Cert: 12A cert
Parents advised to read before viewing film as some scene may contain scenes unsuitable for younger viewers.
Sex & Nudity: A man and a woman kiss "hello" at an airport while another man and a woman hug and kiss briefly.
A man and a woman on a night airline flight giggle and writhe under a blanket; another man looks at them in a disgusted way.
A pilot hugs a female flight attendant side-to-side (please see the Violence/Gore category for more details).
A man and a woman stare into each other's eyes as they talk and smile, suggesting a romantic relationship.
A copilot smiles at a female flight attendant in their airplane and the captain says to him, "Naughty boy."
A man searches male and female passengers briefly, touching arms and waists, and a woman asks him if that is how older men now attract younger women; he says no.
A man notices a scar on a woman's upper chest above a neckline that shows cleavage.
A cell phone shows a picture of a woman bent forward while wearing a low-cut blouse that reveals cleavage.
A man wears a sleeveless undershirt that reveals an anchor tattoo on his arm and some sort of design showing at the neckline and extending under the shirt.
Violence & Gore:Two men struggle and fight in a small airplane bathroom, kicking, shoving and slamming each other's heads against walls, one man gouges the other man's eyes with his thumbs and a handgun falls to the floor; one man picks it up and aims it at the other, who breaks the gunman's neck, and the survivor of the bathroom fight receives a text: "Who knows who you will kill next?"
A man is shot in the forehead and we see a spot of blood as the man falls backward.
We hear that an airplane captain died of chest pains and foaming at the mouth and we see the captain lying on the floor of the cockpit with foam on his lips and a doctor says that he may have been poisoned; a male passenger dies similarly during a struggle and we see the man slide down a wall and collapse with his eyes turned up and foam filling his mouth.
An man argues and fights with another man in several scenes, punching and kicking him, and then breaking his nose with some blood shown.
A man hits an air marshal on the head with an oxygen tank and four other men jump on the marshal, who subdues them all with kicks, punches, head slams, wristlocks and body throws; the marshal suffers a few facial scratches, while the others lie on the floor, semi-conscious (no blood is seen).
A flight attendant hits a terrorist in the back of the head with a heavy object and he punches her (she falls, with some blood on her forehead); a few gunshots occur with no one being struck.
A male passenger begins an argument with an air marshal, who pulls him from his seat and into the galley where he slams his head against the wall, and then puts him back in his seat.
A passenger argues with an air marshal who pulls him from his seat, slams him into a wall twice, duct-tapes his wrists together and places him in the last seat by the galley.
A father hits his adult son in the head with an open hand for recording violent incidents on an airplane.
Smoke fills an airplane cabin as the pilot attempts to land the plane and people cough; during a hard landing, the wheels break off the plane and sparks and fire occur under the fuselage as it skids.
A man is thrown forward toward the audience as yellow flames surge toward the camera, and the windows pop out of the airplane and part of the fuselage wall peels off as people scream and put on oxygen masks that drop from the ceiling; a heavy wind rushes through the plane, a food cart tumbles end-over-end down an aisle toward the camera and seems to hit it.
An airplane cabin depressurizes, throwing a man to the top of the cabin, slamming his back against the roof, and he drops a handgun that a passenger kicks to him across the floor when he falls back down.
A man with a gun is thrown away from the camera to the end of an airplane cabin while pointing a handgun at someone behind the camera viewpoint and people scream when the cabin depressurizes.
A commercial pilot argues with an RAF escort plane pilot and suddenly descends the airliner whereupon a cushioned bomb explodes at the back of the plane with fire and smoke.
A man with duct-taped wrists holds a handgun pointed at another man, but gives up the gun.
A terrorist pulls out a short knife, waves it at people on an airplane and stabs it into the back of a seat; passengers shout in fear and lie on the floor of the plane.
In an airplane cabin, a terrorist grabs a man and points a handgun to his head, while another man points a gun at the terrorist and a second terrorist pulls out a handgun; the terrorists argue and one shoots the other terrorist in the shoulder (we see some blood).
An air marshal argues with a pilot, with a supervisor by phone and with the supervisor's replacement by phone several times and the last argument becomes very loud.
Two federal agents on an airplane argue several times.
A man pulls airline passengers from their seats for questioning about a hidden bomb, pulls them over other passengers and waves a gun around as he does so.
A doctor sets a man's broken nose quickly as he shouts in pain and grabs his reddened nose.
A flight attendant sees a dead man lying in a bathroom with his eyes and mouth open; she gasps and runs away.
We see a long scar on the center of a woman's upper chest above her neckline and after a short argument about deaths on the flight, she tells a man that she died for 43 minutes and came back.
Passengers slide down a ramp from a crippled airplane and appear unhurt; one woman has scrapes and blood on her head and cheek area while a man receives gauze bandages over his trouser leg at the thigh and on his wrist (we see spots of blood on his cheeks); he walks away limping slightly.
An air marshal stands accused of hijacking a plane and stealing a large sum of money, but he says he is saving the plane, not hijacking it; his supervisor tells him over the phone that the US will shoot the airplane down to stop him because, "We don't negotiate with terrorists."
