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Liberty Stands Still Details

2002 Certificate 15
  • Rated:
  • 50
  • from 1046 members

Liberty Wallace (Linda Fiorentino), heiress and co-president of America's largest gun manufacturer is on the way to meet her lover at a theater. While passing through a public park, a series of events finds her chained to a hotdog car, the long-range laser sight of a gun aimed at her chest. The owner of the gun (Wesley Snipes) .. Read more

Starring Linda Fiorentino, Wesley Snipes, Oliver Platt, Martin Cummins
Director Kari Skogland
Genres Action/Adventure, Thriller

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Liberty Stands Still

Liberty Wallace (Linda Fiorentino), heiress and co-president of America's largest gun manufacturer is on the way to meet her lover at a theater. While passing through a public park, a series of events finds her chained to a hotdog car, the long-range laser sight of a gun aimed at her chest. The owner of the gun (Wesley Snipes) calls her via cell phone to explain his agenda and let her know that there is bomb in the hot dog cart that will detonate when her cell phone runs out. So begins a game of cat-and-mouse in which serious questions are raised concerning the issue of gun control. Director Kari Skogland's audacious thriller combines action scenes with tense, intelligent dialogue, providing an intriguing change-of-pace for star Snipes.

Starring Linda Fiorentino, Wesley Snipes, Oliver Platt, Martin Cummins, Hart Bochner, Jonathan Scarfe
Director Kari Skogland
Studio CINEMA CLUB
Run time DVD: 1 hr 32 mins
Certificate Certificate 15
Genres Action/Adventure, Thriller
Language DVD: English
Released DVD: 13 Jan 2003
Production year: 2002
Format DVD
  • Critics' reviews of Liberty Stands Still

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  • 2 stars out of 5

    Anyone who has seen the vastly superior Phone Booth will be more than familiar with the execution and storyline of this tedious thriller. Centred around a single mobile phone call, it's another sniper revenge picture, only here it's bereaved father Wesley Snipes who's getting even after his daughter's fatal shooting. Snipes delivers a credible enough performance as a man walking a tightrope between emotional and psychotic. However, Linda Fiorentino is as ineffectual as her trapped character: an arms manufacturer called on her mobile by crack-shot Snipes and forced to handcuff herself to an explosives-filled hotdog stand. For a race-against-time tale, the feature is inappropriately plodding and tension free, while Fiorentino's climactic confession is too melodramatic to really convince.

    • Radio Times
  • Most helpful member's review of Liberty Stands Still

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  • 2 out of 2 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 3 stars

    A better version of Phone Booth

    I am not sure whether Phone Booth came out first, but they are both similar films. This one was better in terms of the plot and more convincing without Colin Farrell.

      • A customer from London
  • Most recent members' review of Liberty Stands Still

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  • 2 out of 2 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 3 stars

    A better version of Phone Booth

    I am not sure whether Phone Booth came out first, but they are both similar films. This one was better in terms of the plot and more convincing without Colin Farrell.

      • A customer from London
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Rating breakdown

1,046 Member ratings
  • 100
32
  • 90
41
  • 80
78
  • 70
113
  • 60
169
  • 50
157
  • 40
148
  • 30
129
  • 20
121
  • 10
58

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    • Liberty Stands Still
      Liberty Wallace (Linda Fiorentino), heiress and co-president of America's largest gun manufacturer is on the way to meet her lover at a theater. While passing through a public park, a series of events finds her chained to a hotdog car, the long-range laser sight of a gun aimed at her chest. The ...