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2022, Action/Mystery & thriller, 2h 16m

What to know

Critics Consensus

At top speed and with sirens wailing, Ambulance comes riding to the rescue for audiences facing an emergency shortage of Michael Bay action thrills. Read critic reviews

Audience Says

If you're looking for an action-packed movie that doesn't rely on deep dialogue, complex characters, or even a story that makes a ton of sense, Ambulance absolutely delivers. Read audience reviews

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Ambulance videos, ambulance   photos.

Over one day across the streets of L.A., three lives will change forever. In this breakneck thriller from director-producer Michael Bay, decorated veteran Will Sharp (Emmy winner Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Candyman, The Matrix Resurrections), desperate for money to cover his wife's medical bills, asks for help from the one person he knows he shouldn't--his adoptive brother Danny (Oscar® nominee Jake Gyllenhaal, Zodiac, Spider-Man: Far From Home). A charismatic career criminal, Danny instead offers him a score: the biggest bank heist in Los Angeles history: $32 million. With his wife's survival on the line, Will can't say no. But when their getaway goes spectacularly wrong, the desperate brothers hijack an ambulance with a wounded cop clinging to life and ace EMT Cam Thompson (Eiza González, Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw, Baby Driver) onboard. In a high-speed pursuit that never stops, Will and Danny must evade a massive, city-wide law enforcement response, keep their hostages alive, and somehow try not to kill each other, all while executing the most insane escape L.A. has ever seen.

Rating: R (Intense Violence|Bloody Images|Language Throughout)

Genre: Action, Mystery & thriller, Crime, Drama

Original Language: English

Director: Michael Bay

Producer: Michael Bay , Bradley J. Fischer , James Vanderbilt , William Sherak , Ian Bryce

Writer: Chris Fedak , Laurits Munch-Petersen

Release Date (Theaters): Apr 8, 2022  wide

Release Date (Streaming): May 24, 2022

Box Office (Gross USA): $22.3M

Runtime: 2h 16m

Distributor: Universal Pictures

Production Co: New Republic Pictures, Universal Pictures, Bay Films, Endeavor Content, Project X Entertainment

Sound Mix: Dolby Digital

Aspect Ratio: Scope (2.35:1)

Cast & Crew

Jake Gyllenhaal

Danny Sharp

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II

Eiza González

Cam Thompson

Moses Ingram

Jackson White

Officer Zach

Cedric Sanders

Officer Mark

Garret Dillahunt

Captain Monroe

Keir O'Donnell

FBI Agent Anson Clark

Devan Chandler Long

Colin Woodell

Michael Bay

Chris Fedak

Screenwriter

Bradley J. Fischer

James Vanderbilt

William Sherak

Michael Kase

Executive Producer

Laeta Kalogridis

Tracey Nyberg

Roberto De Angelis

Cinematographer

Pietro Scalia

Film Editor

Lorne Balfe

Original Music

Karen Frick

Production Design

Art Director

Lucila Caro

Set Decoration

Lisa Lovaas

Costume Designer

Denise Chamian

Laurits Munch-Petersen

News & Interviews for Ambulance

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Critic Reviews for Ambulance

Audience reviews for ambulance.

Bay at his most earnestly patriotic (and I do mean true patriotism here in the sense of seeing the best or at least the complexity of the truly diverse cast of characters not empty flag waving) and, as with his last movie, he seems to no longer hate a vast majority of the public.

ambulance movie review

ludicrous story with some great action

When it comes to films directed by Michael Bay, everyone should know what to expect at this point. You'll either get a subdued action film like 13 Hours or a bombastic extravaganza like Transformers. There's really no taming Bay when it comes to his filmmaking techniques. Ambulance is his latest thrill-ride of a movie and while I enjoyed this one more than most of his recent films, it's still too much commotion for one movie. Here's why I recommend Ambulance for action fans, but also why I place an asterisk on my recommendation.  Danny Sharp (Jake Gyllenhaal), a criminal whose brother, Will Sharp (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II) is in need of some money, decides to let him in on a bank job they're about to pull. Joining them and failing to accomplish the robbery, these two brothers steal an ambulance to flee from the police. This ambulance also happens to have a paramedic on board with a police officer who has been shot. This makes for an endless car chase from start to finish, which is what kept me engaged the entire time. This, however, was also a detriment to the movie.  The camerawork in this film almost felt like it was trying too hard to keep the audience engaged in this very simple premise. From many twisting drone shots around buildings and running cameras under cars, I can see that this film will visually make certain viewers nauseous. I admired Bay's attempt at making a very hyper-fast film, but it only worked for me about half of the time. Still, this is a film that has a surprisingly devoted cast.  Jake Gyllenhal always brings his A-Game and this film was no exception to that. I've also admired Yahya Abdul-Mateen II's recent work as well and this film only extended my liking for him even further. The biggest standout to me here though is Eiza González's portrayal of the paramedic, Cam Thompson. There have been many films, including ones I love like Baby Driver, where her performances were below average, to say the least. If you continue to pursue acting though, certain performers can improve, and I believe that's happening with her. I was genuinely surprised to see that she was delivering a solid performance. I look forward to seeing more from her now.  Overall, Ambulance isn't going to win anyone over if they're not a fan of Michael Bay's work, but it's definitely among his better films, especially in the last number of years. This entire film is impossible and would never happen in reality, specifically the things they're able to pull off in the ambulance as it's in motion. I rolled my eyes multiple times and cringed at a few lines of dialogue, but I also has a fun time with it, and that's really all I'm looking for in a movie like this. It's loud, the music overpowers certain scenes and the camerawork will deter some viewers for sure, but I recommend Ambulance otherwise.

