Escape Velocity

Escape Velocity


Starring:Wendy Crewson, Patrick Bergin, Peter Outerbridge, Michelle Beaudoin, Patrik Stanek, Pavel Bezdek, David Nykl, Emil Linka, Gerard Whelan, Robert Russell (VIII), Mike McGuffie
Director: Lloyd A. Simandl
Studio: York Home Video
Product Type: DVD
Get Down
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • superb psychodrama
  • Get Down
  • What's up Murray?
  • DEFINITELY NOT THE AVERAGE GANG EXPLOITATION MOVIE
  • Dramatic, yet inspiring
Get Down
Starring: David Hewlett , Aaron Ashmore , Kevin Duhaney , Jessica Greco , and Julian Richings
Director: William Phillips (VIII)
Manufacturer: Velocity / Thinkfilm
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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  1. Nothing
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  5. Ice Men

ASIN: B00008AOU2
Release Date: 2003-03-25

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars superb psychodrama.......2006-05-08

The best movie of 2001 by far. A little known Canadian jewel that will leave an impact on you long after the cathode flicker has faded. Superbly layer and texturing psychological thriller which pits a gang of urban thug against a tree-bound wing-tipped marketing executive. It become of war of endurance as wit and psychology pit against each other in a battle of the Minds.

5 out of 5 stars Get Down.......2006-02-22

Thoroughly enjoyed this movie! Love David Hewlett in SGA and really found his performance in this movie to be fantastic! Really would recommend this movie to all David Hewlett fans!

4 out of 5 stars What's up Murray?.......2003-11-15

I happen to see this movie quite by accident, and am glad I did. Its not an action movie, or comedy, although there are some funny parts. There are some serious issues in this movie, and the best part, like real life everything does not get resolved at the end of the movie. It leaves you thinking and pondering both how you would have handled this situation, but it also opens your eyes to look past yourself. Murray learns a lot, about himself and about a group of youth, one guy in particular. The youth learn something as well. Lessons are learned at a great cost. A good movie to watch if you work with young people.

3 out of 5 stars DEFINITELY NOT THE AVERAGE GANG EXPLOITATION MOVIE.......2003-11-05

A WEALTHY WHITE MAN WALKS ONTO A GANG'S TURF. WHEN HE PREVENTS ONE OF THE GANG MEMBERS FROM ROBBING HIM, THE WHOLE GANG TRYS TO GET VENGEANCE ON HIM. TRAPPED IN THE WOODS, HE MUST FIGHT TO ESCAPE THE GANG. THE REAL SUPRISING THING IS THAT MUCH OF THE GANG IS ACTUALLY WHITE. THERE'S ONLY TWO BLACK MEMBERS. ANYWAY, THIS MOVIE IS ACTUALLY PRETTY GOOD DESPITE THE FACT THAT IT MOVES AT A CONSIDERABLY SLOW PACE. THOUGH THE COVER FOR THIS MOVIE LOOKS LIKE A GANGSTA MOVIE, IT'S FAR FROM BEING ONE. IF YOU'RE JUST LOOKING FOR A GANGSTA MOVIE THAT HAS A LOT OF SHOOTING AND KILLING, THIS IS DEFINITELY NOT A MOVIE YOU WANNA RENT. HOWEVER, IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR A MOVIE THAT HAS A SIMPLISTIC PLOT, THEN I'D SUGGEST YOU GET TO YOUR LOCAL VIDEOSTORE AND RENT THIS.

5 out of 5 stars Dramatic, yet inspiring.......2003-08-01

When it first started I thought it was gonna be totally different. I thought that the white guy would be caught in the middle of two gangs and see if he survives. Turns out he gets stuck, they hide from the gang, and they live. With all the anticipation to see whether or not cle' bennet and his gang get the man out of the tree is a cliff hanger. But in the end is a twist. You'll have to watch it to find out. Overrall performance, I'd say the loyalty, and then betrayal of words can separate many people...It's the truth everyone is looking for. What's ur truth?
Escape Velocity
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • A Classic Case of Missed Opportunities
  • Pretty Space SuperChicks (and Man) Fight Villain & Company !
Escape Velocity
Starring: Wendy Crewson , Patrick Bergin , Peter Outerbridge , Michelle Beaudoin , and Patrik Stanek
Director: Lloyd A. Simandl
Manufacturer: York Home Video
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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  1. A Killing Spring
  2. Verdict in Blood
  3. Velocity Trap
  4. Getting Married in Buffalo Jump
  5. Criminal Instinct: A Colder Kind of Death

