Nowhere to Run (1993) Poster

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7/10
One of Van Damme's better films.
Peach-214 January 1999
Nowhere To Run is one of Van Damme's better films. It has a nice storyline and some good acting. The direction is tight and I lked the score also. Not bad, but will probably be overlooked because it's a Van Damme picture.
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7/10
Claude & Roseanna Show Off
ccthemovieman-110 April 2006
This is another Jean-Claude Van Damme action flick, but a definite notch above many of his other films, at least in production values. The photography and stereo sound are excellent.

Actually, this is pretty simple stuff and old storyline of a low-key good guy rescuing the girl from local meanies. Here, Van Damme defends Rosanna Arquette and her small kids.

In another respect, the movie is just another avenue for the two stars to show off their incredible bodies. Neither has ever been shy about doing that and certainly aren't in this movie. My only objection is having one of the kids make a sexual remark, which is done in here. There is no excuse for that.

Ted Levine, who has turned nice guy in the hit TV series "Monk," is an effective bad guy in here. He played a lot of villains before "Monk" came around.

Anyway, it's fairly low-brow entertainment, but at least it is entertaining and fun to watch.
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7/10
Jean-Claude Van Damme Film Festival
lastliberal26 March 2007
Now, we are moving into what I consider a good Van Damme flick. The story has been told many times. It is similar in many respects to Romeo Must Die - evil developer wants to put up a kitzy development and needs to run off small landowners. Clydie (Rosanna Arquette) resists and her deputy dawg boyfriend (Edward Blatchford) is playing both sides. In comes the hard-ass to get things finished (a very young Ted Levine) and, at the same time our hero breaks out of prison and camps on her doorstep. It seems Van Damme is always either breaking out of prison or going AWOL. Relationships with her two cute kids begin and then things really heat up with mom. Boyfriend is jealous and it all comes to a head, as expected, between Van EDamme and Levine. Smaltzy ending, but great chases. fights, and lots of passion.
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This was one of the best of 1993, no joke.
baumer23 September 1999
Van Damme has a reputation as a kickboxer or an ass kicker and a martial artist. No one really thinks he can act and the only reason he has a career in the movies is because he can do all those things and because women swoon over him. Being the quintessential guy, I am pretty much in the category of guys that likes to see him in films that are loaded with kicks to the head and punches to the stomach. It is a guy thing to want to see guys like Van Damme, Arnold, Sly and Seagal kick some major butt. But I have to admit that as much as I like some of his films that are action and nothing but, this film really blew me away. I was completely convinced with the love story and I felt for the characters. Jean Claude gives his best performance in here. And the sript being written by Eszetheras is perfect. This is a film that relies more on character and dialogue than it does kickboxing skills. And perhaps that alienates die hard Van Damme fans but for the rest of the audience out there this is a great step in the right direction. I have heard people that love his smashmouth style of film say that this is a more tame Van Damme and they don't like it that much, but when your films only gross about the same amount as a typical Friday the 13th film, it's safe to say that there is room to grow and Nowhere to Run is definitely growth. The only reason that people didn't go to see it is because it is Van Damme. But this has so much more to offer than just your typical action flick. The romance is fresh and Kieran Culkin is excellent as the young tyke who grows attached to Van Damme. It's just too bad Claude couldn't make more movies like this one because I really think people would warm up to this style of movie from him and eventually his box office appeal would grow. But as long he continues to make movies like Universal Soldier 2 and Knock Off, he will forever be stuck in that mold.