A man on an airplane receives threatening text messages that state that a person on board will die every 20 minutes until $150 million is deposited into an offshore account.
News reports on TV sets at each seat in an airplane announce that an air marshal has personal problems that have made him psychologically unstable and have resulted in his hijacking the plane; the marshal announces to the passengers that he lost his wife and his job, and then his 8-year-old daughter to leukemia, but that he wants to save the airliner from a bomb.
A man rips open a large plastic wrapped pack of cocaine (please see the Substance Use category for more details) and finds a bomb; he and passengers place it at the back of the plane and cover it with luggage, awaiting an explosion and we hear that tossing it out a door will explode it immediately.
A little girl screams and begins to fall out of an airplane while attached to her seat by the belt, but she is pulled back in by the arm; we see empty seats fall out of the plane.
Two RAF Typhoons appear beside the airliner, radioing the copilot to follow them to Iceland and a passenger says, "We're all going to die."
The passengers of a commercial airliner believe they are in a hijacking and begin to shout, curse and walk around the cabin as they demand answers from an air marshal while one man says, "I think he's going to crash the plane."
A terrorist says that his father died with 3,000 people (in the 9/11 disaster) and he served in the Iraq War but received no thanks when he returned home, and American security is a lie.
Men and women stare suspiciously at a man wearing a skullcap on an airplane, implying that he might be a terrorist.
In two scenes, turbulence rattles the cabin of an airplane significantly and people gasp.
A man grimaces during an airplane takeoff and a woman next to him asks if he will have a seizure; he says he will be fine when takeoff is over.
Profanity: At least 1 F-word, 1 possible F-word appears in a text message (obscured by a large water drop and a broken cell phone screen), 9 scatological terms, 7 anatomical terms, 10 mild obscenities, 8 religious profanities (GD) and 11 religious exclamations (e.g. Oh God, My God, I Swear To God, Jesus, Jesus Christ and For Christ's Sake).
Name-calling (naughty boy, paranoid alcoholic, crazy and fairy brother.)
Stereotypical references to law enforcement agents, terrorists, government bureaucrats, homosexuals, Muslims, alcoholics, hijacking victims, the English and the IRA.
Alcohol/Drugs/Smoking:A woman opens a bottle of aspirin (she does not take any.)
We hear that an unknown person used a blowgun to kill two men with poisoned darts.
A man finds a short dart in the neck of a dead man.
A briefcase contains a large amount of white powder wrapped in cellophane and we hear that it is cocaine and a man calls it "blow."
A man seated in his parked car pours bourbon into his coffee and stirs it with a toothbrush before drinking it.
A man uses breath spray to disguise the smell of alcohol on his breath.
A man in an airplane bathroom opens a bottle of whiskey (he sets it down without drinking.)
Several people mention that a man has an alcohol problem that makes them distrust him in security work.
An airplane has a small bar and a woman walks to the bar and drinks a small bottle of rum while telling another person that she should not do it.
A man pours a large glass of bourbon for a woman and she drinks it.
An unknown person texts a man on a plane to "have a drink."
A man asks another man how many drinks he has had today and the man does not reply.
A man on an airplane announces that he is an alcoholic after losing his wife and child (please see the Violence/Gore category for more details).
Two men smoke cigarettes outside an airport.
A man smokes a cigarette in an airplane bathroom in three scenes.
Frightening/Intense Scenes: The whole film has a very intense tone.
Story: An air marshal springs into action during a transatlantic flight after receiving a series of text messages that put his fellow passengers at risk unless the airline transfers $150 million into an off-shore account.
Likes : From the get go & the trailer your thinking that this is just going to be a typical liam nelson film like taken on a plane but dam this film complete throw's that concept out the window & throw you into an intense ride all the way to the end with Suspense, twists, emotional stuff, realization.
Liam Neeson is at his best in this film with a perfect performance playing an alcoholic air marshal after personal tragic events in his life involving his child & wife which is reveled in the film, he really bring a top notch performance as he try to find who the person is this is what bring the tension to this film as it throw you in different direction which is clever Julianne Moore i think is brilliantly casted in this film to throw the audience off in thinking that its her character that doing it.
The best thing about this film is from the get go the moment he steps on the plane, you notice he's character starts looking at people like he mapping where they are or who stands out on the plane, but the clever thing is it keeps you guess, because it does reveal who the person is or who is threaten the plane until the end that where this film surprises you because you don't see it coming which make a well made film to keep you on the edge of your seat.
Through out the film's ive seen ive never watch a more intense film, special with a spectacular intense ending that this film has really does pull your emotion in to over drive, that what make this film so worth watching.
The plot line is brilliantly done no real plot-holes or goofs, keeps you into it at every second of the film!With better than expected plot and better than expected technical prowess, Non-Stop is a great movie for action fans who want something a little bit more!
Dislikes : The pace of the film is slight slow, but all in all this is a good film.
Overall : One of the most intense film your ever watch, brilliant plot story-line, great twist to throw you off think who its is, one of the most intense endings in a film. a must to see.
Rating: 5 out of 5 for entertainment / 9.7 out of 10 for story-line/ intense concept.
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