ASIN: B00002JWZE
Release Date: 1999-12-28

Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars A Classic Case of Missed Opportunities.......2002-12-24

From glancing at the film summary, the general setting of Escape Velocity- an enormous, scarcely populated Cygnus-style space station precariously close to a star on the verge of transforming into a supernova apparently equipped with some extraordinary anti-gravity device to safeguard its perilous position- invites comparisons to an updated version of the Black Hole. However, it becomes increasingly clear during the film that Escape Velocity is much closer to an intergalactic version of the thriller Dead Calm. Notwithstanding the obvious discrepancies in setting, there are numerous similarities between these films: both feature a homicidal killer unsuspectingly picked up (and in the case of Escape Velocity, awoken from hibernation) by a small crew of good samaritans, who briefly befriends his gracious benefactors before abruptly turning upon them in order to utilize the capacities offered by their ship. Likewise, the maniac expels the husband or male patriarch (Sam Neill and Patrick Bergin in each film respectively) and terrorizes the wife (and her daughter in Escape Velocity) in the meantime until the captain returns and with uxorial assistance, kills the heartless assailant.
Apart from these divergent details and sequences, overall Escape Velocity and Dead Calm are remarkably alike- unfortunately except in terms of production and execution. Whereas the latter film is tautly made and edited, Event Velocity plods in pacing and suffers from abrupt and clumsily executed plot changes.
Doubtlessly the most awkward moment of Escape Velocity is where the assailant, Nash (Peter Outerbridge) having failed to apprehend Billie (Wendy Crewson) and Ronnie (Michelle Baudoin), implausibly proceeds to resurrect his minions, who, like himself, have also been in hibernation for fifteen years. Although the film did previously indicate that Nash escaped from the penal colony along with his cohorts, it is assumed that they must have died during the voyage since Billie and Cal (Patrick Bergin) never observed, let alone mentioned, that other passengers on Nash's ship likewise lingered in suspended hibernation. Surely such a critical factor could not have been ignored by a purported eminent scientist like Cal. In addition to needlessly complicating the action, the resurrection of these minions throws the whole storyline off balance. Ironically, instead of augmenting the odds against our beleaguered heroines, they actually diminish them as Billie is able to overpower all of them (except, of course, for their ringleader, Nash) with relative ease. (While their incompetence could stem from disorientation engendered by hibernation hangover, the fact the film overlooks this notion entirely makes these characters more pathetic than threatening.)
Unlike the Black Hole, which made deft use of panoramic sets to simulate the majestic interior of the Cygnus as a wondrous space city, in Escape Velocity the space station is unnecessarily large and its size never reflected in the cloistered, claustrophobic sets which supposedly depict its interior. As the filmmakers did not have to go through the ordeal of constructing an ornate ship model as in the Black Hole, it seems that the ship here is enormous essentially to exhibit the handsome computer simulation. (Since it's not a cargo ship, what is all that extra space used for, extra reserve fuel to escape the gravitational pull of the red giant?)
It is also contrived that the red giant is continuously stagnant throughout the film and should only explode at the very moment when Nash is pursuing the crew. (Isn't a red giant supposed to be continuously swelling in size before swiftly contracting on the verge of a supernova?) Moreover, although Cal's space dingy becomes alarmingly proximous to the red giant (thanks to Nash's tampering with the controls), the absence of scenes depicting Cal experiencing any sweat or his ship's hull being charred from the star's immeasurable heat fails to provide basic suspense as well as to stupefyingly defy rudimentary laws of astronomy (obviously viewers don't watch these cosmic flicks for scientific accuracy, yet some adherence to common sense sure could have provided some much needed credibility which would definitely have enhanced the film.)
Given these inconsistencies it is no surprise that incontestably the best (as well as the only decent) part of the film is the twenty minutes which elapse from our introduction to the space station's crew to Nash's backstabbing ploys against them. When we first meet the crew, we encounter an ostensibly tranquil yet emotionally frustrated menagerie with each individual possessing foibles which are promising vehicles for strong character conflict: Cal's disappointment with the stagnant development of the erstwhile red giant, Billie's haunting by her husband's death and her ignominious discharge from the military (an intriguing backstory sadly never adequately explained), and her restless, sexually-starved daughter Ronnie feeling the cumulative toll (pehaps a form of cosmic cabin fever) of prolonged isolation due to the voyage. When Nash is discovered and revived, the stage has effectively been set for his arrival to intensify the tension which already exists among the crew. The tragedy of Escape Velocity is that all of these potentially intriguing character angles are effortlessly scuttled once Nash psychotically turns upon the crew, whereby the film sadly degenerates into a pedestrian cat and mouse hunt with the space station's innumerable compartments providing ample labyrinthine sets for several contrived action scenes.
Escape Velocity stands as a classic case of a film which, had concerted efforts been made to allow the characters to freely develop and not fall into regimented stereotypes of the hunter and hunted, could have become a cut above the standard direct- to- video space thriller. Unfortunately, neglect of these considerations place it squarely in this largely undistinguished film subgenre.

