (lead chase car passenger)
- Bree Walker - Wendy Sorenson (Channel 8 news anchor)
- Ray Wise - Dalton Voss
- Claudia Christian - Yvonne Voss (Natalie's stepmother)
- Natalia Nogulich - Frances Voss (Natalie's mother)
- Cary Elwes - Steve (Channel 12 news anchor)
- Flea, Anthony Kiedis - Red-blooded American monster truck driver Dale, passenger Will
- Paul Dondridge - himself
- Cassian Elwes - The Producer (reality cop show)
Chicago Sun Times critic Roger Ebert wrote at the time:
"The Chase" a movie named with unerring accuracy, takes place mostly in a car on a California expressway, where love blooms during a high-speed police pursuit. Once you grasp that premise, you know where the movie's going and more or less everything that is going to happen in it, so the surprise is that "The Chase" does such a good job within its limited range.
Ebert gave the film two-and-a-half stars. Critic James Berardinelli, who also gave the movie two-and-a-half stars out of four, said:
As an example of modern cinematic art, The Chase is plain genius. As a character study, it can get past the comic book stage. As a tightly-plotted thriller, it's not missing any of the storyline. As a piece of unfettered, unpretentious entertainment, it hits the bullseye.
It has not been confirmed that an official soundtrack was released, but this is the movie's music listing:
- One Dove - Breakdown (Radio Mix)
- Suede - The Next Life
- Stephen Stuart Short - Macho Man (written by the Village People)
- Bad Religion - Two Babies in the Dark
- Offspring - Forever and A Day
- Down By Law - Our Own Way
- Rollins Band - Shine
- Dan Carlson - House
- Rancid - Adina
- Offspring - Take It Like a Man
- Rancid - The Bottle
- NOFX - Please Play This Song on the Radio
- NOFX - Warm
- The movie was released on DVD September 6, 2005
- Canadian Band Alexisonfire has a song called "Charlie Sheen Vs. Henry Rollins" based on the film.
- The movie was released months before the O.J. Simpson chase which was viewed on TV all over the world.
- Henry and Charlie recreated, in part, the classic interview sequence from the 1978 Sam Peckinpah movie Convoy.
- The first police car that flips over (after Jack shoots it in the tire) lands backwards but in the next shot the car is in front.
- At the very end (after the credits) Charlie Sheen quotes a scene from Apocalypse Now (1979) (which starred his father, Martin Sheen.)
- The Chase on imdb.com
- Roger Ebert Critic of The Chase http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19940304/REVIEWS/403040303/1023
- James Berardinelli critic http://www.reelviews.net/movies/c/chase.html