poster

Rush (1991)

6.6 | Dec 22, 1991 (US) | Crime, Drama | 02:00
Budget: 17 000 000 | Revenue: N/A

How far do they go before they've gone too far?

Undercover cop Jim Raynor (Jason Patric) is a seasoned veteran. His partner, Kristen Cates (Jennifer Jason Leigh), is lacking in experience, but he thinks she's tough enough to work his next case with him: a deep cover assignment to bring down the notoriously hard-to-capture drug lord Gaines (Gregg Allman). While their relationship turns romantic during the assignment, they also turn into junkies, and will have to battle their own addictions if they want to bring down Gaines once and for all.

Featured Crew

Director
Sound Re-Recording Mixer, Sound Designer
Foley Artist
Original Music Composer
Foley Recordist
Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Costume Design
Best Boy Electric
Screenplay

Cast

profile
Jason Patric
Jim Raynor
profile
Jennifer Jason Leigh
Kristen Cates
profile
Max Perlich
Walker
profile
Tony Frank
Nettle
profile
Special K. McCray
Willie Red
profile
Dennis Letts
Senior District Attorney
profile
Dennis Burkley
Motorcycle Guy

Reviews

avatar
John Chard
8 | Jul 31, 2016
I'm going deeper underground! Rush is directed by Lili Fini Zanuck and adapted to screenplay by Peter Dexter from the Kim Wozencraft novel. It stars Jason Patric, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Sam Elliott, Max Perlich and Gregg Allman. Music is by Eric Clapton and cinematography by Kenneth MacMillan. Two undercover narcotic cops get on a downward spiral that they may not return from... Set and filmed in Texas, Rush is a hot, sweaty and claustrophobic neo- noir. It maybe doesn't have the classic visual tics of yesteryear, but it has photographic style to burn - with Clapton's score suitably melancholic, which in turn is something that sits perfectly with the perpetual sense of doom that pervades the pic. Corruption and addiction lead the way, all while love tries its hardest to break on through to the other side, but we are on a bus to noirville, and noirville is an unforgiving place... Patric and Leigh are damn fine actors if given the right material to work with, and they carry this with aplomb. Sadly, Allman is a weak villain, maybe because he looks like a Rick Wakeman clone?! While under using Sam Elliott is just a plain waste. However, this deserves its place on neo-noir lists. It is deliberate in pacing, therefore asking for you to buy into the thematics at work, to let them itch your skin, but to do so has rewards, for in true noir style it doesn't chicken out once the end credits have rolled. 7.5/10