Un agente dell'FBI si imbarca su un aereo pieno di serpenti velenosi rilasciati intenzionalmente per uccidere un testimone che sta volando da Honolulu a Los Angeles a un processo contro un b... Leggi tuttoUn agente dell'FBI si imbarca su un aereo pieno di serpenti velenosi rilasciati intenzionalmente per uccidere un testimone che sta volando da Honolulu a Los Angeles a un processo contro un boss della mafia.Un agente dell'FBI si imbarca su un aereo pieno di serpenti velenosi rilasciati intenzionalmente per uccidere un testimone che sta volando da Honolulu a Los Angeles a un processo contro un boss della mafia.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 4 vittorie e 8 candidature totali
- Big Leroy
- (as Keith [Blackman] Dallas)
Recensioni in evidenza
An amusing and entertaining film with an outlandish premise: a large collection of venomous snakes unleashed at will, committing all kinds of misdeeds and mischief against the initially naive passengers of an airplane. Never more than a catchy title in search of a movie, 'Snakes on a plane', was shaped by internet fans and opportunist New Line studio execs into a critic-proof product. It may be too long, poorly written and indifferently shot, but it has the charismatic Samuel L. Jackson enjoying himself, swearing up a storm and making the most of attractive lines. Without Jackson as a FBI agent accompanying a murder witness on a flight from Hawaii to Los Angeles, this would assuredly have slithered into oblivion. Besides the commotion, confusion and carnage caused by the venomous snakes, another pleasure is finding the large number of supporting actors (with uneven film careers) who are victims of the hideous snakes, including the following: Rachel Blanchard, Flex Alexander, Kenan Thompson, Lin Shaye, Bruce James, Sunny Mabrey, Gerard Plunkett, Terry Chen, Emily Holmes, Tygh Runyan, Elsa Pataky, Taylor Kitsch, Kevin McNulty, David Koechner, Bobby Cannavale, Tom Butler, among others
The motion picture was mediocre but professionally directed by deceased filmmaker David R. Ellis. He had a long career as stunts coordinator, assistant director and finally director. David made the promotion to Stunt Coordinator in 1978 on Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978). Coordinating TV and films all over the world brought him up to the position of 2nd Unit Director on Gorky Park (1983). "Action" movies proceeded to explode along with David's career. Befriending Harrison Ford, two of David's most notable 2nd units were Patriot Games (1992) and Clear and Present Danger (1994). As shown in Filmography, he worked back-to-back until the break from Disney, offering to 1st unit Direct the feature, "Homeward Bound II: Lost in San Francisco" (1996), directorial debut grossed over $100 Million. Completed two features for 1997, Desperate Measures (1998) & Sphere (1998) with Barry Levinson. Directing Box office success such as ¨Cellular¨, ¨Asylum¨, ¨Shark Night¨, ¨Homeward Bound II: Lost in San Francisco¨, ¨Final Destination¨, ¨Final destination 2¨ and ¨Snakes on plane¨. Rating: 5/10. Average but passable. The movie will appeal to Samuel L. Jacson fans.
On the other hand, the audience is hot for Snakes. As stephanie from salon.com says, if you're going to see Snakes, do so now with the packed evening screenings. People throwing rubber snakes, reciting sam's line and making hissing noises throughout makes for theme park ride levels of fun.
The plot on this bad-boy is razor thin with a pathetic, throw-away villain. After witnessing a murder, Sean (Nathan Phillips) is taken into protective custody by the FBI and more specifically, Jackson's Neville Flynn. He has to be flown from Hawaii to LA to testify and blah, blah, blah. Who cares, right? No one, seriously, NO ONE. Our villain, Eddie Kim, is worthless. We get two minutes or so of screen time from him. He's not the villain; the SNAKES are the villains!!!!! The real fireworks start when we GET ON THAT PLANE. You all know what's going to happen, so they don't waste (much) time building up to it. Eventually the snakes (on the plane) are released. People are bitten in hilarious and very painful fashion. Samuel L. Jackson has to control the situation in that bad-ass way that only he can, and he disposes of the snakes in downright hilarious ways (which I won't spoil, you have to see it to believe it). Most of your characters are generally stereotypes and some of the acting is wooden. Most of the characters are very clichéd and stupid as well, and they don't do the most logical things in the situations they are presented. But that's not what you care about. THAT'S NOT IMPORTANT! What is important, is the fact, that there are SNAKES... ON A PLANE! It's cheesy, B-movie fun, and don't let anyone tell you any different. You want to see snakes on a plane, you're going to see snakes on a plane. Period. It also plays homage to some Jackson flicks of old, I'll let you decide which ones, since the scenes are obviously set up in that way. Try to think of other films Jackson has been in with reptiles.
The special effects were PRETTY good; it was obvious when you were looking at a CGI snake or a real snake, that much I can tell you. But it didn't matter. It doesn't take you out of the movie at all. The action is as good as you can expect from people whooping snakes and vice-versa. It was a good thriller, they kept it moving and didn't slow down, and they kept the tension riding high throughout the film. And it's FUNNY. It's funny if you expect it to be cheesy fun, and it is, and I was constantly laughing throughout. Even as snakes (on a plane) are killing people, you're laughing at it. It was just that good.
