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The Ambulance

  • 1990
  • R
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
4.8K
YOUR RATING
James Earl Jones, Eric Roberts, and Janine Turner in The Ambulance (1990)
Official Home Video Trailer
Play trailer1:38
1 Video
29 Photos
Dark ComedyActionComedyHorrorRomanceThriller

A comic-book artist meets a woman on the NYC streets, but after a quick flirtation, she suddenly collapses and is picked up by an old ambulance. He checks all the hospitals in the area, but ... Read allA comic-book artist meets a woman on the NYC streets, but after a quick flirtation, she suddenly collapses and is picked up by an old ambulance. He checks all the hospitals in the area, but the woman has disappeared.A comic-book artist meets a woman on the NYC streets, but after a quick flirtation, she suddenly collapses and is picked up by an old ambulance. He checks all the hospitals in the area, but the woman has disappeared.

  • Director
    • Larry Cohen
  • Writer
    • Larry Cohen
  • Stars
    • Eric Roberts
    • James Earl Jones
    • Megan Gallagher
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    4.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Larry Cohen
    • Writer
      • Larry Cohen
    • Stars
      • Eric Roberts
      • James Earl Jones
      • Megan Gallagher
    • 49User reviews
    • 45Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Ambulance
    Trailer 1:38
    The Ambulance

    Photos29

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    Top cast53

    Edit
    Eric Roberts
    Eric Roberts
    • Josh Baker
    James Earl Jones
    James Earl Jones
    • Lt. Spencer
    Megan Gallagher
    Megan Gallagher
    • Sandra Malloy
    Red Buttons
    Red Buttons
    • Elias Zacharai
    Janine Turner
    Janine Turner
    • Cheryl
    Eric Braeden
    Eric Braeden
    • The Doctor
    Richard Bright
    Richard Bright
    • McClosky
    James Dixon
    James Dixon
    • Detective 'Jughead' Ryan
    Jill Gatsby
    Jill Gatsby
    • Jerilyn
    Martin Barter
    • Street Gang Leader
    Laurene Landon
    Laurene Landon
    • Patty
    Nick Chinlund
    Nick Chinlund
    • Hugo
    • (as Nicholas Chinlund)
    Matt Norklun
    Matt Norklun
    • Ambulance Driver
    Rudy Jones
    Rudy Jones
    • Ambulance Driver
    Stan Lee
    Stan Lee
    • Marvel Comics Editor
    Max
    • Male Nurse
    Deborah Hedwall
    Deborah Hedwall
    • Nurse Feinstein
    Susan Blommaert
    Susan Blommaert
    • Hospital Receptionist
    • Director
      • Larry Cohen
    • Writer
      • Larry Cohen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews49

    6.04.7K
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    Featured reviews

    dbdumonteil

    Ambulance chaser

    "The ambulance" is perhaps not what people call a great movie.But it's sure much fun to watch!Its black humor is priceless.All the male actors overplay,Eric Roberts ,James Earl Jones and Eric Braeden camp it up and give the viewer the feeling of watching a cartoon (Roberts' escape from the ambulance) or reading a comic strip :anyway ,Roberts makes comic books ("They are not what they used to be "says cop Jones ).The director knows only one tempo:accelerated and ,for lack of subtlety ,there's never a dull moment.And the villain (Braeden) does believe he works for the greater good of humanity !And anyway won't his patient be in perfect health when he dies?
    lor_

    Delightful comedy thriller

    My review was written in December 1990 after watching the film at a Manhattan screening room.

    "The Ambulance" is a wild thriller laced with black humor. Entertaining exercise in urban paranoia will be shown at the Avoriaz fantasy film festival in France and gives Triumph Films a genuine sleeper for 1991 domestic release.

    As with his recent "Maniac Cop" pics, filmmaker Larry Cohen works with the inversion principle: taking a symbol of rescue, a vintage red ambulance, and making its appearance and siren fearful. Here he tilts the balance toward humor, though hair-raising stents and sudden moments of violence teem.