Nowhere to Run is a great film and when it came out in 1993, I remember making out my list for the ten best films that year, and yes, this one was on it. I highly recommend it. I think you will be surprised. However, if you are hard core and like to see his films with lots of kicks and blood and cheesy lines from guys like Bolo Yeung, then don't go see this one, it is too much of a movie for you to enjoy.
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7/10
Great movie
glenn-major17 July 2020
This is a very engaging thriller, and I'm a big fan of the muscles from Brussels! All to like.
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6/10
"When push comes to shove, you'll be dealing with me."
docchainsaw20002 January 2004
"Nowhere to Run" is a 1993 action film with decent action star Jean Claude Van Damme. Although good for fans of the genre and Van Damme, it may be a let down for others. Why I myself am not a diehard Van Damme fan (at least he did "Hard Target"), I thought this movie was good. Why, you ask? Because it has Ted Levine as the bad guy.! Anyway, this movie caught me by surprise. I thought it would be one of those bad movies where stuff explodes just so you can watch stuff explode. But I found it to be a decent vehicle for it's stars, and you never can go wrong with Ted Levine. It's a nice little movie. 6 out of 10.
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5/10
Nowhere to go...
BandSAboutMovies10 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Robert Harmon directed The Hitcher and the Tom Selleck starring Jesse Stone series of TV movies. Here, he guides JCVD to a much more dramatic tale than he's normally in. No worries - the film stays true to the Van Damme trope that it must explain to you that he's another nationality. Here, he's Sam Gillen, a Québécois convict who escapes from Federal custody thanks to his partner. Yes, Van Damme is not a good guy here and his actions directly lead to the death of his friend.

In their last heist, that very same partner killed a bank guard, a crime for which Sam was ultimately convicted. Sam moves on alone, camping on a piece of farmland owned by Clydie Anderson (Rosanna Arquette), who is a widow with two kids, Mookie (Kieran Culkin) and Bree.

After some sneaking around, Sam ends up saving the family from some ruffians. That's when he learns that she's been holding out on selling her property to Franklin Hale (Joss Ackland!), who for some reason will go out of business without having Clydie's property to build tract homes. I have no idea how real estate works, people.

Hale gets Mr. Dunston (Ted Levine!) to try and oust Clydie and the corrupt Sheriff Lonnie Poole (Edward Blatchford, who played the cool brother of Mr. Belding in a very important and special episode of Saved By the Bell) is all into Clydie. He gets the dirt on Sam and forces him to leave, but still sends the cops after him.

While all that is happening, Hale forces Clydie to sign over her home and sets it on fire. Sam comes back just in time to kill Dunston and turns himself over to the police, having learned that running away is never the right thing to do.

Nowhere To Run was originally called Pals and was written by legendary wildman Joe Eszterhas and director Richard Marquand. He told The Guardian, "The script was taken and destroyed many years later by Jean-Claude Van Damme as Nowhere to Run. It lost its sensitivity, it lost everything. I don't like to remember that movie."

It's a downer, to be honest. If you're coming here expecting Bloodsport, maybe you should just watch Bloodsport. Or Kickboxer. Or The Quest.
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6/10
Modest ambitions, modest results
dinky-43 August 2001
Reactions to this movie seem to depend on one's appetite for action. Those hungry for it are disappointed while those looking instead for plot and character development are pleased. I tend to fall into the latter category but must point out that while "Nowhere to Run" ranks among the better Van Dammes, it relies too much on stock situations, (plucky woman defending homestead), and cliche characters, (corrupt business tycoon with oily smile). I'd also like to point out the good work of Edward Blatchford as the local Deputy Sheriff. It's a thankless part but he manages to make something of it, and no, I didn't read any dark psychological meaning into the scene in which he discovers Van Damme taking a shower. However, I did find utterly bizarre that moment at the dinner table when Patricia Arquette's little girl casually comments on the impressive size of a certain portion of Van Damme's anatomy. This was promptly followed by Arquette's comment that it was only average in size. Talk about weird!
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5/10
Van Damme escapes prison to battle an evil magician...
Whatwouldodindo28 August 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Jean-Claude Van Damme escapes a prison transport vehicle to do battle with an evil magician and scum-bag cop who have been employed by developers to steal a communities' land. Kieran Culkin delivers a star performance as a kid who thinks boobs are "really gross!" Rosanna Arquette's hot mom boobs and plenty of shocking screenwriter incompetence make this film watchable with a couple of dudes. Don't check your smart phone too much because the slow moments pay off without too much meandering.

Spoiler alert!: the kids both see Jean-Claude's penis before the mom does! Au revoir!
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7/10
Good Old School
willbrailey31 March 2022
Nowhere to Run is a film that I put on expecting an explosive action spectacle. What I got was a legitimately solid performance from Jean-Claude Van Damme and 1 hour 30 minutes of beautiful cinematography in a peaceful countryside setting. There are hardly any cityscapes or townships in this movie and, for me, that gave it a unique appeal among other movies in the action & adventure genre.