5 out of 5 stars Pretty Space SuperChicks (and Man) Fight Villain & Company !.......2002-10-30

Hi ! I'll drone on a little while, or you can let my Review Title sum things up !!

I'd first like to say, apart from Wendy Crewson and Michelle Beaudoinne as two of Deep Space's Most Heavenly Bodies, ESCAPE VELOCITY shines as pleasant, sit-back / surrender-to-Suspension-of-Disbelief Happy Happy Joy Joy.

Sure, here -are- a heap o' lil' hysterical idiosyncracies to giggle over, but ESCAPE VELOCITY, as before I've noted, is a FUN flick you can leave your Cerebellum OFF-hook for. So, curl up next to your Sweetie and indulge each other in her favorite snacks and beverages, Men !!

Beautifully TRUE to Tradition, ESCAPE VELOCITY boasts a Pistol Packin' Space Mama holding off the Baddies *singlehandedly* whilst her Nubile, Goodie, At-LAST-I-Can-Drink! Daughter take turns fritzing out between bombs and bullets, Carol Lynley / POSEIDON ADVENTURE style.

Where, for you uninitiated, is Our Loving But Tough Step Dad / Commander in the meantime ? Why, CALMLY - and I mean, CALMLY - removing some outerwear so as to most -comfortably- tank-up the (Archaic) Fighter Craft rapidly falling into Gravity Well Hell. ....

... there's even a "Wet T-shirt Contest" ...... but you must bum or buy ESCAPE VELOCITY to see WHO the Lucky Lady (or is that us Men ?) is !!

This is DEFINITELY the Kind of Movie you *and* your Girl can get into, Age Irrelative. Frilly FUN -- NO Final Exam !!
Escape Velocity/Interceptor Force
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Escape Velocity/Interceptor Force
    Starring: York Double Feature
    Manufacturer: York Home Video
    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: DVD

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    ASIN: B0007Z0OEA
    Release Date: 2005-05-10
    Escape Velocity [Region 2]
    Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
    • A Classic Case of Missed Opportunities
    • Pretty Space SuperChicks (and Man) Fight Villain & Company !
    Escape Velocity [Region 2]
    Starring: Wendy Crewson , Patrick Bergin , Peter Outerbridge , Michelle Beaudoin , and Patrik Stanek
    Director: Lloyd A. Simandl
    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: DVD

