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Movie Poster

Face/Off

In order to foil a terrorist plot, an FBI agent undergoes facial transplant surgery and assumes the identity of a criminal mastermind. The plan turns sour when the criminal wakes up prematurely and seeks revenge.

Director(s)

Nick Cassavetes

John Woo

Cate Hardman

William H. Burton Sr.

Arthur Anderson

Joan Cunningham

Jamie Marshall

Les Banda

Artist W. Robinson

Paula Barrett-Barbier

Cast & crew

John Travolta

John Travolta

Sean Archer

Nicolas Cage

Nicolas Cage

Castor Troy

Joan Cunningham

Joan Cunningham

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Thomas Rosales Jr.

Thomas Rosales Jr.

Prisoner (uncredited)

Chic Daniel

Chic Daniel

FBI Squad Leader

Cam Brainard

Cam Brainard

Dispatcher

Danny Masterson

Danny Masterson

Karl

Robert Wisdom

Robert Wisdom

Tito Biondi

Myles Jeffrey

Myles Jeffrey

Michael Archer

John Carroll Lynch

John Carroll Lynch

Prison Guard Walton

Artist W. Robinson

Artist W. Robinson

-

CCH Pounder

CCH Pounder

Hollis Miller

David Warshofsky

David Warshofsky

Bomb Leader

Paula Barrett-Barbier

Paula Barrett-Barbier

-

Nick Cassavetes

Nick Cassavetes

Dietrich Hassler

Norm Compton

Norm Compton

Cigarette Guard

Matt Ross

Matt Ross

Loomis

Cate Hardman

Cate Hardman

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Colm Feore

Colm Feore

Dr. Malcolm Walsh

Joan Allen

Joan Allen

Eve Archer

Tom Fridley

Tom Fridley

Prison Guard

Del Zamora

Del Zamora

Janitor (uncredited)

Walter Scott

Walter Scott

Port Police Commander

Chris Bauer

Chris Bauer

Ivan Dubov

Thomas Jane

Thomas Jane

Burke Hicks

Paul Hipp

Paul Hipp

Fitch

Lisa Boyle

Lisa Boyle

Cindee

Alessandro Nivola

Alessandro Nivola

Pollux Troy

Gina Gershon

Gina Gershon

Sasha Hassler

Dominique Swain

Dominique Swain

Jamie Archer

Harve Presnell

Harve Presnell

Victor Lazarro

Margaret Cho

Margaret Cho

Wanda

James Denton

James Denton

Buzz

David McCurley

David McCurley

Adam Hassler

Tommy Flanagan

Tommy Flanagan

Leo

Dana Smith

Dana Smith

Lars

Romy Walthall

Romy Walthall

Kimberly

Kirk Baltz

Kirk Baltz

Aldo

Lauren Sinclair

Lauren Sinclair

Agent Winters

Ben Reed

Ben Reed

Pilot

Linda Hoffman

Linda Hoffman

Livia

Father Michael Rocha

Father Michael Rocha

Priest

Megan Paul

Megan Paul

Hospital Girl

Mike Werb

Mike Werb

Hospital Dad

Tom Reynolds

Tom Reynolds

LAPD Cop

Steve Hytner

Steve Hytner

Interrogating Agent

Carmen Thomas

Carmen Thomas

Reporter Valerie

John Bloom

John Bloom

Prison Medical Technician

Brooke Leslie

Brooke Leslie

ER Nurse

John Neidlinger

John Neidlinger

Bomb Technician

Gregg Shawzin

Gregg Shawzin

Lock Down Guard

Clifford Einstein

Clifford Einstein

Restorative Surgeon

Marco Kyris

Marco Kyris

Recreation Guard

Andrew Wallace

Andrew Wallace

Altar Boy

Jacinto Rodriguez

Jacinto Rodriguez

Prisoner

Laurence Walsh

Laurence Walsh

Walsh Clinic Nurse

Tony Boldi

Tony Boldi

Jim Elsworth (uncredited)

Khristian Lupo

Khristian Lupo

Dietrich's Henchman (uncredited)

William Morts

William Morts

Dietrich's Man (uncredited)

Jason Thomas Campbell

Jason Thomas Campbell

SWAT Officer (uncredited)

Tory Christopher

Tory Christopher

SWAT Officer (uncredited)

Robert 'Bobby Z' Zajonc

Robert 'Bobby Z' Zajonc

Helicopter Pilot (uncredited)

John Woo

John Woo

-

William H. Burton Sr.

William H. Burton Sr.

-

Arthur Anderson

Arthur Anderson

-

Jamie Marshall

Jamie Marshall

-

Les Banda

Les Banda

-

Details

GenresAction, Crime, Science Fiction
Runtime2h 19 mins
Released on27 Jun 1997
Languageen
Produced inUnited States of America

Reviews

r96sk

9/10

A quality all-out action film! <em>'Face/Off'</em> isn't one that'll stick out in my memory as something deep meaning, incredibly written or anything of the sort. However, as an action film it's superb. There's barely a chance to rethink what you've just seen due to the prevalent and manic nature of onscreen events. You also have fascinating performances from the two leads. Nicolas Cage and John Travolta are awesome in this. I won't spoil the plot, but all I will say is that those two bring it to life brilliantly - it felt, at least to me, very believable; which is impressive. Across the opening portion I thought it was going to be Cage stealing the show, but as things progress Travolta really comes up big to match Cage. Away from NC and JT, there isn't really anything to scream about cast-wise; although, I gotta give shoutouts to Mike Delfino and Gavin Harris; if you know, you know. Nothing much more to note, to be honest. The terrific action means I'd highly recommend this.