I really recommend this one. Worth your time and attention. It hits that sweat spot of being badass, while making you feel relaxed and comfortable.
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5/10
Not expecting this one from Van Damme.
m-ramanan27 September 2022
RATED 5/10 Language: English Source: Netflix

This is simple and templated action masala. The story is wafer thin and it has very good starting escape scene. Based on the story i was expecting some nice heroism and great action stunts.

It has more romance than stunts. Not used Van-Damme's full potential. Not even close to his old masala. Easily skippable one.

Its more on drama and that too highly predictable one. The story and characters are run of the mill and it add even more dullness to the movie.

How much you lower your expectation, this will not go with that. It is not typical Van Damme movie.
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8/10
A huge surprise
theskylabadventure25 April 2008
Having recently revisited my old Van Damme collection (my wife has developed a bit of a crush on JC), I have made my way through all the classics (Bloodsport, AWOL, Kickboxer, Death Warrant, Universal Soldier etc) and hugely enjoyed revelling in the guilty pleasure of watching a short, white Belgian dude kick the living snot out of everyone else on the screen. Why else would anyone go to see a Van Damme picture?

The last film I came to was Nowhere to Run. Having not seen it in a good ten years, and remembering it as slow-paced, indulgent and severely lacking in arse-kicking, I was not really expecting to be at all impressed. It's funny, looking through most of the reviews here, that two groups of people have clearly emerged. The first group, the Van Damme fans, are all complaining that this is not your average VD film and bitching about how they were cheated into watching a serious drama.

The other group are all up in arms at the fact that anyone would make a serious drama and cast Van Damme in it. I have a name for this group, but I doubt IMDb would publish it. Let's just call them w*nkers. Why the w*nkers, who clearly have an abundant dislike for the Muscles from Brussells, would go to see a film with his name above the title is beyond me. Cinesnobs have no place at a Van Damme show. I'll leave it at that.

The reason I felt compelled to write this review is that I am, admittedly, a bit of a Cinesnob, but I'm also happy to take a film for what it is. I like James Bond, I like Sonny Chiba, I like blaxploitation and I also fricking like Van Damme movies! What I did not expect, was for "a serious drama starring Van Damme" (trying saying that out loud without snickering) to be so Damme good! (Get it?)

The story is pretty simple, JC is an escaped con who happens upon a sleepy little town which is about to be pulverised by a nihilistic land developer (not surprisingly, a British one, played with appropriate menace by Joss Ackland). He befriends a little boy (not in the Michael Jackson way, though the boy in question is, ironically, Macaulay Culkin's younger brother, Kieran) and consequently gets rather chummy with the boy's mother. Happily, she is both widowed and incredibly hot. As if her being a still distraught widow weren't enough, she is also being harassed to a rather unreasonable degree by Ted Levine, who is hilarious and brilliant and the land developer's chief henchman. Cue Van Damme.

Sounds like the ideal recipe for another typical action flick, so I am willing to forgive those VD fans who felt cheated. What we actually end up with is a genuinely moving, well paced and hugely enjoyable action drama. It may sound unthinkable, but JC actually pulls his character off perfectly. Sam is mistrusting, awkward but ultimately striving to be a decent person. Director Mark Harmon made a very savvy decision in keeping JC's dialogue to a minimum, leaving him the task of creating a believable character with his face and body language alone. Don't believe the naysayers, JC delivers a truly surprising performance.

Rosanna Arquette also handles her role well, even if the character is flying dangerously close to stereotype. Her performance grounds the whole story, and we both care for her plight and admire her determination (the men in the audience will also admire her perfectly formed semi-naked body). The two kids were bound to be annoying, but they're certainly nowhere close to being as bad as they could have been.

The real star of this film is the consistently beautiful cinematography by the relatively unknown David Gribble. With scenery like this, you'd be hard pressed to go wrong with the external stuff, but the interiors are equally well shot.