    GeneralGeneral | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Genres | DVD | Video
    Beaudoin, MichelleBeaudoin, Michelle | ( B ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
    Bergin, PatrickBergin, Patrick | ( B ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
    Crewson, WendyCrewson, Wendy | ( C ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
    Outerbridge, PeterOuterbridge, Peter | ( O ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
    Simandl, Lloyd ASimandl, Lloyd A | ( S ) | Directors | Stores | DVD | Video
    Used DVDsUsed DVDs | Stores | DVD | Video | Action & Adventure | African American Cinema | Animation | Anime & Manga | Art House & International | Classics | Comedy | Cult Movies | Documentary | Drama | Educational | Fitness & Yoga | Gay & Lesbian | Horror | Kids & Family | Military & War | Music Video & Concerts | Musicals & Performing Arts | Mystery & Suspense | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Special Interests | Sports | Television | Westerns
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    Similar Items:
    1. A Killing Spring
    2. Verdict in Blood
    3. Velocity Trap
    4. Getting Married in Buffalo Jump
    5. Criminal Instinct: A Colder Kind of Death

    ASIN: B00007856I

    Customer Reviews:

    2 out of 5 stars A Classic Case of Missed Opportunities.......2002-12-24

    From glancing at the film summary, the general setting of Escape Velocity- an enormous, scarcely populated Cygnus-style space station precariously close to a star on the verge of transforming into a supernova apparently equipped with some extraordinary anti-gravity device to safeguard its perilous position- invites comparisons to an updated version of the Black Hole. However, it becomes increasingly clear during the film that Escape Velocity is much closer to an intergalactic version of the thriller Dead Calm. Notwithstanding the obvious discrepancies in setting, there are numerous similarities between these films: both feature a homicidal killer unsuspectingly picked up (and in the case of Escape Velocity, awoken from hibernation) by a small crew of good samaritans, who briefly befriends his gracious benefactors before abruptly turning upon them in order to utilize the capacities offered by their ship. Likewise, the maniac expels the husband or male patriarch (Sam Neill and Patrick Bergin in each film respectively) and terrorizes the wife (and her daughter in Escape Velocity) in the meantime until the captain returns and with uxorial assistance, kills the heartless assailant.
    Apart from these divergent details and sequences, overall Escape Velocity and Dead Calm are remarkably alike- unfortunately except in terms of production and execution. Whereas the latter film is tautly made and edited, Event Velocity plods in pacing and suffers from abrupt and clumsily executed plot changes.
    Doubtlessly the most awkward moment of Escape Velocity is where the assailant, Nash (Peter Outerbridge) having failed to apprehend Billie (Wendy Crewson) and Ronnie (Michelle Baudoin), implausibly proceeds to resurrect his minions, who, like himself, have also been in hibernation for fifteen years. Although the film did previously indicate that Nash escaped from the penal colony along with his cohorts, it is assumed that they must have died during the voyage since Billie and Cal (Patrick Bergin) never observed, let alone mentioned, that other passengers on Nash's ship likewise lingered in suspended hibernation. Surely such a critical factor could not have been ignored by a purported eminent scientist like Cal. In addition to needlessly complicating the action, the resurrection of these minions throws the whole storyline off balance. Ironically, instead of augmenting the odds against our beleaguered heroines, they actually diminish them as Billie is able to overpower all of them (except, of course, for their ringleader, Nash) with relative ease. (While their incompetence could stem from disorientation engendered by hibernation hangover, the fact the film overlooks this notion entirely makes these characters more pathetic than threatening.)
    Unlike the Black Hole, which made deft use of panoramic sets to simulate the majestic interior of the Cygnus as a wondrous space city, in Escape Velocity the space station is unnecessarily large and its size never reflected in the cloistered, claustrophobic sets which supposedly depict its interior. As the filmmakers did not have to go through the ordeal of constructing an ornate ship model as in the Black Hole, it seems that the ship here is enormous essentially to exhibit the handsome computer simulation. (Since it's not a cargo ship, what is all that extra space used for, extra reserve fuel to escape the gravitational pull of the red giant?)
    It is also contrived that the red giant is continuously stagnant throughout the film and should only explode at the very moment when Nash is pursuing the crew. (Isn't a red giant supposed to be continuously swelling in size before swiftly contracting on the verge of a supernova?) Moreover, although Cal's space dingy becomes alarmingly proximous to the red giant (thanks to Nash's tampering with the controls), the absence of scenes depicting Cal experiencing any sweat or his ship's hull being charred from the star's immeasurable heat fails to provide basic suspense as well as to stupefyingly defy rudimentary laws of astronomy (obviously viewers don't watch these cosmic flicks for scientific accuracy, yet some adherence to common sense sure could have provided some much needed credibility which would definitely have enhanced the film.)
    Given these inconsistencies it is no surprise that incontestably the best (as well as the only decent) part of the film is the twenty minutes which elapse from our introduction to the space station's crew to Nash's backstabbing ploys against them. When we first meet the crew, we encounter an ostensibly tranquil yet emotionally frustrated menagerie with each individual possessing foibles which are promising vehicles for strong character conflict: Cal's disappointment with the stagnant development of the erstwhile red giant, Billie's haunting by her husband's death and her ignominious discharge from the military (an intriguing backstory sadly never adequately explained), and her restless, sexually-starved daughter Ronnie feeling the cumulative toll (pehaps a form of cosmic cabin fever) of prolonged isolation due to the voyage. When Nash is discovered and revived, the stage has effectively been set for his arrival to intensify the tension which already exists among the crew. The tragedy of Escape Velocity is that all of these potentially intriguing character angles are effortlessly scuttled once Nash psychotically turns upon the crew, whereby the film sadly degenerates into a pedestrian cat and mouse hunt with the space station's innumerable compartments providing ample labyrinthine sets for several contrived action scenes.
    Escape Velocity stands as a classic case of a film which, had concerted efforts been made to allow the characters to freely develop and not fall into regimented stereotypes of the hunter and hunted, could have become a cut above the standard direct- to- video space thriller. Unfortunately, neglect of these considerations place it squarely in this largely undistinguished film subgenre.

