Bullet Train (film)

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Bullet Train
Theatrical release poster
Directed byDavid Leitch
Screenplay byZak Olkewicz
Based onMaria Beetle (Bullet Train)
by Kōtarō Isaka
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyJonathan Sela
Edited byElísabet Ronaldsdóttir
Music byDominic Lewis
Production
companies
Distributed bySony Pictures Releasing
Release dates
  • July 18, 2022 (2022-07-18) (Grand Rex)
  • August 5, 2022 (2022-08-05) (United States)
Running time
126 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$85.9–90 million[2][3]
Box office$239.3 million[4][2]

Bullet Train is a 2022 American action comedy film starring Brad Pitt as a thief who must battle killers while riding a bullet train. The film is directed by David Leitch from a screenplay by Zak Olkewicz, and produced by Antoine Fuqua, who initially conceived the film. It is based on the 2010 novel Maria Beetle (titled Bullet Train in its UK and US edition), written by Kōtarō Isaka and translated by Sam Malissa, the second novel in Isaka's Hitman trilogy, of which the first novel was previously adapted as the 2015 Japanese film Grasshopper. The film also features an ensemble supporting cast including Joey King, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Brian Tyree Henry, Andrew Koji, Hiroyuki Sanada, Michael Shannon, Bad Bunny, and Sandra Bullock.

Principal photography began in Los Angeles in November 2020 and wrapped in March 2021. Bullet Train premiered in Paris on July 18, 2022, and was theatrically released in the United States on August 5, 2022, by Sony Pictures Releasing. The film received mixed reviews from critics and grossed $239 million worldwide on a production budget of around $90 million.

Plot

Yuichi Kimura boards a bullet train in Tokyo in search of the person who pushed his young son Wataru off a roof, hospitalizing him. On the same train is a thief, "Ladybug", replacing a sick coworker, Carver. Ladybug is being guided by his handler Maria Beetle to retrieve a briefcase full of cash from the train. Ladybug is reluctant in performing this job as his recent string of bad luck during his jobs resulted in accidental deaths but he sets out with a new, calmer mindset.

Also on the train are two English brothers, assassins codenamed "Lemon" and "Tangerine". Lemon and Tangerine recently rescued a man ("The Son") and the briefcase from some kidnappers and are taking the Son and the suitcase to Son's father, "The White Death", an extremely violent Russian-born Yakuza boss. Ladybug eventually locates the briefcase with the money inside, discreetly steals it, and heads to the nearest exit doors of the train to disembark at the next stop. However, he suddenly gets attacked by a Mexican assassin, "The Wolf", who spots him while getting on the train.

The Wolf mistakenly believes that Ladybug is the one who assassinated Wolf's entire wedding party, including members of his cartel and his new wife, by mass poisoning, as Ladybug was attending the wedding on a different assignment. A confused Ladybug fights off the Wolf, and the fight ends after Wolf's knife ricochets off the briefcase and strikes his heart, killing him. Distraught, Ladybug stashes the case. Meanwhile, Lemon discovers that the briefcase is missing from where he placed it. Lemon and Tangerine, having left the Son to discuss this twist of events and the ramifications of what will happen to them if they don't return the money, return to their seats only to discover that the Son has been poisoned in the same way that Wolf's wedding party was.

Yuichi finds the person who attacked Wataru, a young woman codenamed "The Prince", but she overpowers him. She explains that she pushed Wataru off a roof to lure Yuichi to the bullet train as part of a plan to have him kill the White Death. To ensure his cooperation, she has a henchman holding Wataru hostage in the hospital.

Ladybug recognizes Lemon as the owner of the briefcase and offers to return it in exchange for being allowed to disembark the train. Lemon suspects that Ladybug killed the Son, leading to a fight. Lemon is knocked unconscious after realizing Ladybug is innocent. The Prince finds the briefcase, booby-traps it with explosives, and rigs Yuichi's gun to explode backward if fired. Ladybug encounters Tangerine and kicks him off the bullet train after another scuffle, but Tangerine climbs back aboard. Suspicious, Lemon shoots Yuichi but collapses after drinking from a water bottle Ladybug had previously spiked with a sleeping drug. The Prince shoots Lemon and conceals him and Yuichi in a bathroom. Ladybug encounters yet another assassin, "The Hornet", who poisoned the Son and Wolf's wedding party with the venom of a boomslang snake. After a struggle, both are exposed to the venom, and Ladybug steals her antivenom to save himself and leaves her to die.