The big let down, both in terms of cinematography and the film as a whole, is the truly lame action. There are only a handful of action sequences in the whole show, but they're easily the dullest moments in the film. When you have a good story, solid characters and a really well-cast group of fine actors, do you really need to throw in a bunch of crappy fights? Sadly, if you're selling this as a Van Damme picture, the answer is yes. So they had the courage to put JC in a serious role and give him the chance to prove that he can actually act, but they didn't have the balls to actually sell the film on this basis. The trailer says "Van Damme, as you've never seen him before" and then just gives us a bunch of poor action clips. Is it any wonder that nobody who actually bothered to see this film liked it?

If it weren't bad enough that the action scenes are badly shot and clumsily edited, they're also punctuated by really poor one-liners from JC ("Strike 3, you're out!" and "Au revoir, f**ker" are among the worst). One gets the feeling that there were differences in the opinions of the director and the star and the opinions of the producers and studio folk. Presumably, someone thought they had found a happy balance. Someone was wrong, and the film really suffers as a consequence.

If you can overlook this, and you're not watching the film either to complain that it's not a solid action flick or to complain that Van Damme is in a drama, you'll probably find yourself surprisingly impressed with the film.
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7/10
Quick Reviews!!
malkane3166 May 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Van Damme was on a role in the late eighties, early nineties, making some of the most fun, simple action movies of the era. His ability to always get a laugh, and being renowned for his nice-guy qualities have ensured his continued success, even if most of his movies now are straight-to-DVD capers.

In Nowhere to Run he stars with an established cast as another misunderstood nice guy, an escaped convict who decides to help a young widow and her family who are struggling against a local developer who is forcing them out of their home. There is a good amount of action, some strong performances, and some very funny moments. Van Damme plays Sam, a mysterious convict who has escaped from prison. He sleeps in a tent outside a small town where two local young kids find and befriend him. Eventually their mother Clydie, played by Rosanna Arquette finds out and invites him into their home cautiously. Of course they fall for each other, much to the distaste of local Sheriff and love interest Lonnie, who decides to look into Sam's background. Franklin Hale, played with typical evil by Ackland is the main bad guy, but his side-arm Levine is the main threat. Sam helps the family, foiling Hale at every turn, but the past is catching up with Sam...

Arquette, Culkin, Levine, and Taubman as the daughter are particularly good, and the story tries to be light-hearted and moral. It may be another attempt to achieve a wider audience for Van Damme, and it is definitely one of his most accessible, thanks to the good cast and humour. The various discussions on Van Damme's naked body are always humorous. Overall another good Van Damme film which will please fans, and may interest a few others.

7.5 out of 10
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5/10
Not JCVD best work. 5.5ish
welhof125 January 2023
On Facebook Van Damme was feeling nostalgic and mention this movie on the 30 year anniversary so I thought I'd give it a go and the rating was spot on, it wasn't that good.

The plot was just so dumb and cliche, common of these types of movies from this era. There was also these uncomfortable sexual innuendos with him and the kids and his penis. Just weird. The villains were some of the worst. Not even comical, just silly.

The scenery was pretty though. Where were they? Montana? They may have said.

Huge fan of these types of movies from this era but there are at least half of dozen of van dammes better work out there.
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Nice guy saves the day in one of his better films
crazy-2317 February 2000
Escaped from prison, Van Damme camps out near a widow's home in the woods.

Sure there's some action in the movie with quite a number of punch 'em outs but the movie really should have been in the drama section, not the action section of rental stores. This is quite a change for Van Damme as he becomes a father to the fatherless, nice guy, gentleman, and town savior.

So the story was really good and damn Van Damme did a good job at his nice guy part. The funniest part is when he and the boy go into town for motorcyle parts and the sherrif dude asks him questions. Listen to how Van Damme pronounces 'motercycle' and 'Quepec'.
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7/10
Get off my land
movieman_kev23 July 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Jean-Claude Van Damme is Sam Gillen an escaped con who happens upon the farm of Clyde, a single mother who's house is in jeopardy of being bulldozed by a real estate developer. He spends his time peeping in on her showering, stealing salt and butting heads with her boyfriend whom she nonchalantly lies to all the time, before he helps her with her hired goon problem.

