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Con Air

Con Air

  • Status: Released
  • 05-06-1997
  • Runtime: 116 min
  • Score: 6.746
  • Vote count: 4246

Newly-paroled former US Army ranger Cameron Poe is headed back to his wife, but must fly home aboard a prison transport flight dubbed "Jailbird" taking the “worst of the worst” prisoners, a group described as “pure predators”, to a new super-prison. Poe faces impossible odds when the transport plane is skyjacked mid-flight by the most vicious criminals in the country led by the mastermind — genius serial killer Cyrus "The Virus" Grissom, and backed by black militant Diamond Dog and psychopath Billy Bedlam.

Nicolas Cage

Cameron Poe

John Cusack

Agent Vince Larkin

John Malkovich

Cyrus "The Virus" Grissom

Ving Rhames

Nathan "Diamond Dog" Jones

Mykelti Williamson

"Baby-O" O'Dell

Dave Chappelle

"Pinball" Parker

Colm Meaney

Agent Duncan Malloy

Monica Potter

Tricia Poe

Landry Allbright

Casey Poe

Rachel Ticotin

Guard Sally Bishop

Steve Buscemi

Garland Greene - "The Marietta Mangler"

Nick Chinlund

William "Billy Bedlam" Bedford

M.C. Gainey

"Swamp Thing"

Danny Trejo

"Johnny-23"

Renoly Santiago

"Sally-Can't Dance"

Steve Eastin

Guard Falzon

Brendan Kelly

Conrad

Jesse Borrego

Francisco Cindino

Carl Ciarfalio

Con #1

Mongo Brownlee

Ajax

José Zúñiga

Sims

Ned Bellamy

Chopper Pilot

John Marshall Jones

Gator

John Roselius

Devers

Fredric Lehne

Pilot

Martin McSorley

Co-Pilot

Dylan Haggerty

Starkey

Dan Bell

Fuel Jockey

Bob Stephenson

Ted, the Pilot

Scott Ditty

Bus Guard

Tommy Bush

Sheriff

Lauren Pratt

Debbie (6 Yrs Old)

Steve Hulin

Ronnie

Don Charles McGovern

Smoke

Angela Featherstone

Ginny

Doug Hutchison

Donald

Jeris Poindexter

Watts

David Ramsey

Londell

Conrad Goode

Viking

Emilio Rivera

Carlos

Mario Roberts

Mongoose (Stunt)

Ty Granderson Jones

Blade

Earl Billings

Guard

Greg Collins

Guard

Billy Devlin

Guard

Mark Ginther

Guard

Joseph Patrick Kelly

Guard

Jeff Olson

Uncle Bob

Dawn Bluford

Female Baggage Handler

Charlie Paddock

Transportation Officer #1

Randee Barnes

Stickman

Don S. Davis

Man In Car

Barbara Sharma

Woman In Car

Thomas Rosales Jr.

Cindino Gunman (Stunts)

Eddie Perez

Cindino Gunman (Stunts)

Scott McCoy

Cindino Gunman (Stunts)

Brian Hayes Currie

Cop In Vegas

Ashley Smock

Huey Pilot

Charles Lynn Frost

DEA Agent

Joey Miyashima

Tech Guy

Scott Burkholder

Air Traffic Controller

Kevin Cooney

Judge

Gérard L'Heureux

Guard Renfro

Pete Antico

Guard Garner

John Robotham

Guard Ryan

Gilbert Rosales

Ramirez (Stunt)

Richard L. Duran

Warlock (Stunt)

George Randall

Old Con on Plane

Jamie Bozian

Con

Harley Zumbrum

Con

Doug Dearth

Con

David Roberson

Supervisor

Alexandra Balahoutis

Waitress

Dick 'Skip' Evans

Airplane Pilot

Sheldon Worthington

Co-Pilot

Robert Taft

Soldier

Robert White

Soldier

Chris Ellis

BOP Official Grant

John Campbell

BOP Bus Driver

Brian Willems

Paramedic

Bill Cusack

Paramedic

Dabbs Greer

Old Man Under Truck

Marco Kyris

Cindino's Pilot

Kevin Gage

Billy Joe (uncredited)

Sam Arnold

LVPD Officer (Mike Danley) (uncredited)

Dennis Burkley

Dale (uncredited)

