Money Train Demo

2021年3月17日
Register here: http://gg.gg/op8n0
With a classic Western soundtrack, Money Train takes place on a train’s carriage – you’ll see wooden diamonds, spades, clubs and hearts on the reels as well as 4 members of this Wild West gang. You have the gunslinger, TNT expert, debt collector and their notorious leader. The latter is the most lucrative symbol giving you 0.8, 4 or 20 times your stake for 3, 4 or 5 across a payline. The 2 crossed guns symbol is the wild which replaces all other symbols for form winning combinations.
*Play Money Train 2 game by relax free for fun or for real money at RANT Casino. Choose your path with its bonuses and take part in catchy promotions. Try your luck in Money Train 2 right now!
*Play Money Train free online slot with RTP 96.2%. Read Money Train review and our rating (CGSCORE 96) or try this Relax Gaming slot free play demo to learn the rules or just for fun. Find the best casinos where to play with real money.
*Sweet Bonanza Play Demo. Razor Shark Play Demo. Money Train 2 Play Demo. Dead or Alive 2 Feature Buy Play Demo.
Money Train is a 1995 American action film starring Wesley Snipes, Woody Harrelson, and Jennifer Lopez, with Robert Blake and Chris Cooper. Foster brothers John and Charlie Robinson are transit cops patrolling the New York City Subway. On Christmas, they. Kahuna Casino is Licensed under Mountberg B.V, a company based at Fransche Bloemweg 4, Willemstad, Curacao, under gaming License number 1668/JAZ issued by Curacao eGaming, authorised and regulated by the Government of Curacao.
Money Train comes with a Money Cart Bonus feature – this is played when you get the bonus symbol simultaneously on reels 1, 3 and 5. The 3 triggering symbols will then reveal a cash value – 3 free spins will then follow. Each time a new symbol hits 1 of the positions, the free spins tally resets to 3. The feature continues as long as new symbols appear on the reels – there’s 6 new symbols than can land which give you the following:
*Persistent Collector – gives you a stake multiplier and collects all visible values on the reels and adds them to its own value at the end of that spin and each spin that follows.
*Persistent Payer – give you a stake multiplier and adds it to all visible symbols on the reels for that spin and any spin that follows.
*Payer – gives you a stake multiplier which is added to all other visible symbols on the reels.
*Collector – gives you a stake multiplier and then collects all visible values on the reels and adds them to its own value.
*Widener – reveals a stake multiplier and opens up an extra reel for even more wins.
Money Train also offers you a Buy feature – basically, you can buy your way into the Money Cart Bonus feature for 80 times your stake. To win big, you need to see the Widener as an additional reel will add more symbols which will lead to more stake multipliers and bigger wins. All in all, this feature can lead to payouts of up to 20,000 times your stake! In the base game, you can win up to 800 times your stake by filling the reels with the notorious leader.
I quite like Money Train – it looks good and has the potential for some serious payouts in the Money Cart Bonus feature if the symbols fall nicely. Saying that, you should definitely play NetEnt’s Dead or Alive 2 as this Wild West adventure offers wins of 40,500 times your stake on each free spin in 1 of the free spins features. (Redirected from Money Train (film))Money TrainDirected byJoseph RubenProduced byScreenplay byStory byDoug RichardsonStarringMusic byMark MancinaCinematographyJohn LindleyEdited byProductioncompany Distributed byColumbia PicturesRelease dateRunning time110 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget$68 million[1]Box office$77.2 million[1]
Money Train is a 1995 American action film[2] starring Wesley Snipes, Woody Harrelson, and Jennifer Lopez, with Robert Blake and Chris Cooper.Plot[edit]
Foster brothers John and Charlie Robinson are transit cops patrolling the New York City Subway. On Christmas, they chase two muggers into a subway tunnel. Nearby trains are halted, but transit captain Donald Patterson allows the money train – hauling subway revenue – to continue. One of the teenage muggers is shot dead by transit cops guarding the money train, triggering a brawl between them and the brothers. Patterson blames John and Charlie for delaying the money train.
Charlie asks John for money to buy a Christmas present, but instead pays off gambling debts to mobster Mr. Brown. Brown intends to have his men throw Charlie off a building, but John intervenes. Revealing Charlie is $15,000 in debt, John at first decides to let them drop him. Brown accepts John’s promise to deliver the money in a few days.
John and Charlie both take a liking to Grace Santiago, a newly assigned decoy transit officer. When a serial killer known as the Torch robs a token booth and sets it on fire at risk of killing the booth attendant, John and Charlie rescue the attendant and put out the fire, but Torch escapes and defeats Grace.