Annoying kids notwithstanding, this film, while not nearly as good as I fondly remembered it as a kid, is an energetic enough time waister for a lazy Saturday afternoon.

Eye Candy: Rosanna Arquette gets fully nude
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7/10
The motorcycle sequence was the only thing memorable for it can't be for Van Damme's acting
jordondave-2808512 June 2023
(2003) Nowhere To Run ACTION

Jean Claude Van Dam stars as escaped convict, Sam Gillen taking the rap for someone's else's murder blah blah blah which is an excuse to showcase the action scenes and perhaps Van Dammes acting range, and as an action fan there's only "one" realistic memorable chase sequence regarding a realistic motorcycle chase (obviously ridden by stunt double) which overshadows whatever else shown on here or most action movies Van Damme has ever done. Movie also stars Rosanna Arquette as the single mother Clydie Anderson imposing her problems on the Van Damme character. A rather young Kieran Culkin also stars as Clydie's son Mike 'Mookie' Anderson.
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4/10
Disappointing for those waiting for action.
tuomas_865 March 2022
Frustration. When you start watching a movie that is defined as an action movie starring Van Damme, expect a great action or an allusion to it. It was hardly in this movie until the last 20min. Of course, otherwise there were momentarily small references to the action during the film. For example, if you're a real Van Damme fan this is part of the collection, but not because of its action. I would say more of a drama as a film that is lightly spiced with action.
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6/10
Best part of the film was Rosanna Arquette
smatysia1 January 2014
This was obviously an attempt to (somewhat) break type for Jean-Claude van Damme. While there are a number of action scenes, (motorbike chase, etc.) the fighting scenes stayed away from the martial arts that van Damme was known for. They were largely conventional movie fighting. His character was largely monosyllabic, and a lot of the dialog and supposed zingers were quite lame. Joss Ackland as the slimily evil land developer was reliably hate-able. The best part of the film was Rosanna Arquette, as the widow van Damme's character protects/ takes up for/ falls for. She was quite beautiful here, and shows some range. Too bad it was wasted on a poor to medium script. No real reason to watch this unless you are a fan of one these actors.
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4/10
Cliché-ridden.
DigitalRevenantX727 April 2008
Plot Synopsis: Sam, a convicted bank robber, is freed when the prison bus he is on is hijacked. On the run from the law, he comes to the aid of a woman & her two children who are being pressured to sell their land to corrupt developers.

"Nowhere to Run" is one of the numerous films featuring Belgian martial arts legend Jean-Claude Van Damme. The film, like many of Van Damme's work, does not rank too highly when it comes to things like acting, script or even direction. Director Robert Harmon, who helmed the excellent "The Hitcher", manages to keep things from going out of control. The script is simplistic, bordering on clichés – the good guy convict, the embattled single mother, the shady developers, even the corrupt sheriff. As usual, Van Damme makes a meal out of his role, while the two kids should have been taught a serious lesson on not to talk to strangers. Joss Ackland & Ted Levine play the villains quite well.
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7/10
Such an awful-good film
bowmanblue21 July 2020
Do you like cheesy, bad, action movies from the eighties? If the answer is 'Yes' then you should find entertainment from 'Nowhere to Run' (even if it was made in 1993!). Jean Claude Van Damme has made some great films. And some equally bad ones. 'Nowhere to Run' lies so far in the 'bad' category that it transcends its terrible make-up and pushes through the negative to force its way back into the good category.

This time round Van Damme plays - yet another - slight variation of every other character he's ever played when he takes on the form of an escaped criminal who winds up helping a widow and her family protect their land against a bunch of cliched villains, lead by an 'uber cliched' British mastermind.

If you like action, then you won't find much of it here. Yes, there are the obligatory punch-ups and car chases, but they're not filmed particularly well and therefore you'll be shaking your head at how someone actually thought they would satisfy adrenaline junkies.

If you had some sort of 'action movie bingo' card, I reckon you could tick off pretty much every trope associated with the genre. And that's even before you mentioned the script. It's awful. In fact, there are some moments in the dialogue which just come so out-of-the-blue that you'll find yourself laughing at the sheer ludicrous randomness of the inclusion of such lines.

