Reading more like a play than a movie script, "Flight Risk" puts three actors in a plane with a psycho Mark Wahlberg on the loose. Mel Gibson directs.
While it’s tense onboard the plane in Flight Risk, the surrounding Alaskan landscape is simply serene.
Mel Gibson’s chamber thriller Flight Risk is thin at 3,000 feet, but Topher Grace makes for good in-flight entertainment.
Headlined by the addition of several veteran actors and famous director Mel Gibson, “Flight Risk” released Jan. 24 with the intention of finding great success in an otherwise quiet month of films. It did not.
Mel Gibson casts Mark Wahlberg against type as a psycho in the cheap and lousy action thriller, Flight Risk, now in theaters.
Flight Risk’ is an adrenaline-pumping action thriller that explores the intricate web of betrayal, survival, and redemption. The gripping narrative follows a Marshal who is tasked with transporting a critical informant to safety.
Michelle Dockery and Topher Grace also star in this movie about a U.S. Marshall, her mob-connected witness and a hit man posing as a pilot.
Everyone in the movie isn’t flying in the same direction and the tone is all over the place. Brutal shootings and cuffed beatdowns mix with terrible puns and jokes at the expense of Spirit Airlines.
In FLIGHT RISK, super-talented filmmaker Mel Gibson applies his cinematic brilliance to a thriller about a heroic
Before Uncharted, Mark Wahlberg starred in a $85M video game movie that he was skeptical about and rightfully so as it flopped hard.
Performances aside, Flight Risk commits the nearly unforgivable sin of turning a great thriller premise into laughably convoluted potboiler fare.
The Alaska Gold Rush town of Nome was hundreds of miles from anywhere, cut off by the frozen sea and under siege from a contagious disease known as the “strangling angel” for the way it suffocated chi