I don't know what else I can say about this, except that if you have the chance, SEE THIS FILM OPENING WEEKEND. Get a crowd in there that wants to have good, dumb, popcorn-movie fun and you will have a blast. My theater was off the hook, and it's seriously the most fun I've had at the movies in longer than I can remember. Go into this film knowing what it is and watch it with exactly that in mind and you'll have a GREAT time. Expect nothing from it and just let yourself have fun for a couple of hours. This film won't be the darling of the critics; it wasn't pre-screened because the makers KNOW what this film is and what they expect from it. I can't think of another instance where a film drew this kind of buzz on its title alone, and where everyone who went to see it completely knew it was going to be "so bad it's good." And it really is. Kudos to the studio that ordered re-shoots after all the buzz on the internet kicked in, it really shines. And thanks for the "line" which is quoted at the head of the review. Everyone in my theater said it with him, and EVERYONE was cheering.
Snakes on a Plane has landed. And it's good summer fun. With snakes. On a plane. Eight out of ten stars.
- Sgt. Fluffy
After Final Destination 2 and Cellular, David R. Ellis seems to be New Line Cinema's king of B-movies. Since the departure of Ronny Yu from this project, he seemed like the most logical choice. And while he does use some innovative ideas (such as the pretty cool 'snake vision') the film is too darkly shot and edited like a blur. I don't find death to be funny and expected a stronger 'man vs nature' subtext to it. What we get is a man being bitten on the penis and stoners bitten while joining the Mile High Club. And the sudden, stinging attacks never seem to frighten. The first few kills are crass and exploitative and it spoils the mood for the rest of the film.
I know I am being ridiculous criticising a no-brainer film such as this in such a way but even low-grade B-movies like Anaconda and it's sequel managed to be more scary and exciting than this. The characters are set-up in the typical horror film way and it's obvious which ones are going to die one by one. And while their deaths appear to violent, you never REALLY see anything shocking. A film with such an eccentric title really should have gone to crazy, far-fetched extremities and delivered loads of gore. But it never truly seems like it does. The majority of the film seems taped together from various different writers ideas and some scenes definitely feel tacked on after principal photography.
Films set on panic-stricken planes are abundant (Exec Dec, Passenger 57, United 93, Con Air, Die Hard 2) and scenes of crash landings and decompression are nothing new to audiences. The presence of Snakes doesn't make it much different.
Plus, Trevor Rabin's score is total crap. Plain and simple. Uninspired, generic rubbish completely without theme, melody, excitement our even coherence in it's endless bombasticness. I had great hopes for him when he did such brilliant work (actually co-composing) on Con Air and Armageddon, but he's fast proving to be talentless.
Samuel L. Jackson is brilliant as always and the under-rated Julianna Margulies is quite bloody gorgeous, more so than more popular Hollywood actresses. Lin Shaye (a popular New Line actress, since her husband runs the studio) has more to do than usual in the role of a heroic stewardess and those of you who like her more comedic roles will find this a welcome change. Though there's not much else I can recommend.
After all the internet-nerd hype surrounding this film, it fails to live up to potential and expectations. Quite a disappointment!
If you're willing to watch it through a certain lens; with the knowledge that you're watching a truly satirical movie, it's very entertaining. Samuel L Jackson's charismatic performance is what makes this movie great.
The marketing behind this movie is truly unique in that it is exactly what it says it is and almost nothing else! Silly but fun watch!
Samuel L. Jackson Through the Years
Samuel L. Jackson Through the Years
Lo sapevi?
- Quiz(At around forty-four minutes) When the male flight attendant puts the snake in the microwave, he can be seen hitting the "snake" preset button on that microwave, a somewhat unusual preset for a microwave.
- Blooper(at around 1h 27 mins) Flynn tells the passengers to hold their breaths before he shoots the windows, thereby depressurizing the interior of the plane. In reality, if a person holds their breath during depressurization, a 'lung over-expansion injury' can occur. This is why scuba divers are taught "Never hold your breath".
- Citazioni
Neville Flynn: Enough is *enough*!
[the terrified passengers on the plane turn to Neville]
Neville Flynn: I have *had* it with these motherfucking *snakes* on this motherfucking *plane*! Everybody strap in!
[draws his handgun]
Neville Flynn: I'm about to open some fuckin' windows.
- Curiosità sui creditiBefore the credits, there is a quick flash of a open-mouthed snake ready to bite the camera. During the credits, Cobra Starship's "Snakes on a Plane (Bring It!)" music video plays.
- Versioni alternativeThe DVD contains some deleted scenes:
- A scene where Mercedes talks to the newlywed couple in the airport.
- The scene where Eddie Kim fights his opponent is prolonged.
- A scene where you see all the passengers board the plane.
- The dialog between Three Gs and Mercedes is prolonged.
- More dialogs in the first meeting between Agent Flynn and Claire.
- The attack on Mrs. Bova is prolonged.
- A scene where Three Gs and Mercedes talk about a music video.
- The newlywed woman complains that she never will have children.
- A short scene between the newlyweds when they prepare to crash.
- More dialog in the final scene between Flynn and Claire.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Jimmy Kimmel Live!: Episodio #4.303 (2006)
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Dettagli
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- Paesi di origine
- Lingua
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- Serpientes a bordo
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 33.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 34.020.814 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 13.850.000 USD
- 20 ago 2006
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 62.022.014 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 45min(105 min)
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.39 : 1






