An air marshal springs into action during a transatlantic flight after receiving a series of text messages demanding $150 million into an off-shore account, or someone will die every 20 minutes. The alcoholic and discredited air marshal Bill Marks is a former cop that still grieves the death of his eight year-old daughter that died of leukemia. Bill is assigned to a flight from New York to London and the passenger Jen Summers sits on his side in the first-class. When the plane is crossing the Atlantic Ocean, Bill receives text messages telling him that one passenger will die every twenty minutes unless the TSA air flight company transfers 150 million dollars to an offshore account. Bill contacts his superior that does not believe in his words. Further they discover that the bank account is in the name of Bill. Now Bill has to find the terrorist with only the support of Jen and the flight attendant Nancy and soon he finds a bomb on board. But the TSA representative believes that Bill is the terrorist. Will he succeed in saving the passengers lives? They took his daughter, they took his wife, they took his wolves, they took his memory, oh wait…wrong movies. <br/><br/>Anyway, this time they took his plane and he's not going down with out a fight. Liam Neeson returns with another awesome thriller with literally non-stop suspense, tension, paranoia, and thrills that might make you think twice about buying another plane ticket. The movie contains awesome long takes that intensifies the jolting suspense and heart stopping tension. Yes, Neeson plays a character similar to other roles he's done since Taken, but he's a bad ass. Yes, it does have similarities to Passenger 57 however, it's filled with clever twists and turns that you won't see coming. Yeah, it's that great along with some pulse pounding action. If you're a fan of the thriller genre then this movie is the best one we have so far this year. Check it out. Bill Marks, a former cop dealing with his daughter's death by drinking, is now a federal air marshal. While on a flight from New York to London, Marks gets a text telling him that unless 150 million dollars is transferred to an offshore account, someone will die every 20 minutes. Can he find the terrorist in time and save everyone? Non Stop is another brilliant Liam Neeson movie that never stops on making you guess of who wants to shut down the plane but also the acting and the suspense gets better and better by the actual minute to be honest. (10/10) A nifty lift-off and a tense first hour lead us, disappointingly, to a very bumpy landing. While Neeson and co. do their best, the script just doesn’t deliver where it really matters.
Sawjust replied
376 weeks ago