
( Ray Stevenson), a self-professed salesman who has not-so-secretly just retired from espionage work. Fortunately, Frank is ultimately a passenger on this particular ride, with the real attractions being the crashes, the physics-defying brawls, and the nonstop, almost endearingly shameless product placements, with Evian, American Express and especially Audi getting as much screentime as the film’s nominal star.Īlso, photocopying several pages from “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade,” the film joins Frank with his vinegary father, Frank Sr. Attempting to make up in pursed-lipped handsomeness what he lacks in charisma and hulking machismo, Skrein isn’t exactly a like-for-like replacement. Music/Sounds: A calm, 3-note piano tune, with a cinema projector sound playing under it.Īvailability: Seen on theatrical releases by the company.With longtime star Jason Statham sitting this one out, Ed Skrein (“Game of Thrones”) takes on the role of Frank Martin, the fastest, fightingest Uber driver in Europe.


On the filmcell disc, a silhouette of a man raises his arm and points towards the right of the screen, causing the sky behind the logo to brighten up.

Then lights and colored swirls come out and pan to space where they create a filmcell disc with the words "SINCE 1937" on its' bottom, and the words "BELGA FILMS" floating, with a stripe separating "BELGA" and "FILMS". A man comes near to the camera and starts it. Logo: On a background, we see an outline of a moon, with an old video camera standing on its top. The company was purchased in 2010 by AFAS Belgium. They also have a video distribution branch, Belga Home Video.

It distributes most of the catalogues of Lionsgate and EuropaCorp, as well as other movies, in Belgium and Luxembourg. Belga Films is a Belgian film distribution company, founded in 1937 by Elyse Tobback.
