Status

Released

original language

English

Budget

$ 100000000

Revenue

$ 150166126

Top Billed Cast

Denzel Washington

Walter Garber

John Travolta

Ryder

John Turturro

Lt. Camonetti

Luis Guzmán

Phil Ramos

James Gandolfini

Mayor

Michael Rispoli

John Johnson

Gary Basaraba

Jerry Pollard, motorman

Alex Kaluzhsky

George, teen hostage

Alice Kremelberg

George's Girlfriend

Katherine Sigismund

Mother-hostage

Jake Siciliano

Boy hostage

Gbenga Akinnagbe

Wallace, hostage

Jason Butler Harner

Hostage who can't urinate

Victor Gojcaj

Bashkim, hijacker

Robert Vataj

Emri, hijacker

Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor

Therese Garber

John Benjamin Hickey

Deputy Mayor LaSalle

Ramón Rodríguez

Delgado, MTA worker

Tonye Patano

Regina, conductor

Ty Jones

Sniper

Chance Kelly

ESU Captain

Billy Devlin

ESU Guy

Chip Brookes

Zealous Aide

Jonathan Rau

Federal Reserve Supervisor

Anthony Annarumma

'Q' Train Motorman

Victor Cruz

Maintainer Three

Glen Tortorella

Maintenance Worker

Bobby Bojorklund

Maintenance Worker

Saidah Arrika Ekulona

Dispatcher One

Jasmin Tavarez

Puerto Rican Girl

Sean Meehan

Undercover Cop

Todd Susman

Supervisor

J. Bernard Calloway

Officer Moran / NYPD Liaison

Zach Poole

LaSalle's Aide

Reuben Jackson

Reporter at MTA

Sean Nelson

ESU One

Deak Evgenikos

ESU Two

Lee Shepherd

Dr. Weiss

Mike Houston

Money Car Driver

Frank Wood

Police Commissioner Sterman

Brian Haley

Police Captain Hill (MTA)

Maria Bartiromo

Financial Reporter

John Lavelle

Team Member (NYPD)

Peter Bucossi

SUV Driver

Steve Routman

Heckler

Laurie Cole

Reporter at 42nd Street & Vanderbilt

Nick Loren

Tunnel Commander

Daniel Stewart Sherman

ESU Lieutenant Staley

Patrick Dalton

MTA Worker

John Keiser

MTA Worker

Adrian Martinez

Cabbie

Jordan Gelber

Commuter

Rose DelCastillo

Reporter

Joe Forbrich

ESU Guy

Jason Cerbone

ESU Guy

Michael Mihm

ESU Desk Officer

Robert Perry

Motorman

Sammy Miraglia

Motorman

Kenneth Natal

Motorman

René Ifrah

Money Car Shotgun

Tommy Bayiokos

Garber's Hero Transit Cop (uncredited)

Frank Anello

NYPD Officer (uncredited)

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Movie Reviews

A review by JPV852

Written by JPV852 on 2021-04-12

Saw this one many years ago, probably when it came out on Blu-ray, and decided to give it another watch at random, and... pretty much lined up with from the first go around. Nothing amazing nor has any great twists, but the performances from Washington and Travolta made the movie worth the time. On the downside, as with many of his later films, Tony Scott's choppy direction was a bit annoying. **3.5/5**

A review by r96sk

Written by r96sk on 2023-11-15

Having seen (and truly loved) <em>'<a href="https://letterboxd.com/film/unstoppable-2010/" rel="nofollow">Unstoppable</a>'</em>, it's impossible not to see <em>'The Taking of Pelham 123'</em> as a rather pale incarnation of that 2010 flick (which also has Tony Scott as director and Denzel Washington as lead!). How strange that those two came together to make two very similar movies so close together. In the end, here, there is enough done to separate them, but early on especially I felt like I was watching the same film almost. For the record, that other release is so vastly better than this... so I'd recommend that more if you want a train-centric production from Scott and Washington. With all that noted, this 2009 film is still a fairly enjoyable 1hr 40mins or so - despite some questionable editing choices. A big reason for my positive rating is the aforementioned Washington, who gives as good a performance as he always tends to give - which is why he is probably my favourite actor, him or Leonardo DiCaprio anyway. John Travolta does well though, even if I kept getting <em>'<a href="https://letterboxd.com/film/face-off/" rel="nofollow">Face/Off</a>'</em> vibes throughout. Here, he made me laugh a few times and the guy has some good dialogue/delivery of said dialogue. Even if that latter element is hit-and-miss elsewhere. The rest of the cast are alright-to-meh, nice to see James Gandolfini though. It's, taking everything into account, all worth a watch, I'd say.

A review by Geronimo1967

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2025-02-22

It’s not really fair comparing this with the much more sophisticated 1974 version of this story as Tony Scott has taken a fairly broad-brush to that template and pretty much re-characterised the whole story. That’s a story about a gang of well organised criminals who plan a daring hijack of a subway train in New York, USA. Their plan is simple enough. They seize one car and then their leader “Ryder” (John Travolta) demands $10 millions within the hour or the bodies will start mounting up. His contact in the control room is “Garber” (Denzel Washington) and soon wheels are in motion to get the cash. What’s not so clear, though, is just what the agenda of these criminals is. It’s not an excessively large sum of money and we know that “Garber” is under investigation for bribery, so is there something more sinister going on here? What is obvious is that these guys mean business and are not afraid to demonstrate that fact! Tony Scott has managed to convey something of the claustrophobic nature of the tunnels well here and Harry Gregson-Williams’s aggressive score also helps build the tension but for me, Travolta just doesn’t deliver anything on the scale of menace I wanted here. Sure, his character is vile and violent but with the story relying on a degree of ambiguity for much of it’s substance, his unsubtle and charm-free performance is all just too one-dimensional to keep the intrigue sustained. Washington, likewise, just doesn’t impose himself on the story anywhere near enough to give us any real sense of panic and the other  supporting efforts are all a bit too underwhelming too, delivering a great deal of wasteful shouty dialogue as this thing rather lumbers along as if it were stuck at the lights, too. It probably didn’t need remaking but it does remind you just how good Robert Shaw was on the less is more front.