Street Machine

THE CHASE 1994

> GETTING THERE IS TWICE THE FUN

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AFTER being jailed for a crime he didn’t commit, Jack Hammond (Charlie Sheen) busts out of prison and steals a car with the plan to cross into Mexico. After being spotted by a pair of beat cops while at a local service station, Jack takes poor little rich girl Natalie Voss (Kristy Swanson) hostage and commandeer­s her red BMW, instigatin­g a monumental freeway car chase.

The BMW is soon being hotly pursued by numerous police cars, helicopter­s and news crews, while Natalie’s uber-billionair­e father, Dalton Voss (Ray Wise), pulls out all stops and offers financial incentives to retrieve his daughter. Meanwhile, two of the cops in pursuit, Dobbs (former Black Flag frontman Henry Rollins) and Figus (Josh Mostel), are in the middle of filming a Cops-style documentar­y TV show.

All the while, Jack and Natalie are forming a romantic connection, and after consummati­ng this newfound love behind the wheel at speed, Natalie is now an accessory to the crime rather than a victim.

As the title might suggest, The Chase is virtually all car chase for its entire run time, highlighte­d by period-perfect, fiery, Last Action Hero-esque stunts and Natalie’s BMW copping a hammering via J-turns and endless handbrake slides. The action scenes are strewn with plenty of oneliners delivered in the way that only Charlie Sheen can, while Henry Rollins’s preacher-like ramblings are front and centre as a pseudo commentary for the chase. There’s additional 90s rock star cameos from The Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Anthony Kiedis and Flea, who pilot the coolest jacked-and-flamed Ford Bronco you’re likely to see.

VERDICT: 3/5

WITH plenty of stupid and almost slapstick humour, The Chase never takes itself too seriously, and neither should you. The film’s quick pace is perfectly matched by the upbeat energy of the cracker punk rock soundtrack featuring the likes of Bad Religion, NOFX, Rancid, The Offspring and The Rollins Band. Throw in the awesome stunt work and the whole affair just screams pure 1990s, making for a fun, easy watch.

 ?? ?? COOL FLICK FACT: Much of the dialogue for Kiedis and Flea’s characters (below) was improvised to allow the pair maximum creative freedom.
COOL FLICK FACT: Much of the dialogue for Kiedis and Flea’s characters (below) was improvised to allow the pair maximum creative freedom.
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