Jonathan Cold returns, this time he goes undercover to stop a group of terrorists before they bomb Los Angeles.Jonathan Cold returns, this time he goes undercover to stop a group of terrorists before they bomb Los Angeles.Jonathan Cold returns, this time he goes undercover to stop a group of terrorists before they bomb Los Angeles.
Matt Salinger
- Myshkin
- (as Matthew Salinger)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film is infamous for Steven Seagal's almost total lack of involvement in any of the fight scenes due to his leaving the film 18 days into a 30-day shoot. Alexander Gruszynski shot fights with stunt doubles and scenes that were to involve Seagal were shot with Tamara Davies instead.
- GoofsDuring the fight scene with Seagal and Greer, you can clearly see it's not Seagal but a stunt double. His jacket even changes between black and grey.
- Quotes
Jonathan Cold: You see, in this business... the keys to the kingdom is weapons-grade plutonium. If you ain't got that, you ain't got shit.
- ConnectionsEdited from The Foreigner (2003)
Featured review
Who the Hell are you? I'm Steven Seagal
Who the Hell are you? I'm Steven Seagal playing Jonathan Cold, hired assassin, out to stop a group of terrorists from destroying Los Angeles with a compact nuclear device.
We get the usual mumbled laboured dialogue from Seagal, the slow motion movement. A stunt double was used for many scenes and the usual rule is, if it moves, it's the double.
I didn't find the supporting cast as irritating compared to other Seagal flicks. John Pyper Ferguson and Julian Stone make reasonable bad guys while Tamara Davies is easy on the eye and puts in a competent performance as Seagal's sidekick.
The filming is good, the plot is sensible, well sort of, and there is lots of shooting if you like that sort of thing.
Overall this isn't the worst Seagal film. The first and last 20 minutes are pretty good even though the middle section drags quite a bit.
We get the usual mumbled laboured dialogue from Seagal, the slow motion movement. A stunt double was used for many scenes and the usual rule is, if it moves, it's the double.
I didn't find the supporting cast as irritating compared to other Seagal flicks. John Pyper Ferguson and Julian Stone make reasonable bad guys while Tamara Davies is easy on the eye and puts in a competent performance as Seagal's sidekick.
The filming is good, the plot is sensible, well sort of, and there is lots of shooting if you like that sort of thing.
Overall this isn't the worst Seagal film. The first and last 20 minutes are pretty good even though the middle section drags quite a bit.
helpful•41
- ogdendc
- Jan 15, 2014
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Foreigner: Black Dawn
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $8,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $63,709
- Runtime1 hour 36 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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