16 Blocks
Directed by
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Produced by
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Written by
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Starring
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Music by
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Cinematography
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Editing by
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Studio
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Alcon Entertainment
Millenium Films Cheyenne Enterprises Emmett/Furla Films The Donners' Company Equity Pictures Nu Image Films Sunswept Entertainment |
Distributed by
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Warner Bros.
(USA)
20th Century Fox (Brazil) Sony Pictures (Australia) |
Release date(s)
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March 3, 2006
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Running time
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110 minutes
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Country
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Language
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English
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Budget
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$55,000,000
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Box office
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$65,664,721
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Download Song/Video/Music & Photos
Plot
Jack Mosley is alcoholic, burned-out NYPD detective. Despite a late shift the night before, his lieutenant orders him to escort a witness, Eddie Bunker from local custody to the courthouse 16 blocks away to testify on a police corruption case before a grand jury at 10 a.m. Bunker, a taxi driver, tries to be friendly with Mosley, telling him of his aspirations to move to Seattle to become a cake baker with his sister that he has never met, but Mosley is disinterested, and stops at a liquor store. They are suddenly ambushed by a gunman, and Mosley drags Bunker to a local bar to take shelter and call for backup. Mosley's former partner, Frank Nugent, and several other officers arrive. Nugent and his men have ulterior motives, telling Mosley that Bunker is not worth defending as his testimony will likely out several offices, including Nugent, in on the corruption scheme. and try to frame Bunker for firing at an officer before they kill him. Mosley intervenes, rescuing Bunker and fleeing.Mosley briefly stops at his sister Diane's apartment to retrieve guns and ammo, learning that the police have already approached her about his activities today. He and Bunker take steps to further allude the cops, and Mosley is wounded in the process. They become cornered in a run-down apartment building as Nugent and his men search floor by floor. Mosley calls the district attorney to arrange for help, but purposely gives the wrong apartment number, suspecting that there is a mole involved. They are able to escape onto a passenger bus, and as the police follow them, Mosley is forced to treat the passengers as hostages. The bus crashes into a construction site and is soon surrounded by the ESU. Aware that Nugent will likely order the ESU to raid the bus risking the safety of the passengers, Mosley allows the passengers to go free, using their cover to allow Bunker to sneak off the bus in the confusion. Mosley finds a tape recorder in the discarded possessions on the bus, and prepares a farewell message to Diane.
Cast
* BruceWillis as Det. Jack Mosley
* Mos Def as
Edward "Eddie" Bunker
* David Morse as Det. Frank Nugent
* Jenna Stern
as Diane Mosley
* CaseySander as Capt. Dan Gruber
* Cylk Cozart
as Det. Jimmy Mulvey
* David Zayas
as Det. Robert "Bobby" Torres
* Robert Racki as Det. Jerry Shue
* Patrick Garrow as Det. Touhey
* Sasha Roiz
as Det. Kaller
* Jeff Kelly
as Det. Shlong
* Conrad Pla
as Det. Ortiz
* Hechter Ubarry as Det. Edward Maldonado
* Richard Fitzpatrick as Deputy Commissioner
Wagner
* PeterMcRobbie as Mike Sheehan
* Mike Keenan as Ray Fitzpatrick
* RobertClohessy as Sgt. Cannova
* Jess Mal Gibbons as Pederson
* Tig Fong as Briggs
* Brenda Pressley as ADA MacDonald
* Kim Chan as
Sam
* Carmen Lopez as Gracie
* ScottMcCord as Lt. Kincaid
* Steve Kahan
as Restaurant Owner
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Box office
The film, released by Warner Bros., opened in the United States on March 3, 2006.Image Collection 16 Blocks |
Reception
Based on 158 reviews collected by Rotten Tomatoes, the film received a 55% approval rating from critics, with an average score of 5.9/10. By comparison, Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating in the 0–100 range based on reviews from top mainstream critics, calculated an average score of 63, based on 34 reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews".Michael Atkinson of The Village Voice commented that "the clichés come thick on the ground" and called it "a small movie trying to seem epic, or a bloated monster trying to seem lean." Peter Travers of Rolling Stone gave the film two-and-a-half out of four stars and called Willis and Mos Def "a terrific team," concluding that "Until Richard Wenk's script drives the characters into a brick wall of pukey sentiment, it's a wild ride." Chicago Sun-Times critic Roger Ebert gave it three out of four stars and commended Mos Def for his "character performance that's completely unexpected in an action movie," while calling the film "a chase picture conducted at a velocity that is just about right for a middle-age alcoholic."
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