The Crow: Salvation

2000

Action / Crime / Fantasy / Horror / Mystery / Thriller

9
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 18% · 11 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 43% · 25K ratings
IMDb Rating 4.9/10 10 12455 12.5K

Plot summary

Alex Corvis, a man wrongly executed for the murder of his girlfriend, returns from the dead and sets out to find the real killer.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
September 29, 2023 at 07:33 PM

Director

Top cast

Kirsten Dunst as Erin Randall
Walton Goggins as Stan Roberts
Jodi Lyn O'Keefe as Lauren Randall
Eric Mabius as Alex Corvis
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
936.79 MB
1280*692
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 41 min
Seeds 7
1.88 GB
1918*1036
English 5.1
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 41 min
Seeds 12

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by carlodipalma 6 / 10

Better!But could of used a bit more action!

First the cast was okay not the best cast for a crow film but anyways . The villain played by Fred Ward is a sick mother fu*ker and you really get a sense that he's in his role he really portrays the villain well! The crow .... Alex Corvis played by Eric Marbius is an okay crow he really shows he's back to avenge his loss. He moves like the character should but for the love scenes more or less.

This is movie is really entertaining from beginning to end lots of blood and action for your average crow fan. Some of the fight/gun/chase scenes are quite quick in a way some you wish could have been longer! This movie get's a 6.5 on 10 from me!

Reviewed by NateWatchesCoolMovies 6 / 10

Definitely the best of the sequels

Now let's be real, there's only one good Crow film. They were just never able to catch that midnight magic again, though they tried, with four more films and a dud of a TV series. Each of the sequels is nearly the exact same as the first, in terms of plot: a man is killed by feral urban thugs, only to be resurrected one year later by a mysterious crow, blessed with invincibility and begins to work his way through the merry band of scumbags in brutal acts of revenge, arriving at the crime lord sitting atop the food chain, usually a freak with vague ties to the supernatural or occult. All the films in the series are structured that way, but only one deviated and tried something slightly different with the formula. City of Angels, the second, is a boring, almost identical retread of the first, it's only energy coming from a coked up Iggy Pop. Wicked Prayer, the fourth, had a premise with potential aplenty, and turned out so maddeningly awful I'm still dabbing the blood from my eye sockets. Salvation, however, is the third entry and almost finds new air to breathe by altering the premise slightly. Instead of lowlife criminals, it's a posse of corrupt police detectives who frame an innocent dude (Resident Evil's Eric Mabius) for crimes they themselves committed, fry him to a crisp in the electric chair and get off scott free. His girlfriend (Jodi Lyn O'Keefe) is also killed in the process. Now, not only is it cops instead of criminals, but the arch baddie at the top of the pile is the police commissioner, who has occult written all over him. *Not only* that, but he's played by Fred Ward, who is brilliant in anything. While nowhere near an iota of the atmosphere or quality of the first film, this one works better than any of the other sequels, thanks to that spark of an idea that changes the game ever so much. The detectives are a nice and skeevy bunch too, played by the reptilian likes of William Atherton, Walton Goggins and others. Ward wears the starched, proper uniform of an authoritative figure, but his eyes gleam with the same secrets and dark magic we saw in the two other previous underworld kingpins, Top Dollar (Michael Wincott) and Judah Earl (Richard Brooks), but it's that contrast that takes you off guard and makes things more intriguing. And as for Eric, does he hold his own with the others who've played the role? Mabius he does, Mabius he doesn't, you'll just have to watch and see. He definitely knocks Vincent Perez out of the park, that silly Frenchman. Real talk though, no one will ever dethrone Brandon Lee, not even whatever pisant they get for the remake that's been hovering on the fringes of preproduction for the last half decade. On top of it all we also get Kirsten Dunst, of all people, as a sympathetic attorney who works alongside Mabius to clear his name, as he clears the streets of no-good crooked cops. So there you have it. If you ever find yourself meandering around the kiosks in blockbuster, and see the Crow films lined up on the shelves like emo ducks in a row, the first film will naturally already be rented out. Where then to turn? You can certainly do worse than this one.

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