post_page_cover

‘Red Eye’ Starring Cillian Murphy & Rachel McAdams Is Streaming on Netflix in July

Jun 28, 2025

Netflix are ready to board one of Wes Craven’s final gifts this July, as it adds one of the leanest, most rewatchable nail-biters of the 2000s. Starring Cillian Murphy long before he was recognized by The Academy with his Best Actor Oscar win for Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer, the 85-minute thrill ride also featuring the incredible Rachel McAdams is probably one of the most underrated movies of Craven’s career, as he veers from outright horror to dark, claustrophobic suspense that keeps you on the edge of your economy seat. Released in 2005, Red Eye earned an 80 percent critical score on Rotten Tomatoes but has rarely had a decent run on streaming, so there will be many people who have either never seen it or completely forgotten it exists that will be thrilled to find it coming to the ever-accessible library of Netflix.

Related

10 Best Action Thrillers of the Past Decade, According to Rotten Tomatoes

Here are the best action thriller films of the past decade, ranked by their Rotten Tomatoes critics’ scores.

While Craven is known mostly for his Nightmare on Elm Street movies and other groundbreaking horrors, the set-up of Red Eye doesn’t include monsters of the supernatural kind and has an incredibly simple set-up. Rachel McAdams plays Lisa Reisert, a Miami hotel manager catching the last flight out of Dallas after her grandmother’s funeral. Murphy’s Jackson Rippner who is in the seat next to her, seems to be a regular guy, if a little jittery and on edge about flying. However, things take a dark turn when Rippner reveals that he has Reisert’s father hostage and if she doesn’t aid him in an assassination, then her father will die. Obviously, being trapped on a plane is not the ideal place to be in this situation, and while the movie does have several tense action sequences, it is the tight, airless atmosphere that makes it a thrill-ride from start to finish.
‘Red Eye’ Is a Perfect Example of Craven’s Best Work

DreamWorks Pictures

Although Red Eye is not a horror movie, there are plenty of jump-scares, blood, and moments of terror to see it tread a tightrope across multiple genres. The movie was shot in less than a month by the master filmmaker, and mostly plays out as a two-hander between its leads, which allowed both stars to show off what they could do with very little space and some close expression-based shots that are more effective than a wide chase shot. Murphy was still relatively unknown at the time, with the film landing three years after his break-out role in Danny Boyle’s 28 Days Later, and in the same year he played Jonathan Crane in Nolan’s Batman Begins, but the steely-eyed menace of his role in Red Eye certainly helped to show off his range, and was a small glimmer of what was to come. Meanwhile, McAdams did an exceptional job of portraying a woman in panic, but who never becomes hysterical, and simply finds that she has to use every bit of her wits to outsmart her tormentor before the end of the flight. At a time when many movies require a little homework to be fully enjoyed, Red Eye is a movie that you can just throw on, buckle in, and enjoy in a relatively short space of time. This July, fans of Murphy, McAdams, and the late, great Wes Craven can appreciate one of the most underrated suspense thrillers of the noughties. Source: Netflix

Red Eye

Release Date

August 19, 2005

Runtime

85 Minutes

Writers

Carl Ellsworth

Producers

Bonnie Curtis, Chris Bender, J.C. Spink, Jim Lemley, Marianne Maddalena

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
Publisher: Source link

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
Sapphic Feminist Fairy Tale Cannot Keep Up With Its Vibrant Aesthetic

In Julia Jackman's 100 Nights of Hero, storytelling is a revolutionary, feminist act. Based on Isabel Greenberg's graphic novel (in turn based on the Middle Eastern fable One Hundred and One Nights), it is a queer fairy tale with a…

Dec 7, 2025

Sisu: Road to Revenge Review: A Blood-Soaked Homecoming

Sisu: Road to Revenge arrives as a bruising, unflinching continuation of Aatami Korpi’s saga—one that embraces the mythic brutality of the original film while pushing its protagonist into a story shaped as much by grief and remembrance as by violence.…

Dec 7, 2025

Timothée Chalamet Gives a Career-Best Performance in Josh Safdie’s Intense Table Tennis Movie

Earlier this year, when accepting the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role for playing Bob Dylan in A Complete Unknown, Timothée Chalamet gave a speech where he said he was “in…

Dec 5, 2025

Jason Bateman & Jude Law Descend Into Family Rot & Destructive Bonds In Netflix’s Tense New Drama

A gripping descent into personal ruin, the oppressive burden of cursed family baggage, and the corrosive bonds of brotherhood, Netflix’s “Black Rabbit” is an anxious, bruising portrait of loyalty that saves and destroys in equal measure—and arguably the drama of…

Dec 5, 2025