

96分鐘
““Every second brings the truth closer.””
A high-speed train cuts through the landscape, carrying passengers who believe this journey is just another routine trip. Among them is a former bomb disposal expert (Anthony Mackie) trying to leave his past behind, and a man (Sean Teale) desperate to fix a life already slipping through his fingers. Everything changes when a hidden bomb turns time into the enemy. With only minutes separating survival from catastrophe, the train becomes a confined world where fear spreads faster than the speed outside the windows. Every decision matters. Every second costs something. But 96 Minutes isn't only about defusing a bomb. It's about regret that arrives too late, relationships tested under unbearable pressure, and the weight of knowing that one mistake can take everything with it. As the countdown continues, the tension isn't just about whether the bomb can be stopped—it's about whether the people on board can face what they've been running from before time runs out .
Imagine being trapped on a train, forced to confront the ticking sound of a bomb above you. What if you also had to reckon with the ghosts of your past? Director Jim Gillespie (I Know What You Did Last Summer) traps us in the narrow corridors of a train for 96 relentless minutes, never letting us catch our breath. Anthony Mackie's former bomb disposal expert confronts his past while Sean Teale's desperate man embodies all the hopelessness of trying to fix a broken life. What if this bomb is not just an explosive device, but a metaphor for the secrets everyone carries inside? Critics have praised the film's gripping atmosphere and performances, though some note that the finale doesn't fully meet expectations . But one thing is certain: you won't be able to leave your seat during these 96 minutes. The question is: are you ready to face what you've been running from when time is working against you?
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