

Bullet Train Explosion
Directed by Shinji HiguchiA group who straps bombs to a Japanese bullet train in an attempt to extort money from the government.
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Bullet Train Explosion Ratings & Reviews
- sti53October 27, 2025For a movie about a bullet train, this one sure halted around midpoint. I nearly fell asleep for a moment. Clocking in at well over 2 hours, it lost it's momentum and would have profited from being trimmed down to maximum 90 minutes. Perhaps even shorter. Too bad they didn't have Keanu Reeves on board
- DjREXApril 27, 2025Nice plot
- George BananzaSeptember 27, 2025Train goes fast like bullet, train goes boom like explosion.
- Loj_August 22, 2025It was ok. Went into itnot knowing what to expect but ejnoyed it.
- Brandon RwafaMay 10, 2025This is the equivalent of sparing a school shooter because he's a girl . I would have taken her out without hesitation are you kidding me. I know for a fact they wouldn't hesitate if it was a guy. It was such a good movie till the twist. Ideals are peaceful and history is violent, this movie is very idealistic to a very annoying point.
- jackmeatMay 1, 2025My quick rating - 6.1/10. Bullet Train Explosion is exactly what it says on the poster — a high-speed, high-stakes action thriller set aboard a Tokyo-bound shinkansen rigged to explode if it drops below 100 kilometers per hour. It’s a kinetic, visually impressive ride that brings a lot of the Speed-like thrills while adding just enough cultural and thematic texture to avoid feeling like a direct copy. And let's face it, the similarities are more in tune with The Bullet Train as opposed to Speed. No, not the one from 2022 with Brad Pitt, the 1975 Japanese one. Are you still with me LOL. While not perfect, it’s an entertaining foreign production that’s easy to recommend to action fans — especially those who, like me, don’t often get around to international films unless they’re dubbed or subtitled for tired eyes. Right off the bat, the movie evokes that nostalgic, old-school disaster film energy, much like a drive-in double feature. There’s tension in the control room, frantic coordination from railway authorities, and a looming sense of dread inside the train as passengers come to grips with their fate. While it's no horror film, something I admittedly would have preferred, it delivers its suspense through tight set pieces, dramatic confrontations, and a bomb that quite literally keeps things moving. Visually, Bullet Train Explosion is a treat. Tokyo’s sprawling landscape blurs past with some impressive CGI that’s smartly paired with practical effects and what appear to be miniatures in a few key sequences. That combination gives it a tactile feel that a lot of digital-only productions lose. It never looks cheap, which is refreshing for a streaming action flick. The film adds a unique wrinkle to the usual bomb-on-a-vehicle plot with the bomber’s motives. They aren’t groundbreaking, but there’s a bit more to their backstory than the usual revenge or chaos-for-chaos-sake angle. Still, the movie mostly plays it safe, driving toward the exact kind of conclusion you expect from minute one. There are some light explorations of class, governmental indifference, and unity among workers, but these threads feel more like afterthoughts than true thematic anchors. The runtime is where things suffer a bit. Exceeding two hours (137 minutes), it starts to feel padded, especially when the focus drifts from the train itself. The tension that makes the ride gripping begins to sag with every cutaway that doesn’t serve the central plot. Since I watched the dubbed version, I won’t pass judgment on the acting, though even with occasionally clunky translation, the performances get the job done. The drama among the passengers is easily the highlight. It's those scenes, along with the explosion countdowns, that give the movie a pulse. Bullet Train Explosion won’t redefine the genre, but it’s a solid foreign action flick with enough spectacle, tension, and heart to be worth the ride. Just don’t expect too many surprises.




