John rejects Charlie’s plan to rob the money train to pay off their debts. When they and Grace are assigned to patrol the money train, Charlie discovers a grate in the train’s floor and a maintenance ladder leading to Central Park. A brawl breaks out between John and another officer, quickly involving the entire squad. Again blaming the brothers and accusing them of taking some of the money, Patterson continues to berate them even after realizing a collection agent miscounted. Charlie tells John the best time to rob the money train would be New Year’s Eve, due to looser security and the year’s highest proceeds: up to $4,000,000 that night.
John gives Charlie $15,000 to pay back Mr. Brown, but while on the train, Charlie loses it to an old lady and is beaten by Brown’s men as punishment. Returning home, he is saddened to spot Grace and John sleeping together and runs away.Money Train 2 Demo
In a sting operation to apprehend Torch, Grace is disguised as a token booth attendant. Realizing the trap, Torch distracts police by pushing a man in front of a moving train, killing him. Torch sprays gasoline on Grace, but before he can light it, Charlie alerts the other officers, who open fire. John pursues the killer into another station, where they fight. Torch is burned by his gasoline and killed by an approaching train. Patterson fires Charlie for ruining the ambush; trying to defend Charlie, John is fired as well, leading to the brothers breaking up with each other.
John storms into Mr. Brown’s club, after hearing about Charlie and defeats the mobsters utilizing his Kung-Fu skills, threatening Brown if anything happens to Charlie, knocking him out with a 360-degree kick into a glass enclosure.
Grace persuades John to intervene in Charlie’s robbery. Charlie enters the money train from beneath, throws out the driver and drives it to the ladder, but is unable to escape with the money due to the presence of a group of cops. Reaching the train, John persuades Charlie to drive further to avoid arrest, and they disable the brakes to prevent Patterson activating them remotely. Patterson deploys a steel barricade, but John and Charlie accidentally increase the train to maximum speed and smashes through the barricade. Transit control officer Kowalski declares the money train a runaway and starts clearing tracks, but Patterson diverts the train onto a track occupied by a passenger train, the 1220 Coney Island to prevent its riders’ escape, and doesn’t even tell the driver about the money train. When Charlie tries to steal the money, John attempts to prevent to safe his life, leading to a brawl between the brothers. Eventually, they make up their quarrel, when Charlie saves John from falling off the train. The money train slams into 1220 and slows down, but speeds up again, continuing to ram the rear of the passenger train with increasing risk of derailing it and killing everyone on board, including the driver.
With no brakes and the throttle jammed, the brothers decide to throw the train into reverse to save the passenger train. Charlie positions an iron bar to trip the reverse lever, and the brothers climb on top of the train. The money train rams into 1220 again, activating the reverse lever, putting it into reverse position and the brothers jump across to the 1220 train as the money train derails, to the horror of Patterson, who is waiting at the next station with the officers.
When arriving, the brothers try to escape but are spotted by Patterson, who interrogates them. Fed up with his abuse, they both punch him in the face after he spits at John. As Patterson shouts out for their arrest, but instead only arrested by Grace for endangering the passengers’ lives, much to their amazement. The brothers exit onto Times Square just as the New Year countdown begins. During the celebration, John realizes Charlie has a bag with over $500,000, much to his dismay. The film closes with the brothers walking off into the distance arguing over the money while the credits roll.Cast[edit]
*Wesley Snipes as John Robinson
*Woody Harrelson as Charlie Robinson
*Jennifer Lopez as Grace Santiago
*Robert Blake as Captain Donald Patterson
*Chris Cooper as Torch Edwards
*Joe Grifasi as Riley
*Scott Sowers as Mr. Brown
*Skipp Sudduth as Kowalski
*Enrico Colantoni as DooleyProduction[edit]A former R21 car was rebuilt for use in the film. After production, the car was donated to the New York Transit Museum.
Snipes and Harrelson had appeared together in the 1992 hit White Men Can’t Jump. They were both paid $5.5 million to star in Money Train.[3]
The subway car used as the money train in the film is a modified R21 subway car.[4] The rolling stock was modified by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and film crew into an imposing subway train covered in silver armor plating and equipped with flashing orange lights and sliding barred doors, like those on a jail cell. After production, the car was donated to the New York Transit Museum, and is currently stored at the Coney Island Complex as of February 2010. Other cars were used as props in the movie.[4]