And yet for all its - many - faults, I found myself taking enormous entertainment from 'Nowhere to Run.' In some places I found myself laughing harder than many comedy films. It's not a film you should take seriously. If you stopped to over-analyse the plot for even a fraction of a second you'd find yourself trying to make sense of something that just isn't meant to be logical. If ever a film required you to put your brain 'on hold' then it was this one. Sheer popcorn fodder.
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5/10
Standard fare for Van Damme
TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews10 February 2006
It's written by Joe Eszterhas(Basic Instinct)... yet it's virtually entirely uneventful. It's directed by Robert Harmon(The Hitcher, which I haven't seen but is said to be at least mildly interesting), yet barely holds your interest at all. It features Jean-Claude Van Damme(a man known and loved for Karate) yet has little to no fighting at all. The story isn't particularly involving. The plot is dull. The acting ranges, but most of it is Damme's standard. Oh yes, it *is* that bad. I enjoyed Ted Levine's character, but really, when you get to see that guy do his thing, how can you not? The action is as non-existent as it is uninspired. The writing, dialog and humor is pretty dim. The characters are clichés, one-note and poorly developed. The whole romance subplot just barely works. The leads are unappealing and lack charisma. The kids are more annoying than anything else. The film is ridden with action-flick clichés... that and Van Damme's rather poor excuse for acting kept me laughing rather than watching in excitement... I was on the edge of my seat for a fair bit of the time spent watching it, but that was because I almost fell of my chair from aforementioned laughing. I had seen this film once before, a few years back... and I remembered it as forgettable, not really worth my time and thoroughly unimpressive. As it turns out, my memory is not all that bad. Luckily, I didn't waste too much time paying attention this time around; I recognized most from the last time I watched. I guess it had etched itself on my mind, in order to keep me from forgetting how drab the film is. All in all, I suppose it's OK for big fans of Van Damme, just remember that this is not one of those of his films(meaning, the vast majority of them) where he kicks his way through all obstacles. Look elsewhere for that. I recommend this only to fans of Van Damme, as everyone else just won't see the point to it(as I did on this second viewing, after not being a fan of Damme's anymore). 5/10
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8/10
Surprisingly good
senrav27 September 2003
I had heard that this movie wasn't typical Van Damme, but I still expected it to be mindless action on the whole. I was shocked when it turned out to be truly well done, and not just for a Van Damme movie. The acting is great, especially Rosanna Arquette's performance, and the story is not cheesy at all--it's actually compelling. The (sparse) fight sequences don't involve any weird Van Damme midair split-kicks to the head; they're straight-ahead brawls. This is definitely Van Damme's best, focusing on story and not action, but I guess his presence makes a lot of people overlook it. My rating: 8/10.
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7/10
I like it, but it is not the typical Van Damme flick
vocklabruck1 August 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I know many people do not like this movie, because they are used having Van Damme in action movies with martial arts and shooting scenes. This is NOT an action flick, instead it is a drama with an action touch.

I really enjoyed the movie. Kieran Culkin was excellent and also Ted Levine. There is a scene where it would have been good some tears from Van Damme, but I bet this wasn't possible because of the "macho" he always portrays in all his movies, and... boys don't cry.

If you like action you will enjoy the fights and the chase, but do not expect fireworks. There is also the typical "show butt" scene, but what is somehow misplaced is the scene where the kids talk about Van Damme's penis at the dinner, actually unnecessary.

All in all I recommend this movie for everyone. You will have a good time.
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2/10
Could have been very good,if only the directing was'nt so awful.
STAR RATING:*****Unmissable****Very Good***Okay**You Could Go Out For A Meal Instead*Avoid At All Costs

Nowhere To Run carefully conveys some touching,poignant moments,absent from every other Van Damme film except Legionnaire,but clumsily portrays them.The charecter development is poorly worked out,with potentially great charecters to build on either being killed off too early,or too quick to shed their skin.More of the film Van Damme obviously concentrated on being more dramatic,but ultimately the action scenes are as usual,especially so at the end,what take over,but again,this is too rapidly conveyed to have any real lasting effect,other than to do what any other basic Van Damme film would do.For a truely dramatic break from the norm,Legionnaire remains the Van Damme film to talk about.**
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