John Chard

10/10

It's like looking in a mirror, only, not. There's a tendency to undervalue the action movie. Certainly there's a wide expanse of land in cinema world where film fans reside, where the thought of praising an action film for being "classic" cinema is considered treason against the very word. Yet some of the artistry involved in the genre's leading lights is purely sublime, regardless of how bizarre and unlikely the plot is. Enter John Woo's berserker, ear splitting, high octane actioner, Face/Off. Rightly sitting along side the likes of Die Hard and Predator as genre pieces that showcase how good things can be when it all comes together, Woo's movie is as much fun as you could wish to have for over two hours of explosive, fantastical, unadulterated cinema. The plot sees John Travolta's serious family man cop, Sean Archer, devote his life to catching unbalanced maniacal bad guy Castor Troy (Nicolas Cage). There's some bad history between the two and when Archer manages to capture both Troy and his equally vile brother, Pollux (Alessandro Nivola), it would seem to be closure for Archer and his family. However, it's found that the Troy's have left a ticking bomb somewhere in Los Angeles, and if undetected it will flatten L.A. and kill practically everyone. So, Archer undergoes a revolutionary face-swapping procedure with the now comatose Castor and sets about getting the information from the incarcerated Pollux. But wait!, Castor wakes up and turns the tables by assuming Archer's identity, setting the wheels in motion for each man to live the others life until the Face/Off between the pair will decide their respective fate. Unbelievable? Of course. Who cares? Well nobody should really, because surely going into a film like this one is expecting the ludicrous. Both Cage and Travolta are superbly realising the spectacular nature of the script, and being mesmerising in the duality of the roles into the bargain. Make no bones about it, Woo and his team have crafted a benchmark action movie. There's a trail of thought that suggests that Woo basically keeps making the same movie, that's a fair enough point, sure enough, all of his staple action sequences and traits are evident in Face/Off. Yet Woo has delved into his characters, given them some flesh on their action bones, and then upped the anti in action set pieces to cloak them in chaotic beauty. From the opening Jet escape/pursuit set up, to the outrageous speed boat finale, the film is one long exhilarating breath taker. Joan Allen, Gina Gershon, Dominique Swain & Nick Cassavetes all file into the background playing important characters who are rightly secondary to the protagonists, while a ream of extras come and go as each are dispatched in a hail of Woo inspired carnage. The pace never sags and the eyes and ears are treated to a vibrancy that is often sadly missing from many other big budgeted action blockbusters. This is a masterpiece of action cinema, so even as a Orson Welles crane shot is a magnificent thing, so it be with the sight of two stunt men flailing thru the air in a spray of exploding water. Oh yes sir, this is a classic alright. 10/10

Andre Gonzales

8/10

Never seen a concept for movie this way. They literally trade faces. Good versus evil and not only do they trade faces but there characters and personalities have to change as well. 2 of the best that could ever do it. John turns into Nicholas and Nicholas turns into John. I would say Nicholas Cage played it better then John Travolta did.

CinemaSerf

6/10

“Troy” (Nicolas Cage) is a nasty piece of work, and his latest bombing plot has attracted the attention of FBI man “Archer” (John Travolta). Now he has some personal skin in the game, as his nemesis was responsible for the death of his young son - an event both he and wife, physician “Eve” (Joan Allen) are still coming to terms with. When they apprehend him, though, the boffins come up with an unique plan that will enable "Archer" to infiltrate the terrorist gang and bring them all to justice whilst saving the city of Los Angeles from a grizzly fate. The trick? Well that involves some groundbreaking technology that will change his features from those of his own to those of “Troy”. All he has to do now is master a few of his more nasty character traits and then convince his girlfriend “Sasha” (Gina Gershon) - then he’s home and dry. Meantime, though, the real hoodlum awakens in an hospital bed and before we know it, he has assumed a counter-identity that he knows can not only put the kibosh on “Archer” and his cunning plan, but can enable him to mislead the investigators who are not in on the swap. The one woman who wasn’t read into the plot was “Eve” and so when her ‘husband” turns up as usual, we all know that a game violent and deadly game of cat and mouse is about to ensue. I did like the premise and for a while, with Cage at his most dastardly and then Travolta having a go too, it works quite well. It’s just far too strung out, though, and once serendipity has played a part once too often to help contrive the plot, I found myself losing interest in a story that became increasingly devoid of jeopardy. Moreover, as the story progresses Travolta stops being menacing and starts being hammy whilst Cage’s character strays once too often into the realms of weepy melodrama. The ending(s) take for ever to get us over the finish line, and left me feeling just a bit weary of the repetitiousness of a last twenty minutes that has pyrotechnics galore but little by way of doubt.

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Face/Off (1997) Original Trailer [FHD]
Face/Off - Trailer

Teasers

Face/Off - Trailer