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U.S. Marshal Sam Gerard is accompanying a planeload of convicts from Chicago to New York. The plane crashes spectacularly, and Mark Sheridan escapes. But when Diplomatic Security Agent John Royce is assigned to help Gerard recapture Sheridan, it becomes clear that Sheridan is more than just another murderer.
U.S. Marshal Samuel Gerard and his team of Marshals are assigned to track down Sheridan, who has been accused of a double-murder.
Yes, you have read correctly. This movie is my number 180 movie. It is definitely not as good or as original as The Fugitive, but it is an action movie, that has everything an action movie is supposed to have. It has action, a bit of humour, not bad acting actors, and it is thrilling. If you like The Fugitive , you will probably like this one, too, but not as much as The Fugitive. In The Fugitive the actors are way better and it is a more original movie. U.S. Marshals is a sequel, so you should not expect something great. I rated this movie 8/10.
This is a sequel to the 1993 flick, The Fugitive, and, despite decent performances by Tommy Lee Jones and Wesley Snipes (Irene Jacob, a very talented French actress, who is also a babe of biblical proportions, appears much too infrequently), was far inferior to its predecessor. It was a suspense movie without the suspense (anyone who doesn't know how it's going to end before it starts should be watching Scooby Doo).
The trick in this type of movie is to generate suspense anyway, and I found U.S. Marshals sorely lacking. The dialog was sappy, the plot "twists" were entirely predictable and the climax was, well...not all that climatic. There were too many lulls in the action (the lack thereof saved the first film) and the story was WAY too derivative of its predecessor.
You'd be better off watching The Fugitive again.
The action sequences were often nail-biters, the lead characters were well-developed, and the dialogue was intelligent.
There were never two Taurus guns in play; there was only ever one, Royce's. In an attempt to ensure no one would realize that the gun used to shoot Newman was his gun, Royce filed off the serial number and presented it as evidence, however it is this very precaution which ultimately causes his failure, as it is when Gerard sees the filed off number that he realizes there was only ever one Taurus.
Some fans have speculated that perhaps Gerard didn't realize Royce got his gun back in the swamp, thinking that he only retook possession of it in the nursing home. However, this cannot be so, as if it were, Royce would not need to file off the serial number, as everyone would know that it was his gun that was used to shoot Newman, as Sheridan had apparently taken it from him.
The IMFDb has plenty of information on this subject, and some excellent stills from the film; go here for more information. The conspiracy which Sheridan is attempting to unravel concerns the selling of state secrets to the Chinese (represented by Xian Chen). The two men behind the conspiracy are Frank Burrows (Rick Snyder) and John Royce. When delivering the documents to Chen, Royce and Burrows use Sheridan as their bag man, although he is unaware what he is delivering and where his orders are coming from. Barrows' superior however, Bertram Lamb (Patrick Malahide), is aware of the fact that someone on the inside is involved, so he sends two agents to intercept the sale. These two agents are killed by Sheridan, who flees the city, changing his name and getting a job as a tow truck driver. After the death of the agents, Royce and Barrows decide to frame Sheridan for the whole thing. They plant his fingerprints at the murder scene (despite the fact that he was wearing gloves for the entire time), and once he is in police custody, they (or perhaps their Chinese co-conspirators) pay off an airport worker to give the gun to an assassin on the plane. When Sheridan escapes however, Royce is assigned by Barrows to Gerard's team, presumably to ensure that Sheridan never gets the opportunity to talk, which is why he tries to kill him several times throughout the film. The R1 US Special Edition DVD released by Warner Bros Home Entertainment in 1998, contains the following special features:
• Scene-specific audio commentary with director Stuart Baird (it is worth noting in relation to Baird's commentary that the sound mix is extremely poor, with the sounds of the movie being almost at the same volume as Baird's commentary, making it extremely difficult to hear what he is saying in places. Additionally, the back of the box inaccurately advertises the commentary as feature length).
• Trailers for The Fugitive (1993), U.S. Marshals (1998), Cahill U.S. Marshal (1973) and Wyatt Earp (1994)
• 3 U.S. Marshals TV Spots
• Cast & Crew Biographies and Filmographies
• Production Notes (10 pages)
• U.S. Marshals: Justice Under the Star (1998); an 11-minute featurette looking at the history and activities of the real U.S. Marshals
• "Anatomy of a Plane Crash" (9 featurettes looking at various aspects of the plane crash scene; "The Crash: A Five-Act Play", "Model Airplanes", "Exterior Sets", "Interior Sets", "Landing Location", "Escape Under Water", "Crash Research", "Miniature Road" and "Crash for Crash: U.S. Marshals vs. The Fugitive")
• The R2 UK DVD, released by Warner Bros. Home Entertainment (UK) in 1999, contains the "Anatomy of a Plane Crash" featurette and the Production Notes, but it loses everything else. Yes. The US edition released by Warner Bros. Home Entertainment in 2012, is region free, and contains the exact same special features as its DVD counterpart. a5c7b9f00b
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