    5 out of 5 stars Pretty Space SuperChicks (and Man) Fight Villain & Company !.......2002-10-30

    Hi ! I'll drone on a little while, or you can let my Review Title sum things up !!

    I'd first like to say, apart from Wendy Crewson and Michelle Beaudoinne as two of Deep Space's Most Heavenly Bodies, ESCAPE VELOCITY shines as pleasant, sit-back / surrender-to-Suspension-of-Disbelief Happy Happy Joy Joy.

    Sure, here -are- a heap o' lil' hysterical idiosyncracies to giggle over, but ESCAPE VELOCITY, as before I've noted, is a FUN flick you can leave your Cerebellum OFF-hook for. So, curl up next to your Sweetie and indulge each other in her favorite snacks and beverages, Men !!

    Beautifully TRUE to Tradition, ESCAPE VELOCITY boasts a Pistol Packin' Space Mama holding off the Baddies *singlehandedly* whilst her Nubile, Goodie, At-LAST-I-Can-Drink! Daughter take turns fritzing out between bombs and bullets, Carol Lynley / POSEIDON ADVENTURE style.

    Where, for you uninitiated, is Our Loving But Tough Step Dad / Commander in the meantime ? Why, CALMLY - and I mean, CALMLY - removing some outerwear so as to most -comfortably- tank-up the (Archaic) Fighter Craft rapidly falling into Gravity Well Hell. ....

    ... there's even a "Wet T-shirt Contest" ...... but you must bum or buy ESCAPE VELOCITY to see WHO the Lucky Lady (or is that us Men ?) is !!

    This is DEFINITELY the Kind of Movie you *and* your Girl can get into, Age Irrelative. Frilly FUN -- NO Final Exam !!
    Escape Velocity [Region 2]
    Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
    • A Classic Case of Missed Opportunities
    • Pretty Space SuperChicks (and Man) Fight Villain & Company !
    Escape Velocity [Region 2]
    Starring: Wendy Crewson , Patrick Bergin , Peter Outerbridge , Michelle Beaudoin , and Patrik Stanek
    Director: Lloyd A. Simandl
    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: DVD

