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Freeway

Freeway

  • Status: Released
  • 23-08-1996
  • Runtime: 102 min
  • Score: 6.4
  • Vote count: 418

Following the arrest of her mother, Ramona, young Vanessa Lutz decides to go in search of her estranged grandmother. On the way, she is given a ride by school counselor Bob Wolverton. During the journey, Lutz begins to realize that Bob is the notorious I-5 Killer and manages to escape by shooting him several times. Wounded but still very much alive, Bob pursues Lutz across the state in this modern retelling of Little Red Riding Hood.

Kiefer Sutherland

Bob Wolverton

Reese Witherspoon

Vanessa Lutz

Wolfgang Bodison

Detective Breer

Dan Hedaya

Detective Wallace

Amanda Plummer

Ramona Lutz

Brooke Shields

Mrs. Wolverton

Michael T. Weiss

Larry

Bokeem Woodbine

Chopper

Guillermo Díaz

Flacco

Brittany Murphy

Rhonda

Alanna Ubach

Mesquita

Susan Barnes

Mrs. Cullins

Conchata Ferrell

Mrs. Sheets

Tara Subkoff

Sharon

Julie Araskog

Prosecutor

Annette Helde

Lady Cop

Sydney Lassick

Woody Wilson

Paul Perri

Cop #1

Robert Peters

Cop #2

Ben Meyerson

Cop at Truckstop

Craig Barnett

Cop #3

G. Eric Miles

Cop #4

Chris Renna

Doctor

Kathleen Marshall

ER Nurse

Melinda Renna

Female Anchor

Kitty Fox

Grandma

Nico Petrakis

Girl Gang Member

Michael Merrins

Guard

Lorna Raver

Judge

Theodore Garcia

Little Gumby

Manny Rodriguez

Marshall

Christine Mourad

News Reporter

Spantaneeus Xtasty

Staff Member

Roberta Hanley

Teacher

Michael Kaufman

Trick

David Andriole

Truck Driver

Monica Lacy

Twin #1

Leanna Creel

Twin #2

Louis Mustillo

Vanessa's Attorney

Ria Pavia

Waitress

Wuchak

**_Vulgar, violent, darkly satirical updating of Lil’ Red Riding Hood_** I’ve seen two of writer/director Matthew Bright’s movies before seeing this: The enlightening and moving “Dark Angel: The Ascent” from two years earlier and the well-done “Ted Bundy” from six years later. (He wrote the former and wrote/directed the latter). With “Freeway” he had way more money in which to work and it could’ve been his ticket to a bigtime filmmaker, yet it bombed at the box office. However, critics tended to laud it (Siskel & Ebert, for instance, gave it a ‘thumbs up’); and it went on to develop a cult following. It’s a crime thriller meshed with hard-edged dark comedy. Despite the title, it’s not a road movie and the second half becomes a women-in-prison flick for the most part. If you can roll with its wild audaciousness and sexually explicit verbiage, it can be fun and amusing, but I was disappointed after seeing Bright’s aforementioned “Dark Angel,” which had nine-times LESS the budget. “Freeway” is technically proficient and the actors do a fine job; it just wallows in foulness to the point of being an unpleasant experience. I’m sure Mark Bright was aiming for a Tarantino film, but he forgot to include meaty themes, as well as interesting characters and dialogues. Don’t get me wrong, there are some interesting bits here and there, they’re just overshadowed by an unrelenting spirit of filth. Reese Witherspoon was 20 years-old during shooting while Kiefer Sutherland was 29. For a similar film involving the latter that’s superior, check out “Desert Saints.” It runs 1h 44m and was shot in the heart of summer 1995 in Los Angeles, as well as just north of there in Sylmar (Vanessa’s house) and Castaic (the interrogation). GRADE: D+