Per Gunnar Jonsson

This is one of those movies which are simply good solid entertainment. The fact that I do like Nicolas Cage, even though he is at times really lousy at choosing which movies he participate in, is of course an additional plus. Naturally I do like the performance of Nicolas Cage in this movie but John Malkowich is also great as the main bad guy and Steve Buscemi is perfect as the nutcase although his role could have been a bit more expanded upon. The rest of the actors are doing nicely as well although it always saddens me to see Colm Meaney playing a dumbass and/or bad guy after his role in Star Trek. The story is not really bad although it has the usual Hollywood mistakes here and there. The ease by which they pick locks in this high security flight is somewhat laughable and I seriously doubt that they would have been able to haul the plane out of that desert junkyard in flyable condition in real life for instance. Still, it is not a bad story and it works for moving the movie forward. There are plenty of action and it is mostly quite entertaining. Sometimes it is a bit silly and rather unrealistic of course but, as I wrote, mostly it is quite entertaining. The ending is definitely a bit on the silly side with the plane touching down on the Las Vegas Strip. This bit felt like the producers realized that they had some FX budget left and just had to burn it. Anyway, on the whole a quite entertaining movie.

John Chard

Ladies and Gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. I have the only gun on board. Welcome to Con Air. Hummingbird Humdinger. Con Air is directed by Simon West and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer. It stars Nicolas Cage, John Cusack and John Malkovich. Plot sees Cameron Poe (Cage), a parolee on his way home to his wife and daughter after serving years in prison for manslaughter. He's travelling on a plane full of the most dangerous criminals currently being held in America, they are being transferred to some new super prison. Inevitably something goes wrong and the cons take over the plane, with only Poe standing between them and freedom. No doubt about it, Con Air is one of the most over the top action film's you are ever likely to see. But it knows it is, it embraces it - and positively revels in it. What we have is a bunch of sicko's and psycho's on a plane, their roll call of crimes as gargantuan as the excess of explosions and quips are. Down on the ground are a frantic John Cussack and an angry Colm Meaney, the play off between the two almost as funny as the shenanigans on the plane - where characters called Billy Bedlam (Nick Chinlund), Cyrus The Virus (Malkovich) & The Marietta Mangler (Steve Buscemi) push mania to a new level. Enter director West, who clearly under orders from Bruckheimer, unleashes a barrage of explosive set pieces, each one more outrageous than the last. It's neatly edited and paced like a good action movie should be. There's also no small amount of tension to sidle along side the white knuckle thrills. As Cage strips down to his Bruce Willis vest we have a real likable hero to get on side with, yes it's played tongue in cheek, very much so, but his character has been so well written by Scott Rosenberg we really forgive the ridiculousness of each heroic act. Also along the for the ride are Ving Rhames, Danny Trejo, M.C. Gainey & Rachael Ticotin, the latter of which does admirably well as the lone female surrounded by 800 tonnes of testosterone. Junky nonsense as a story for sure, but just like the cast are having a blast of a time with it, so too should the discerning action comedy fan. 7.5/10

Andre Gonzales

Great movie. One of my favorites growing up. Action packed with a great storyline. Great cast too.

CinemaSerf

This takes forever to get going, but once the plot gets the establishing twenty minutes out of the way, it's actually quite a decent adventure story. Ranger Nicolas Cage ("Poe") gets embroiled in a fatal brawl that lands him in jail. Out on his parole, he gets caught up in a highly sophisticated prison break planned by "Cyrus" (John Malkovich) - intent on hijacking their prison flight and executing a complicated onwards escape plan before the pursuing Colm Meaney ("Agent. Malloy") and an heavily armed squad of soldiers track them down. Luckily for Cage, and the authorities, John Cusack ("Agent Larkin") is on hand to help guide in the Feds as time marches on, and Cage's predicament becomes even more precarious. Malkovich makes for quite a good scheming baddie; there is plenty of action, a little bit of humour, pyrotechnics and the last half hour consists of pretty decent, entertaining, end-to-end stuff. Nothing remotely cerebral, but it's still an enjoyable film that finds a use for a snow plough in the desert! Soundtrack is quite good, too.

Horseface

Silly perfection! Having just watched this again after twenty-odd years, as it's now available in 4k. My god, Hollywood was great back in the day. This movie is stupid, silly, over-the-top everything, and wholly implausible. But it doesn't matter. It's 100% honest wholesome fun, like an action comic for boys in men's bodies. It's got everything, and everything's like a love letter. I want Criterion to add this to their collection and have some of their film historians create commentary tracks for it. This movie is now in my top ten, and I'll watch at least ten times more. 10/10