    GeneralGeneral | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Genres | DVD | Video
    Beaudoin, MichelleBeaudoin, Michelle | ( B ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
    Bergin, PatrickBergin, Patrick | ( B ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
    Crewson, WendyCrewson, Wendy | ( C ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
    Outerbridge, PeterOuterbridge, Peter | ( O ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
    Simandl, Lloyd ASimandl, Lloyd A | ( S ) | Directors | Stores | DVD | Video
    ( E )( E ) | Titles | Features | DVD | Video
    Similar Items:
    1. A Killing Spring
    2. Verdict in Blood
    3. Velocity Trap
    4. Getting Married in Buffalo Jump
    5. Criminal Instinct: A Colder Kind of Death

    ASIN: B00004WZ9O

    Customer Reviews:

    2 out of 5 stars A Classic Case of Missed Opportunities.......2002-12-24

    From glancing at the film summary, the general setting of Escape Velocity- an enormous, scarcely populated Cygnus-style space station precariously close to a star on the verge of transforming into a supernova apparently equipped with some extraordinary anti-gravity device to safeguard its perilous position- invites comparisons to an updated version of the Black Hole. However, it becomes increasingly clear during the film that Escape Velocity is much closer to an intergalactic version of the thriller Dead Calm. Notwithstanding the obvious discrepancies in setting, there are numerous similarities between these films: both feature a homicidal killer unsuspectingly picked up (and in the case of Escape Velocity, awoken from hibernation) by a small crew of good samaritans, who briefly befriends his gracious benefactors before abruptly turning upon them in order to utilize the capacities offered by their ship. Likewise, the maniac expels the husband or male patriarch (Sam Neill and Patrick Bergin in each film respectively) and terrorizes the wife (and her daughter in Escape Velocity) in the meantime until the captain returns and with uxorial assistance, kills the heartless assailant.
    Apart from these divergent details and sequences, overall Escape Velocity and Dead Calm are remarkably alike- unfortunately except in terms of production and execution. Whereas the latter film is tautly made and edited, Event Velocity plods in pacing and suffers from abrupt and clumsily executed plot changes.
    Doubtlessly the most awkward moment of Escape Velocity is where the assailant, Nash (Peter Outerbridge) having failed to apprehend Billie (Wendy Crewson) and Ronnie (Michelle Baudoin), implausibly proceeds to resurrect his minions, who, like himself, have also been in hibernation for fifteen years. Although the film did previously indicate that Nash escaped from the penal colony along with his cohorts, it is assumed that they must have died during the voyage since Billie and Cal (Patrick Bergin) never observed, let alone mentioned, that other passengers on Nash's ship likewise lingered in suspended hibernation. Surely such a critical factor could not have been ignored by a purported eminent scientist like Cal. In addition to needlessly complicating the action, the resurrection of these minions throws the whole storyline off balance. Ironically, instead of augmenting the odds against our beleaguered heroines, they actually diminish them as Billie is able to overpower all of them (except, of course, for their ringleader, Nash) with relative ease. (While their incompetence could stem from disorientation engendered by hibernation hangover, the fact the film overlooks this notion entirely makes these characters more pathetic than threatening.)
    Unlike the Black Hole, which made deft use of panoramic sets to simulate the majestic interior of the Cygnus as a wondrous space city, in Escape Velocity the space station is unnecessarily large and its size never reflected in the cloistered, claustrophobic sets which supposedly depict its interior. As the filmmakers did not have to go through the ordeal of constructing an ornate ship model as in the Black Hole, it seems that the ship here is enormous essentially to exhibit the handsome computer simulation. (Since it's not a cargo ship, what is all that extra space used for, extra reserve fuel to escape the gravitational pull of the red giant?)
    It is also contrived that the red giant is continuously stagnant throughout the film and should only explode at the very moment when Nash is pursuing the crew. (Isn't a red giant supposed to be continuously swelling in size before swiftly contracting on the verge of a supernova?) Moreover, although Cal's space dingy becomes alarmingly proximous to the red giant (thanks to Nash's tampering with the controls), the absence of scenes depicting Cal experiencing any sweat or his ship's hull being charred from the star's immeasurable heat fails to provide basic suspense as well as to stupefyingly defy rudimentary laws of astronomy (obviously viewers don't watch these cosmic flicks for scientific accuracy, yet some adherence to common sense sure could have provided some much needed credibility which would definitely have enhanced the film.)
    Given these inconsistencies it is no surprise that incontestably the best (as well as the only decent) part of the film is the twenty minutes which elapse from our introduction to the space station's crew to Nash's backstabbing ploys against them. When we first meet the crew, we encounter an ostensibly tranquil yet emotionally frustrated menagerie with each individual possessing foibles which are promising vehicles for strong character conflict: Cal's disappointment with the stagnant development of the erstwhile red giant, Billie's haunting by her husband's death and her ignominious discharge from the military (an intriguing backstory sadly never adequately explained), and her restless, sexually-starved daughter Ronnie feeling the cumulative toll (pehaps a form of cosmic cabin fever) of prolonged isolation due to the voyage. When Nash is discovered and revived, the stage has effectively been set for his arrival to intensify the tension which already exists among the crew. The tragedy of Escape Velocity is that all of these potentially intriguing character angles are effortlessly scuttled once Nash psychotically turns upon the crew, whereby the film sadly degenerates into a pedestrian cat and mouse hunt with the space station's innumerable compartments providing ample labyrinthine sets for several contrived action scenes.
    Escape Velocity stands as a classic case of a film which, had concerted efforts been made to allow the characters to freely develop and not fall into regimented stereotypes of the hunter and hunted, could have become a cut above the standard direct- to- video space thriller. Unfortunately, neglect of these considerations place it squarely in this largely undistinguished film subgenre.