    Eric Roberts introduces the film as sort of a day in the life of James Toback ("The Pick Up Artist" helmer). In telephoto shots on Manhattan streets (apparently using real-life people as extras), he tries to pick up beautiful Janine Turner.

    As she valiantly gives him the brush-off, she suddenly faints, and a sinister ambulance, controlled by the film's heavy Eric Braeden, whisks the diabetic girl to a hospital. After work, Robets tries to find her and, as the film's shooting title suggested, she's vanished "Into Thin Air".

    With fast repartee and a gallery of quirky characters spurring the tale along, Roberts continues his search but finds little help from the disbelieving police inspector James Earl Jones. His paranoia increases in quantum leaps as mad scientist Braeden's henchmen start eliminating people around him and give Roberts a frightening ambulance ride.

    Help finally surfaces in unlikely sidekick Red Buttons, an aging New York Post reporter Roberts rooms with at the hospital. Jons' pretty assistant on the force, Megan Gallagher, is another kindred spirit leading to an exciting climax atg a downtown dance club where Braeden keeps his kidnap victims upstairs as medical experiments.

    With unpredictable plot twists coming fast and furious, this fresh approach to the thriller format is especially of interest to genre fans. Real-life Marvel Comics exec Stan Lee has a nice guest role playing himself as Roberts' boss, and the comic book backdrop is used effectively as Roberts draws large panels of Turner and the ambulance to aid his investigation.

    Cohen puts a sting in this tale with a delightful false ending that trumps the "Carrie" finish tacked onto nearly every horror film of recent vintage.

    Reteamed here with Jones shortly after they filmed "Best of the Bet" two years ago, Roberts is perfectly cast. His familiar abrasiveness ("Star 80", "The Pope of Greenwich Village") is used to good advantage.

    Jones is a hoot as the gum-chewing cop whose know-it-all attitude gets him in trouble. Buttons steals his scenes in his best film assignment since "The Poseidon Adventure".

    Following up on her tv policewoman duty on the defunct series "Hill Street Blues", Gallagher is a big-screen find as the tough cop who believes in Roberts. Turner, adopting a different look with long, dark hair here, develops considerable sympathy in her brief assignment. Supporting cast is solid, including Richard Bright (of "The Godfather Part III") as a no-nonsense cop and Braeden, inverting his messianic scientist role of Dr. Forbin, memorable to genre fans in the classic: "Colossus: The Forbin Project".

    Tech credits exploit the NYC terrain well, especially Spiro Razatos' unusual chases and stunt work.
    7BA_Harrison

    Nee-nah nee-nah nee-YES!

    Eric Roberts, sporting an impressive mullet, plays Marvel comic artist Josh Baker, who tries his luck with the beautiful stranger he sees every day on the way to work. Not one to take 'no' for an answer (making him a sexual predator by today's standards), he pursues the woman (Janine Turner), even buying her a Walkman from a street vendor (she throws it back at him: probably didn't have Megabass and auto-reverse). However, when the woman suddenly collapses in the street and Josh comes to her help, he learns a little more about her: she is diabetic and her name is Cheryl. An ambulance arrives and whisks her to hospital, or so it seems...

    In reality, Cheryl has been kidnapped by human traffickers, who sell people with diabetes for medical experimentation. When Josh is unable to locate Cheryl at any of the local hospitals, he tries to find out what has happened to her, enlisting the help of grouchy New York detective Lt. Spencer (James Earl Jones), elderly newspaper reporter Elias Zacharai (Red Buttons), and pretty policewoman Sandra Malloy (Megan Gallagher)

    Like most of director Larry Cohen's movies, The Ambulance is a quirky little B-movie, packed with offbeat performances, often bordering on the camp (Jones, gum in mouth, chews up the scenery and Roberts' mannerisms are strange, to say the least). The film's oddball approach and OTT acting help to make it an entertaining time-waster for fans of cult cinema, despite the somewhat off-putting nature of Josh's flowing locks (not surprised that Cheryl said 'no' to him; do you think Eric Roberts ever looks back at his work from this period and cringes?). Cohen keeps the action moving at a fair lick, with plenty of mystery and peril, and a particularly well-handled final act that features lots of dangerous looking stunt-work.

