Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 68000000
Revenue
$ 77224232

John

Charlie

Grace Santiago

Donald Patterson

Torch

Riley

Mr. Brown

Kowalski

Woman on Platform

Gambler

Dooley

Crash Train Motorman

Guard

Decoy Cop

Guard

Victor

Hood

Hood

Token Clerk

Cop's Girlfriend (uncredited)

Guard with Dooley

New Years Eve Reveler (uncredited)

Subway Robber

Subway Robber

Frank the Bartender

Woman on Platform

Gambler

Gambler

Guard

Detective

Dispatcher

Dispatcher

Guy at Bar

Brown's Enforcer

Brown's Enforcer

Brown's Enforcer

Guard with Dooley

Motorman

Businessman

Mickey

Darryl

Barricade Captain

Punk Girl

Punk Guy

Decoy Cop

Hood

Captain #2

Crosswalk Child

Crosswalk Child

Written by mooney240 on 2022-10-03
**Money Train loses interest while trying to figure out what it wants to be.** Money Train is a movie with an identity crisis. Is it a buddy cop movie? Crime drama? Serial killer char? Heist film? Romance piece? Well, Money Train tries to be all those things in less than 2 hours, making for a disjointed mess with inconsistent pacing and barely any story to follow. Woody Harrelson and Wesley Snipes are the good guys of the story, but they ultimately rob a train and cause millions of dollars of damage, and the audience is supposed to laugh it off because their boss is a jerk. Doesn’t work. With a cast including Wesley Snipes, Woody Harrelson, and Jennifer Lopez, I thought Money Train had to be at least mildly entertaining (and it did have fun moments), but the numerous stories and tones left everything too underdeveloped to enjoy and an ending that is more abrupt than satisfying.