Crash

2004

Action / Crime / Drama / Thriller

103
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 74% · 242 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 88% · 250K ratings
IMDb Rating 7.7/10 10 449580 449.6K

Plot summary

In post-Sept. 11 Los Angeles, tensions erupt when the lives of a Brentwood housewife, her district attorney husband, a Persian shopkeeper, two cops, a pair of carjackers and a Korean couple converge during a 36-hour period.


Uploaded by: OTTO
April 05, 2022 at 06:04 PM

Director

Top cast

Brendan Fraser as Rick Cabot
Sandra Bullock as Jean Cabot
Keith David as Lt. Dixon
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
863.76 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 52 min
Seeds 20
2.12 GB
1904*800
English 5.1
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 55 min
Seeds 44

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by acclar 9 / 10

a realistic, gritty, no-nonsense look at the way life is for so many....

After seeing this movie, I was able to really understand what "Six Degrees of Separation" means. There is a thread that weaves its way through the landscape of life connecting, influencing, and defining all. This movie is certainly thought-provoking, one cannot watch it without feeling either privileged to have become part of the fabric, or like a fly on the wall - seeing, yet unable to influence or guide. There is almost a sense of frustration at ones inability to be no more than an observer in this movie since it compels you to want to shout in warning, gasp in shock, cry in sorrow, and hold in comfort. "Crash" is definitely not a movie to use as a venue to escape life for a couple of hours, but it is a movie that certainly makes you take a second and third look at who you are within yourself. The actors are surprising not only for their depth of performance, but also because they do not play characters you think you know. I would highly recommend this movie to anyone who likes drama, action, comedic relief, or just an appreciation for a well-thought out movie.

Reviewed by WriterDave 9 / 10

Bold and Compelling Treatise on Racism in Modern Society

Take the pop-cultured infused socio-political discourse of a Spike Lee movie, the glossy grit of a Michael Mann LA crime story, and the compelling mosaic story-telling technique of a Paul Thomas Anderson film, and you'll get the "feel" for Paul Haggis' stunning directorial debut. To boil a film like "Crash" down to such terms, however, would do it severe injustice. Powerful and thought provoking, this is the most accomplished and compelling film since "21 Grams" premiered back at the end of 2003.

"Crash" brilliantly shows through intertwining vignettes, that are often blazingly funny in their brutal honesty and fascinatingly gut-wrenching in their melodrama, how subtle racism (often guised in nervous humor) and overt prejudice (often exasperated by sudden irrational violence and an overabundance of readily available firearms) completely permeate our culture and everyday interactions within society. A hyper intelligent script showcases not characters, but brilliant representations of real people, people we know and pass in the street every day, people not unlike us. People who at first seem to be lost causes in the war against racism (witnessed in Matt Dillon's harried beat cop and Sandra Bulluck's spoiled District Attorney's wife) can often become the most unlikely solutions to the problem, while people who ride in on their high horse (witnessed in Ryan Phillipe's noble young police officer) can turn against the tide in the blink of an eye. No one is immune to it no matter how hard they try to rise above it (witnessed in Don Cheadle's quietly tragic detective).

In the end, everyone is flawed, the racism is inescapable, and the audience feels a twinge of sympathy for just about everyone. Perhaps that is what Haggis is hinting at to be our answer. Showing empathy and being able to relate even on the most remote level to every human being out there is the first step to that true brotherhood of man. Because the film offers no real solution, the discussion and discourse it creates in the minds of the viewers is the first step in solving society's ills. We can't tackle everything at once, but we can open a dialogue, and hopefully, one person conversing with another will be the first step to our salvation. It takes a bold film to raise such questions, and an even greater one to compel an audience to talk about the potential answers, and that is exactly what "Crash" accomplishes.

Reviewed by cardsrock 7 / 10

Crash is not a bad film, but that doesn't mean it should've won Best Picture

I can understand why the Academy gravitated towards this race-oriented drama. However, it picked a film that beats you over the head with the idea that racism is bad. I'm pretty sure most people watching this film already knew that. While there are some creative sequences, there are an awful lot of incredible coincidences that tie these characters together. Some of the transformations are a little far-fetched as well. The actors do a fine job for the most part, even though the father/daughter scene is pretty melodramatic. I really don't think this is a bad film and worthy of the insane amount of hate it gets, it just is a bit simplistic for a Best Picture winner in the modern era.

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