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Speed 2: Cruise Control
Annie is looking forward to a Caribbean cruise with her cop boyfriend, Alex, who purchased the tickets to make up for lying about working on the SWAT team. But their trip soons becomes fast and furious when a computer hacker breaks into the computer system of the Seabourn Legend cruise liner and sets it speeding on a collision course into a gigantic oil tanker.
31 October 1967, Santa Clarita, California, USA
31 May 1963
10 July 1956, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA
6 July 1983, Canada
24 November 1976, Bartow, Florida, USA
26 December 1960, Rotorua, North Island, New Zealand
13 February 1941, Gothenburg, Västra Götalands län, Sweden
6 April 1948, Jacksonville, Florida, USA
June 20, 2014
First, the good news: Unlike most action film sequels, Speed 2: Cruise Control is not a mere retread of the original. Now the bad news: Better it had been.
May 28, 2013
Speed cost something like $30 million; this sequel cost four times as much. So why is it such a feeble, aimless piece of junk in comparison?
May 29, 2013
It's all very disappointing.
June 20, 2014
Familiarity quickly breeds contempt, with Bullock rather obviously just along for the ride.
June 20, 2014
De Bont's annoyingly jerky camera seldom stays still, the personable and appealing Bullock is given virtually nothing to do, [and] the plot twists range from the incredible to the absurd.
May 28, 2013
De Bont remains an expert director of action, but putting the reference to cruise control in the title serves as fair warning of an unengaged filmmaker on automatic pilot.
May 29, 2013
Speed 2's a test of patience.
May 28, 2013
[A] truly horrid sequel.
May 28, 2013
The human propensity to tamper with a good thing is probably ineluctable.
June 20, 2014
An ear-splitting amusement-park attraction posing as a movie.
June 20, 2014
There's very little to tell about the story that you can't figure out from the two-minute trailer.