Tangerine runs into the Prince and notices one of Lemon's train stickers on her, realizing that she shot Lemon. Ladybug interrupts them, and the Prince manipulates Ladybug into fighting Tangerine, who gets killed after his gun goes off in the struggle. Believing her to be innocent, Ladybug agrees to protect the Prince and get her off the train. Yuichi's father, "The Elder", at the next stop, boards the bullet train. He recognizes the Prince and informs her that Wataru is safe, as her henchman has been killed by his guard. After she flees, the Elder tells Ladybug he will remain to confront the White Death, who killed his wife while taking over the Yakuza. Finding Yuichi and Lemon still alive, the four work together to prepare to face the White Death. At Kyoto, Ladybug gives the White Death the briefcase. The Prince, revealed to be the White Death's daughter, fails to goad him into shooting her with the rigged gun.

The White Death explains that everyone on the bullet train was linked to the death of his wife. He hired them hoping they would kill each other, not knowing Carver, who killed the White Death's wife and was his intended target, was replaced. The White Death's henchmen open the briefcase, which explodes, knocking Ladybug and the White Death back onto the bullet train. The White Death's remaining henchmen board and battle the assassins, while the Elder duels the White Death. The bullet train crashes into downtown Kyoto. Emerging from the wreck, impaled with the Elder's katana, the White Death tries to kill Ladybug, but the rigged gun explodes in his face. The Prince threatens Ladybug, Yuichi, and the Elder with a machine gun but is struck and killed by a passing fruit truck. Maria arrives to retrieve Ladybug, who has embraced an optimistic philosophy on life, while Japanese authorities begin to clean up the damage caused by the bullet train crash.

In a mid titles scene, the fruit truck that runs over The Prince is shown to be driven by Lemon who had survived a fall from the train when jumping on an assassin who was taking aim at Ladybug pushing him through the open train door and landing in a lake below. Climbing out of the lake he then stops and steals a passing fruit truck. One that is loaded with Tangerines.

Cast

In addition, Channing Tatum and Ryan Reynolds appear in uncredited cameo roles as a train passenger and as assassin Carver, respectively.[5] The film's director, David Leitch, appears briefly as the 17th person killed (albeit unintentionally) by Lemon and Tangerine while freeing White Death's son.

It's been noted that Ryan Reynolds accepted the cameo as a thank you to Brad Pitt for his Cameo in Deadpool 2.[6]

Production

High-speed bullet train Tokaido Shinkansen upon which the film was based.

Bullet Train had been initially developed by Antoine Fuqua—who co-produced the film—through his Fuqua Films banner.[7] It was originally intended to be a serious action thriller in the vein of Die Hard (1988), but the project turned into a light-hearted action comedy during the development process.[8][9]

It was announced in June 2020 that Sony Pictures had hired David Leitch to direct the adaptation of the Kōtarō Isaka sequel novel from a screenplay by Zak Olkewicz,[7] with Brad Pitt being cast in the film the following month.[10] Variety reported that Pitt was paid $20 million.[11] Joey King subsequently entered negotiations for a supporting role,[12] while in September, Andrew Koji was added,[13] with Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Brian Tyree Henry joining in October.[14][15] In November 2020, Zazie Beetz,[16] Masi Oka,[17] Michael Shannon,[18] Logan Lerman,[19] and Hiroyuki Sanada joined the cast,[20] with Leitch revealing in December that Karen Fukuhara had also joined, and that Jonathan Sela would serve as cinematographer.[21] That same month, singer Bad Bunny (credited as his real name, Benito A Martínez Ocasio) was also added to the cast,[22] and Sandra Bullock joined the following year in February to replace Lady Gaga, who had dropped out due to scheduling conflicts with House of Gucci (2021).[23][24]

Production for Bullet Train began in October 2020 in Los Angeles, during the COVID-19 pandemic.[25] The production budget was reportedly $85.9 to 90 million.[2][3] Filming started on November 16, 2020,[26] and wrapped in March 2021.[27] The producers constructed three full train cars, and LED screens with video footage of the Japanese countryside were hung outside the windows of the train set to help immerse the actors.[28] Stunt coordinator Greg Rementer said Pitt performed 95 percent of his own stunts in the film.[29]

Music

The film features a number of original tracks. Most notably, the film contains Japanese-language covers of "Stayin' Alive" by Bee Gees and "Holding Out for a Hero" by Bonnie Tyler. Composer Dominic Lewis noted that the film's soundtrack represent "all vibe and no technique".[30]