Four additional R30s were used for filming on New York City Subway property, including for the crash between the money train and the 1220 Coney Island. These four cars were 8463, 8510, 8558, and 8569.[4]
The actual money train resembled a normal maintenance train painted yellow with black diagonal stripes. The New York City subway system retired its money trains in 2006, as the introduction of the MetroCard and computerized vending machines that allowed fare payment by credit card have dramatically reduced the number of coins stored in subway stations. Two money train cars were later sent to the New York Transit Museum.Music[edit]
The original music score by Mark Mancina was released in March 2011 by La-La Land Records as a limited edition of 3000 copies. The album features approximately 41 minutes of music across 17 tracks. Additional music was composed by John Van Tongeren.Reception[edit]Box office[edit]
The film took in $35.4 million at the North American box office, including $10.6 million on its opening weekend.[5] In 2005, USA Today characterized it as a ’bomb’.[6]Critical response[edit]
Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 22% of 32 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating was 4.3/10. The site’s consensus states: ’Loud, incoherent, and aimless, Money Train reunites Snipes and Harrelson -- and proves that starring duos are far from immune to the law of diminishing returns.’[7] Brian Lowry of Variety wrote that it ’bounces along with a lame script and inconsistent pace’.[8]Stephen Holden of The New York Times wrote, ’More viscerally charged than Speed and hipper than Die Hard With a Vengeance, the movie is a careening, screeching joyride that showers sparks like fireworks.’[9]Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Examiner called it ’a cut above the usual’ buddy cop film due to the stars’ chemistry and its well-crafted action scenes.[10]Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times described it as ’a by-the-numbers action-buddy picture’ that is ’an acceptable if undemanding venture’.[11]Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly rated it D+ and called it ’a big, noisy headache of a movie.’[12] Hal Hinson of The Washington Post called it a feeble and clichéd buddy film.[13]
Filmink said the film ’exemplifies bloated dumb ‘90s action. J Lo is good though.’[14]
In addition to its poor reviews, the film was vilified for its portrayal of a man robbing a ticket booth by running a rubber tube around the bulletproof partition and dousing the attendant with an unknown flammable liquid, then threatening to set them on fire. This crime was repeated in real life after the film’s release, although police did not think the similar crime was related to the film. Nevertheless, many people, including Bob Dole, called for a boycott of the film.[15][16]Money Train DemoSee also[edit]References[edit]
*^ ab’Money Train - Box Office Data’. The Numbers. Retrieved 27 July 2011.
*^Welkos, Robert W. (March 11, 1995). ’A Subway Commuters Can’t Ride : ’Money Train,’ With Woody Harrelson and Wesley Snipes, Lays Some Costly Tracks’. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
*^Cox, Dan (October 18, 1994). ’Harrelson to make ’Money’’. Daily Variety. p. 1.
*^ abchttp://www.nycsubway.org/wiki/Other_Passenger_Cars_Converted_to_Work_Service
*^’Money Train (1995)’. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2011-08-06.
*^Ut, Nick (2005-03-17). ’Newly acquitted Robert Blake seeks work’. USA Today. Associated Press. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
*^’Money Train (1995)’. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
*^Lowry, Brian (1995-11-19). ’Review: ’Money Train’’. Variety. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
*^Holden, Stephen (1995-11-22). ’Money Train (1995)’. The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
*^LaSalle, Mick (1995-11-22). ’Buddies Board ’Money Train’ / Snipes, Harrelson as subway cops’. San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
*^Turan, Kenneth (1995-11-22). ’MOVIE REVIEW : Action and Rapport Keep ’Money Train’ on Track’. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
*^Tucker, Ken (1995-12-01). ’Money Train (1995)’. Entertainment Weekly (303). Retrieved 2014-12-15.
*^Hinson, Hal (1995-11-22). ’’Money Train’ (R)’. The Washington Post. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
*^Vagg, Stephen (February 3, 2020). ’Top 10 Unmemorable Films Starring Legendary Screen Couples’. Filmink.
*^Holloway, Lynette (December 16, 1995). ’Token Booth Fire Attack Seems Unrelated To Movie’. The New York Times. Retrieved May 13, 2010.
*^Vandam, Jeff (2006). ’Cash and Carry’. New York Times. Retrieved 2006-12-31.External links[edit]Money Train Slot
*Money Train at IMDb
*Money Train at AllMovieMoney Train Demo GamesRetrieved from ’https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Money_Train&oldid=1007591031
Register here: http://gg.gg/op8n0

https://diarynote-jp.indered.space

コメント

最新の日記 一覧

<<  2025年7月  >>
293012345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
272829303112

お気に入り日記の更新

テーマ別日記一覧

まだテーマがありません

この日記について

日記内を検索