in Film History 1998 - 2002 |
Ronin (1998) In the film's plot, a group of displaced spies and political agents were brought together in a Montmartre bistro, and then led to a Parisian warehouse where Irish IRA terrorist organizer Deirdre (Natascha McElhone) (and femme fatale) offered to hire them as an international team of specialists (all ex government officials or covert military-mercenary operatives) with one purpose in mind - to ambush a heavily-armed convoy and retrieve a mysterious silver metal briefcase desired by both the Irish and the Russians - contents unknown (the film's obvious Hitchcockian 'McGuffin') - that was handcuffed to its courier. The operatives and organizers were the film's main characters:
They soon learned from Deirdre's rogue operative-handler Seamus O'Rourke (Jonathan Pryce) who was giving orders, that they were competing with members of the Russian mafia for the steel case. The first chase sequence began with an ambush and fierce gun-battle in Nice, France, orchestrated by Sam and Vincent, in order to intercept the steel briefcase in a car within a convoy. The chase after the convoy mainly involved a 1996 Audi S8 (driven by Larry) and a 1995 Citroen XM (the target car), while a Mercedes Benz 450SEL (Sam and Vincent) was a backup car following them. Out of town, cars careened on a twisting and winding Cote d'Azur coast-side road along the French Riviera. One of the convoy's escort cars was blown up with a rocket-launcher. When two of the cars were diverted off the main road due to construction, the chase continued on a dirt road, and then returned to the narrow streets of the town of Nice, and plowed through an open market. The chase ended when the cars crashed and plowed through a harbor/waterfront restaurant where diners were eating streetside, and a major gunbattle ensued, as Gregor stole the case. After the successful ambush of the convoy near Nice, France, the double-crossing Gregor betrayed the team by absconding with the case (and swapping it with a silver spray-painted, replicated duplicate containing a bomb). He then attempted to negotiate with Russian thugs led by Mikhi (Féodor Atkine) to purchase and acquire the case. During a tense standoff between the team and Gregor with the Russians, Sam was seriously wounded in the abdomen by a ricocheted bullet, and Gregor was captured by Seamus with Deirdre. Later in the film, there was another thrilling 9 minute high-speed car chase (the second major high-speed chase of the film) between a blue 1996 Peugeot 406 driven by Sam (with Vincent) who were chasing a black 1991 BMW M5, driven by Deirdre (with Seamus in the back seat and Gregor in the front seat) in a high-speed pursuit through Parisian streets and a metro tunnel under the Seine River and continuing into wrong-way, heavy freeway traffic, causing crashes and pileups. They were also pursued by French police in Citroen ZXs. The car chase ended when the tires on Deirdre's car were shot at, causing it to upend, roll and crash, careen off the end of an uncompleted highway, and burst into flames. Gregor escaped with the case, while Seamus and Deirdre were rescued from the flaming car. The film concluded with the steel case exchanging hands multiple times, and the deaths of many individuals including the double-crossing Gregor, Russian thug Mikhi (Féodor Atkine), Mikhi's Russian girlfriend Natacha Kirilova (Katarina Witt), and Seamus O'Rourke. The contents of the case were never revealed. In the final scene, Sam and Vincent were in the same Montmartre bistro from the film's opening, where Sam's mind was on whether Deirdre would walk through the door to him or not, rather than listening to a BBC radio report that the death of Irish rogue terrorist operative Seamus meant stability and peace between the Sinn Féin and the British. Vincent cautioned his friend: "She will not be coming back here." When Vincent asked about the contents of the case, Sam replied: "I don't remember." In voice-over, Vincent had learned a lesson: ("No questions. No answers. That's the business we're in. You accept it and move on. Maybe that's lesson number three"). |
(l to r): Sam and Vincent Pursuing a Convoy Escort Car Along the French Riviera Outside of Nice Escort Car Blown Up with Rocket-Launcher Pursuit Diverted onto Dirt Road Back into the Narrow Streets of Nice Courier in Back of Target Car Handcuffed to the Steel-Metal Briefcase End of Nice Chase - Crash In Front of Harbor-Side Restaurant Gregor Stealing the Metal Case After the Nice Chase Russian Mikhi (Féodor Atkine) Negotiating to Purchase Case from Gregor Gregor Double-Crossed and Shot In Forehead by Mikhi's Sniper Final Scene: Vincent and Sam in a Bistro |
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The World is Not Enough (1999) In the pre-title credits sequence, agent James Bond (Pierce Brosnan) pursued shapely but lethal assassin Cigar Girl (Maria Grazia Cucinotta) after she was responsible for the explosive death of wealthy industrialist and oil tycoon Sir Robert King (David Calder) in MI6 headquarters in London, England. He noticed her yacht-speedboat on the nearby Thames River, where she was observing the damage and aiming to kill him with her scoped rifle. He pursued in "Q's" (Desmond Llewelyn) unfinished, rocket-propelled jet boat, and had to evade the larger boat when the pretty sniper fired machine-gun rounds and a bazooka at him. After a lengthy and destructive chase sequence (during which Bond submerged his boat for a dive under a lowered bridge, and also emerged on land and crashed through a wharf-side restaurant as a short-cut), the two ended up at the Millennium Dome, where the Cigar Girl attempted to escape in a hot-air balloon after her boat was torpedoed. Bond sailed through the air and grabbed onto the balloon's safety line as it ascended, while MI6 surrounded them by helicopter, and Bond offered to protect her if she cooperated:
But she refused ("Not from him!"). She decided to suicidally kill herself by blowing up one of the helium gas tanks on the balloon, as Bond lept from the safety line, fell onto the roof of the Dome, and survived although he suffered a dislocated collarbone. |
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Charlie's Angels (2000)
But then they left the track in the stadium and proceeded out onto the streets of Los Angeles (where people and cars scattered - including an airborne surfboard) - leading to a spectacular wreck of a red car and a game of chicken between the race cars on a suspension bridge. |
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Driven (2001) There was a memorable night-time race through city streets -- including the famous shot of the racers driving past a hotel and blowing a sexy blonde passerby's dress up - a semi-referential nod to The Seven Year Itch (1955). |
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The Fast and the Furious
(2001) The film, directed by Rob Cohen, opened with a violent, high-speed, western-style robbery on an interstate highway of a semi-truck by smaller, black supercharged vehicles. And the high-adrenaline finale featured three classic car chases.
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In this exciting action-thriller set in Paris, amnesiac CIA assassin Jason Bourne (Matt Damon) maneuvered away from the CIA and Parisian gendarmes in a red, battered-old vintage Austin Mini Cooper as they closed in on him. Before the chase began, he cautioned his vagabond girlfriend Marie Kreutz (Franka Potente) passenger next to him, the car's owner, that she should leave: "Last chance, Marie," but she remained with him. He negotiated the tiny vehicle through heavy traffic in Paris, through narrow alleyways, down stone steps (before which he warned: "So, we got a bump comin' up"), along sidewalk pavements, and up one-way thoroughfares, causing multiple pile-ups around their car. The extended chase sequence ended when one of the last pursuing police motorcyclists crashed into a Peugeot 405, and they pulled into an underground parking garage. |
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Die
Another Day (2002) The Jaguar was equipped with a Gatling gun centered behind the driver and passenger seats, missiles emerging from the front grille, concealed door-mounted rocket launchers and a trunk full of mortar bombs. It was pitted against the Vanquish, that was manufactured with 9mm machine guns that emerged fom the hood vents, five heat-seeking missiles, two shotguns that operated from the front radiator grille, and an ejector seat. There was also a great hovercraft chase sequence in the film. |