Release

Bullet Train was originally set to be released on April 8, 2022, before being delayed to July 15, 2022,[31] again to July 29,[32] and then to August 5.[33] Its world premiere occurred at the Grand Rex in Paris, France on July 18, 2022.[34]

The film was released on 4K UHD, Blu-ray and DVD on October 18, 2022, with the digital version released on September 27, 2022.[35][2] Bullet Train was released on Netflix on December 3, 2022, as part of a deal made by Sony and Netflix in 2021.[36]

Reception

Box office

Bullet Train grossed $103.4 million in the United States and Canada, and $135.9 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $239.3 million.[2][4]

In the United States and Canada, Bullet Train was released alongside Easter Sunday, and was projected to gross $26–30 million from 4,357 theaters in its opening weekend.[3][37] The film made $12.6 million on its first day, including $4.6 million from Thursday night previews. It went on to debut to $30 million, topping the box office.[38] The film made $13.4 million in its sophomore weekend, remaining in first.[39] The film made $8 million in its third weekend, falling to third.[40]

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, 54% of 328 critics gave the film a positive review, with an average rating of 5.6/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Bullet Train's colorful cast and high-speed action are almost enough to keep things going after the story runs out of track."[41] Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 49 out of 100, based on 61 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[42] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale, while PostTrak gave the film an 82% overall positive score, with 63% saying they would definitely recommend it.[38]

Richard Roeper of the Chicago Sun-Times rated the film three and a half out of four stars, calling it "wildly entertaining" and praised the performances, "the creative and blood-spattered action sequences" and most of all the writing.[43] Peter Debruge of Variety wrote, "Bullet Train feels like it comes from the same brain as Snatch, wearing its pop style on its sleeve – a Kill Bill-like mix of martial arts, manga and gabby hitman movie influences, minus the vision or wit that implies."[44]

Representation of race in casting

The casting of several non-Asian actors, including Brad Pitt and Joey King, prompted accusations of whitewashing as their characters were Japanese in Kōtarō Isaka's novel. David Inoue, executive director of the Japanese American Citizens League, criticized the casting, explaining that while American actors would have been appropriate if the setting were changed to the United States, the filmmakers used the novel's Japanese setting while keeping Japanese characters in the film's background, strengthening charges of whitewashing. Inoue also questioned the actors' allyship to the Asian community for knowingly accepting whitewashed roles, and further criticized the film for pushing the "belief that Asian actors in the leading roles cannot carry a blockbuster", despite the recent successes of Asian-led films such as Crazy Rich Asians (2018) or Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021).

King appeared in the film despite having previously said "I do not believe a white woman should play a character of color. Not me or any other white woman for that matter."[45] Eric Francisco of Inverse wrote, "Unless you saw the individual character posters, you'd be unlikely to think Bullet Train actually stars any Asian talent. Hollywood supposedly doesn't cast Asian leads because they aren't stars, but the truth is, they aren't stars because Hollywood won't cast Asian leads. How can audiences get excited about buying tickets to see Asian actors when their existence in a movie is barely acknowledged?"[46]

When asked about the casting, Isaka defended the film and described his characters as "ethnically malleable", maintaining that his original Japanese setting and context were irrelevant as they were "not real people, maybe they're not even Japanese."[47] Sony Pictures Motion Picture Group president Sanford Panitch highlighted Isaka's views to defend the casting, reassuring that the film would honor the novel's "Japanese soul" while giving the opportunity to cast big name stars and adapt it on a "global scale". Bullet Train screenwriter Zak Olkewicz argued that the decision to cast beyond Japanese or Asian actors proved “the strength of [Isaka]'s work" as it was a story that could "transcend race". Director David Leitch noted that discussions had taken place during pre-production to change the film's setting, but it was ultimately decided to keep Isaka's original location Tokyo due to its international appeal.[48] Jana Monji of AsAm News highlighted the underrepresentation and misrepresentation of Asians in the film and responded to Olkewicz's comment, "That sounds like White privilege providing an excuse for exclusion."[49]

Francisco mentioned that the Japanese author and most audiences in Asia "enjoy their own domestic film industry and go to Hollywood for the spectacle of foreigners", noting the differences between Asians in Asia and Asian American issues.[50]

Accolades

At the 2022 People's Choice Awards, the film was nominated for Movie of 2022, and Action Movie of 2022, Brad Pitt was nominated for Male Movie Star of 2022, and Joey King was nominated for Female Movie Star of 2022, and Action Movie Star of 2022.[51]

References

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External links