    5 out of 5 stars Pretty Space SuperChicks (and Man) Fight Villain & Company !.......2002-10-30

    Hi ! I'll drone on a little while, or you can let my Review Title sum things up !!

    I'd first like to say, apart from Wendy Crewson and Michelle Beaudoinne as two of Deep Space's Most Heavenly Bodies, ESCAPE VELOCITY shines as pleasant, sit-back / surrender-to-Suspension-of-Disbelief Happy Happy Joy Joy.

    Sure, here -are- a heap o' lil' hysterical idiosyncracies to giggle over, but ESCAPE VELOCITY, as before I've noted, is a FUN flick you can leave your Cerebellum OFF-hook for. So, curl up next to your Sweetie and indulge each other in her favorite snacks and beverages, Men !!

    Beautifully TRUE to Tradition, ESCAPE VELOCITY boasts a Pistol Packin' Space Mama holding off the Baddies *singlehandedly* whilst her Nubile, Goodie, At-LAST-I-Can-Drink! Daughter take turns fritzing out between bombs and bullets, Carol Lynley / POSEIDON ADVENTURE style.

    Where, for you uninitiated, is Our Loving But Tough Step Dad / Commander in the meantime ? Why, CALMLY - and I mean, CALMLY - removing some outerwear so as to most -comfortably- tank-up the (Archaic) Fighter Craft rapidly falling into Gravity Well Hell. ....

    ... there's even a "Wet T-shirt Contest" ...... but you must bum or buy ESCAPE VELOCITY to see WHO the Lucky Lady (or is that us Men ?) is !!

    This is DEFINITELY the Kind of Movie you *and* your Girl can get into, Age Irrelative. Frilly FUN -- NO Final Exam !!

    DVD:

    1. Todd McFarlane - The Devil You Know
    2. Star Trek - The Original Series, Vol. 6, Episodes 12 & 13: Miri/ The Conscience of the King
    3. Crash of the Moons (B&W)
    4. Final (2001)
    5. Spaceways
    6. This Island Earth
    7. Mighty Gorga / One Million AC/DC
    8. A Boy And His Dog
    9. Johnny Mnemonic (Superbit Collection)
    10. Komodo

    DVD

    DVD

    DVD

    Willa: An American Snow White

    Harry Enfield-Guide to the Opera

    Batman Beyond: The Movie/Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker

    DVD: Jerry and Tom

    Die Haut der Erde