Diemazz

Qinhuangdao
Mattias Norström
Badi VII
Brendan Gaughan
Matthew Cheung
Catastrophe (play)
Bushmeat
Kamsa
Binary Star
CD40
Czech people
Guangshen Railway
Gender feminism
Kemwel
EchoStar Communications Corporation
Huangshan (city)
Insulin
WTMV
adrian high school michigan
Aleister Crowley
Hindgut
wsb atlanta
Mérens
Ward (law)
KRDJ
WCVJ
Berliner Weisse
Harmony, California
WREY
Balsall Common
Waraich
1517 in music
Felton Pilate
Category:627 births
Yongxiu County
Nocturne (1946 film)
Emperor Wu of Southern Qi
WUSN
Evergreen (disambiguation)
1694
Lee Shih chiao
WWRM
Antique cymbals
Category:701 deaths
Grunge speak
Bumiputera (Brunei)
CDEFGAHC MID
Yeah Yeah Yeahs


Broken Arrow

Theatrical poster
Directed by John Woo
Produced by Bill Badalato
Terence Chang
Mark Gordon
Written by Graham Yost
Starring John Travolta
Christian Slater
Samantha Mathis
Music by Hans Zimmer
Editing by Joe Hutshing
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) February 9, 1996
Running time 108 min.
Country  United States
Language English
Budget $55 million (estimated)
IMDb Allmovie

Broken Arrow is a 1996 American action film directed by John Woo, written by Graham Yost, and starring John Travolta and Christian Slater. The original music score was composed by Hans Zimmer. It deals with the attempted theft of an American nuclear weapon.

Contents

Plot

Major Vic 'Deak' Deakins (John Travolta) and Captain Riley Hale (Christian Slater) are pilots in the United States Air Force. The film begins with a boxing match between the two, where Hale is knocked out by Deakins. During the fight, Deakins (whom Hale considers a mentor and his closest friend) tells Hale the story of the rope-a-dope and reveals a major theme of the film: when your opponent shows you one thing, he will do another. After the match Hale gives the bet money of the match back to Deakins saying he had stolen it from his wallet. Later both the pilots are assigned to a top secret exercise on a B3 Stealth Bomber with two nuclear missiles on board. Deakins and Hale take off from Whiteman Air Force Base in the Bomber (a fictional advanced version of the actual B-2 Spirit stealth bomber) carrying the two live nuclear weapons on an evening exercise over Utah.

After successfully evading Air Force radar during the exercise, Deakins has a friendly chat during which he distracts Hale to check their port-side window. At this point, he draws his gun to shoot Hale. A struggle ensues ending when Deakins ejects Hale. He then drops the missiles from the plane. When the airforce base regains radar contact with the aircraft, Deakins reports that "Hale's lost it. I'm punching out" and ejects leaving the plane to crash on the mountain side over the Utah canyons.

Meanwhile, a Special Forces team is sent to recover the missiles. They do not find the missiles in the remains of the plane and report a "Broken Arrow," a situation where nuclear weapons are missing. The team later locates the missiles in a canyon, but are killed while recovering them by mercenaries led by Deakins and Pritchett (Bob Gunton), whom Deakins doesn't like sharing his command even Pritchett claims that the operation is "his money".

Hale survives the ejection and is found by Park Ranger Terry Carmichael (Samantha Mathis) whom, after a brief stand-off, he convinces to help him track down Deakins and foil his plot. After recovering the weapons, Hale attempts to disable them using a safety feature which would render them unusable by intentionally entering the arming code incorrectly. Deakins, however, had anticipated this scenario, and Hale inadvertently arms the warhead. Finding himself unable to disarm the warhead, Hale decides to place it and the unarmed weapon deep into the abandoned copper mine where they've been working to prevent them from being used elsewhere. Deakins arrives and secures the unarmed warhead leaving Hale and Terry to die in the upcoming explosion. Deakins is chased by a helicopter as the mercenaries proceede with their mission; blackmailing the government with the threat of detonate the warhead in a civilian area. Pritchett berates him for allowing the helicopter to give chase and Deakins, fed up with his complaining, kills Pritchett by crushing his throat with a flashlight. Hale and Terry escape the mine via an underground river. Following the explosion during which the EMP (Electro-Magnetic Pulse) disables and subsequently destroys the NEST Team sent in to recover the warheads, Terry and Hale track Deakins to a motorboat to be used for transporting the remaining warhead. While trying to steal the boat, Terry is forced to hide onboard while Deakins moves the warhead.

Hale works out that Deakins intends to move the warhead onboard a train and sets off in a helicopter to find the train and hunt down the remaining mercenaries. On board the train Hale finds Terry. A gunfight ensues between Hale, Terry and Deakins' henchmen in which most of the mercenaries are shot dead. The train is set on fire when the one of the bullets hits a fuel barrel during the gunfight. Hale faces off against Deakins in hand-to-hand combat in the boxcar containing the warhead. Hale overcomes Deakins' superior abilities and retaliates with a flurry of blows, which weakens Deakins. Hale then leaps out of the train with a remote control and turns off the warheads timer. At the same instant, a detached train car comes slamming into the car where the fight had ensued. Due to the impact from the collision, the disarmed warhead flies into Deakins and the entire train explodes, incinerating Deakins.

Hale, who survived, finds a 20-dollar bill fluttering on a twig in the debris of the train wreck; the same 20-dollar bill he had stolen from Deakins. He then finds Terry and they formally introduce themselves to each other.

Cast

Box office

Broken Arrow was #1 at the box office its opening weekend grossing $15.6 million. It stayed on top for a second week and ultimately had a domestic gross of US$ 70,770,147 and an international gross of $79,500,000, for a total worldwide gross of $150,270,147[1].

Notes

As discussed in United States military nuclear incident terminology, it "initially involves an apparent Pinnacle-Broken Arrow event, as the nuclear weapons are supposedly jettisoned in an emergency, but as this is a ruse to steal the weapons, it actually depicts a Pinnacle-Empty Quiver event by the above definitions. However, the subsequent detonation of one of those weapons constituted a Pinnacle-Broken Arrow event."

External links

search:

Site Map: RSS 2.0

Recent Searches: Brugada syndrome
Broken Arrow (1996 film)
Nocturne (1946 film)
Nissan Neminov
Image:2002 OH Proof png
Ninji (Nintendo)
Fame
Yasna
Nikki Gil
Nicanor (satrap)

Related Pages: