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  1. "Breakdown" is so plain and blunt that much of it is almost nonverbal, like a spectacular action sequence that follows the Jeep into a raging stream. (Some of the film's stunt work is dazzling.) Episodes like this, and like a furious confrontation at the end of the story, work much better than the inevitable explication of the plot.

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  3. I think he was a working trucker who gradually developed the crime on the side with his pals. The stuff that the film leaves to the imagination (what they actually did with his wife, how they kidnapped/killed/buried the others, how they became disgruntled with their incomes/boring lives/hatred for tourists and hatched the idea in the first place) I find so eerie and chilling.

  4. May 2, 1997 · Jeff Taylor (Russell) and his wife Amy (Quinlan) are headed toward a new life in California when their car's engine dies on a remote highway. Amy accepts a ride from a helpful trucker (Walsh) while Jeff waits with the car. But when Jeff shows up at the agreed rendezvous, he finds his wife's not there. The locals aren't talking; the police aren't much help. With no one to turn to, Jeff battles ...

    • (19)
    • Jonathan Mostow
    • R
    • Kurt Russell
  5. May 2, 1997 · May 2, 1997. 4 min read. “Breakdown” is taut, skillful and surgically effective, the story of a man who finds himself trapped in a surrealistic nightmare. The story’s setup is more entertaining than the payoff; as Hitchcock observed, suspense plays better than action. But the film delivers–right up until a final moment I’ll get to later.

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  8. BREAKDOWN (1997) Aspect ratio: 2.39:1. Sound format: Dolby Digital. After their car breaks down in open country, a married couple (Kurt Russell and Kathleen Quinlan) are pitched into mortal danger when Quinlan disappears after accepting help from a sinister trucker (J.T. Walsh).

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