A factory worker must protect his son during the 1992 L.A. uprising after the Rodney King verdict.A factory worker must protect his son during the 1992 L.A. uprising after the Rodney King verdict.A factory worker must protect his son during the 1992 L.A. uprising after the Rodney King verdict.
Christopher Ammanuel
- Antoine Bey
- (as Christopher A'mmanuel)
Featured review
Israeli director Ariel Vromen brings us a thriller with plenty of drama in a film that has some very intense moments, but they are not enough to give us a much more well-rounded film as we sometimes hoped for.
The script written by Sascha Penn manages to have moments of social drama that really manage to be a high point in the film and perhaps largely compensate for the weaker moments that the film experiences once it leans exclusively towards action that fails to reach a level that manages to give you the intensity of those more ghetto moments that feel precisely well done.
An efficient cast that gives us the posthumous appearance of the beloved Ray Liotta and a Scott Eastwood alongside Tyrese Gibson, who already know how to give us action on screen and continue to deliver in those moments when they provide it.
We find ourselves as spectators in a story where there are shootouts, a car chase, some heroism and some hard life lessons that invite us to have a good film that has its pleasant moments and those moments allow the film in general to come out acceptable and perhaps appreciated for its parts of social drama that really invite reflection.
Afterward we are left with a mixture of sensations where the film could have been much more complete than what we ended up receiving, which ends up deflating towards its final part, which leaves us with the bitter feeling that it had much more to give us.
The script written by Sascha Penn manages to have moments of social drama that really manage to be a high point in the film and perhaps largely compensate for the weaker moments that the film experiences once it leans exclusively towards action that fails to reach a level that manages to give you the intensity of those more ghetto moments that feel precisely well done.
An efficient cast that gives us the posthumous appearance of the beloved Ray Liotta and a Scott Eastwood alongside Tyrese Gibson, who already know how to give us action on screen and continue to deliver in those moments when they provide it.
We find ourselves as spectators in a story where there are shootouts, a car chase, some heroism and some hard life lessons that invite us to have a good film that has its pleasant moments and those moments allow the film in general to come out acceptable and perhaps appreciated for its parts of social drama that really invite reflection.
Afterward we are left with a mixture of sensations where the film could have been much more complete than what we ended up receiving, which ends up deflating towards its final part, which leaves us with the bitter feeling that it had much more to give us.
- saolivaresm
- Sep 19, 2024
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe last movie Ray Liotta filmed, and the last to be released in theaters. Liotta had completed filming all his scenes before his death in May 2022.
- GoofsMercer is on parole for a felony conviction but is working at a secure precious metals facility. That isn't realistic at all, nor is the way that the security guard claims to be in charge of hiring, saying that he is giving people who deserve one a second chance.
- Quotes
Mercer Bey: You know what scares me about you? I don't want you to grow up to be like me.
- How long is 1992?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $2,906,073
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $1,418,905
- Sep 1, 2024
- Gross worldwide
- $2,943,477
- Runtime1 hour 37 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39:1
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