Due to a high volume of active users and service overload, we had to decrease the quality of video streaming. Premium users remains with the highest video quality available. Sorry for the inconvinience it may cause. Donate to keep project running.
Do you have a video playback issues?
Please disable AdBlocker in your browser for our website.
The movie follows a hotel manager ensnared in an assassination plot by a terrorist while aboard a red-eye flight to Miami. Threatened by the potential murder of her father, she is pulled into a plot to assist her captor in offing a politician.
If constructing a thriller could be likened to building a house, then Wes Craven's Red Eye is a perfect piece of architecture: It's clean-lined and soundly structured, without a foot of wasted space or any materials left unused.
September 26, 2005
Cinemaphile.org
The movie gains an effective footing by, basically, thoroughly exploiting one's fear of being blackmailed into something dangerous.
It took forever, but the best thriller of summer 2005 has finally arrived. The gripping, seat- clutching suspense in this baby will pin you to your seat.
August 27, 2005
Film and Felt
Works extremely well as a fast-paced adrenaline rush, but not so well as an allegory on today's government and security issues.
For Wes Craven, who I like a lot as a slasher director, he really goes into a different direction with this.
August 29, 2005
Time Out
The psychological mind-games are played to the hilt, the pressurised cabin air increases the edge-of-the-seat tension and the 85-minute flight time is gratifyingly short.
I'm not claiming masterpiece stature for Red Eye, just a solid professionalism in the acting, writing and direction that seems inextricably related to the modesty of its intentions.
The movie turns into a complicated duel that depends on precise observation of physical detail and moment-by-moment continuity so closely calibrated that it's impossible to find a wasted shot or an exaggerated emotion.