    Of the six Cohen films I have seen so far (The Ambulance, Full Moon High, Special Effects, Q-The Winged Serpent, It's Alive, and The Stuff), this is easily my favourite. 6.5/10, rounded up to 7 for Stan Lee as Stan Lee - not much acting required, but at least it's not just a pointless blink-and-you'll-miss-it cameo like in the MCU movies.
    6Platypuschow

    The Ambulance: Great concept........marginally competent

    Starring Eric Roberts, James Earl Jones and Meghan Gallagher this early 90's thriller actually succeeds in entertaining.

    It tells the story of a man who finally makes a move on the woman of his dreams only to witness her collapse and get taken away by an ambulance (I too have that effect on women). When he tries to visit her however he learns she was never brought in and may be one of a number of missing persons connected to this old ambulance.

    I like the idea, though I've seen things with a similiar concept before the addition of the ambulance really made it interesting.

    Roberts though a hokey actor manages to deliver here as does the rest of the stellar cast.

    Though I love the concept I don't think it was utilized well and I'd love to see this remade. Regardless however the competence of the cast, the concept and an odd amount of comedy make for a passable film.

    Kudos to Stan Lee being cast as Stan Lee.

    The Good:

    Cast are on point

    Stan Lee!

    Excellent idea

    The Bad:

    Not followed through with all that well

    Ending is a bit underwhelming

    Things I Learnt From This Movie:

    I simply cannot take a lead male seriously with a mullet...........except Joe Dirt
    6merklekranz

    Fun ride .........

    "The Ambulance" is not really a "black comedy", although it does have moments of dark humor throughout. It really is sort of a hybrid comedy-suspense film. Eric Roberts carries things as the perplexed wannabe lover boy, while James Earl Jones comes and goes as a perplexed, somewhat irrational police detective. The movie is not overall terrific, but there are some memorable scenes, especially relating to the ambulance itself. Overall for a B movie, "The Ambulance" delivers enough entertainment value to recommend seeing it, however I doubt multiple viewings would be that rewarding. .......................... - MERK

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      At the time the film was made Stan Lee was desperately trying to get some of his Marvel characters made into movies. He was not having any luck at all. It was very frustrating for him. He had this deal with a producer to do a movie of Doctor Strange and Larry Cohen was hired to write the script. He wrote the script for the movie, which never got made, but in the process he became friends with Stan Lee. They started socializing and going out for dinner and going to each other's homes. Sometimes we would go out with Bob Kane, the creator of Batman. He had a great time with these guys. When Cohen made this film he said to Stan: "I think I'm going to make this character a cartoonist who works for Marvel. I asked him to play himself. He was really anxious to do it. It was the only time Stan has had some real scenes to play in a movie and some real dialogue. In the Marvel pictures he's mostly a walk-on or an extra. With me he had a real character to play, even if it was the part of Stan Lee. We maintained our friendship over the years."
    • Goofs
      All entries contain spoilers
    • Quotes

      Josh Baker: [opening line] This is the story of what can happen to a guy, for talking to a strange woman on the street.

    • Connections
      Featured in Movie Nights: The Ambulance (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      Perpetual Emotion
      Written by Gary McLaughlin & Ophie Shur (as Ophir Shur)

      Performed by Wendy Smith

      Produced by Gary McLaughlin

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 19, 1990 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Into Thin Air
    • Filming locations
      • New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Epic Productions
      • Esparza / Katz Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $4,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 36 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Ultra Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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