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‘Ambulance’ Review: Michael Bay Is Our Emergency Movie Technician

The action auteur’s latest opus stars Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as bank robbers who commandeer an unlikely getaway vehicle.

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ambulance movie review

By A.O. Scott

I wish someone had come with me to the screening of “Ambulance,” so I could have leaned over at a key point early in the story and whispered, “That must be the ambulance.” It’s great when movies make you feel smart.

Not that anyone necessarily goes to Michael Bay movies for that reason. And “Ambulance,” which includes verbal shout-outs to “Bad Boys” and “The Rock,” is something of a return to form for this auteur of vehicular mayhem and muscular bombast. A relatively low-budget project, especially when compared with the “Transformers” franchise he started, it bundles explosive set pieces into a plot that would be preposterous if you stopped to think about it.

The whole idea is that you won’t. Bay’s virtuosic flouting of the laws of physics, probability and narrative coherence is meant to catapult you into a zone of sublimity where melodramatic emotion and adrenalized excitement fuse into a whole new kind of sensation. Big, operatic feelings — mostly having to do with loyalty, honor and professionalism — are both heightened and lightened by propulsive speed and overscaled action. You’re not required to believe any of it, but somehow the word that comes to mind when I reflect on the 136 minutes I spent pinned to my seat watching this thing is “persuasive.”

That’s partly because “Ambulance,” built on the chassis of a 2005 Danish movie of the same name, is advancing an argument, or maybe a meta-argument, about the current state and aesthetic raison d’être of cinema.

Some of the salient points are made through dialogue (the script is by Chris Fedak), in a series of offhand jokes about the current state of pop-cultural literacy. At one point the criminal mastermind (Jake Gyllenhaal) refers to one of his minions as “Mel Gibson,” insisting on a resemblance that isn’t really there and invoking “Braveheart.” He seems to think that movie won “a bunch of Grammys.”

Later, a reference to “The Rock,” the Michael Bay movie, will be mistaken for a reference to the Rock, the wrestler and actor (also known as Dwayne Johnson) who appeared in “Pain & Gain,” a different Michael Bay movie. A graybeard Los Angeles police captain (Garret Dillahunt) will call a younger F.B.I. agent (Keir O’Donnell) “Doogie Howser.” “I’m sorry, boomer, but I don’t know who that is,” the whippersnapper retorts.

OK, that one is not really about cinema per se, but to me these odd little notes signal that Bay, born on the cusp between the baby boom and Generation X, has traded in his enfant terrible status for membership in the old guard. A glorious heritage is slipping away before our eyes. Action is required!

Ergo “Ambulance,” which takes place in a single hectic day in Los Angeles and is defiantly the kind of movie they supposedly don’t make anymore. It isn’t driven by the brand requirements of a lucrative intellectual property, and it isn’t something you could just as well watch at home.

Before the major chasing and shooting gets underway, the titular vehicle and its heroic E.M.T., Cam Thompson (Eiza González), attend to a young car-accident victim who has been impaled on a piece of wrought-iron fence. This kind of mishap is a staple of shows like “Grey’s Anatomy” and “9-1-1,” and “Ambulance” can be seen as a sustained critique of television’s domesticated presentation of disaster. Cam saves the child in the morning and by the time rush hour rolls around is performing emergency abdominal surgery in the middle of a car chase while conferring with trauma surgeons via video chat. Exploding cars and an exploding spleen, cut together in perfect counterpoint: that’s cinema, kids.

So are the wild vertical drone shots in which the camera rockets skyward before plunging back to earth, a carnival-ride move that Bay adds to his repertoire of swooping, ricocheting, vertiginous effects. And so, finally, is the story, an old-fashioned concatenation of coincidences, collisions and foolproof plans gone horribly awry.

At the center is a daylight robbery that plucks $32 million from a bank — a modest haul compared with the $100 million Ed Harris was after in “The Rock” back in 1996, especially when you adjust for inflation. The main robbers are Danny (Gyllenhaal) and Will (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II), who grew up as brothers, raised by a criminal father. Flashbacks show their boyhood selves at play, but as grown-ups they have taken diverging paths. Danny followed in Dad’s footsteps, while Will joined the Marines. Now married (to Moses Ingram) with an infant son, he’s desperate for money to pay for his wife’s cancer treatment. Stopping by Danny’s place of business to ask for a loan, he ends up signing on with Danny’s crew.

Eventually they are joined by two hostages: Cam and a rookie cop named Zach (Jackson White), whose partner, Mark (Cedric Sanders), becomes part of an elaborate tour of the freeways and alleys of Los Angeles that also involves a lot of other people on both sides of the law. It all ends up pretty much where you expect it will, but the actors do a good job of seething and emoting under pressure, and Gyllenhaal does a volatile, charming sociopath thing that isn’t as annoying as it might be.

So after much deliberation, my critical verdict on “Ambulance” is: It’s a movie!

Ambulance Rated R. F-bombs, exploding cars, a ruptured spleen. Running time: 2 hour 16 minutes. In theaters.

An earlier version of this article misidentified the actor who played one of the villains in “The Rock.” It was Ed Harris not Sean Connery.

How we handle corrections

A.O. Scott is a co-chief film critic. He joined The Times in 2000 and has written for the Book Review and The New York Times Magazine. He is also the author of “Better Living Through Criticism.” More about A.O. Scott

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  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews

Jake Gyllenhaal, Eiza González, and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II in Ambulance (2022)

Two robbers steal an ambulance after their heist goes awry. Two robbers steal an ambulance after their heist goes awry. Two robbers steal an ambulance after their heist goes awry.

  • Michael Bay
  • Chris Fedak
  • Laurits Munch-Petersen
  • Lars Andreas Pedersen
  • Jake Gyllenhaal
  • Yahya Abdul-Mateen II
  • Eiza González
  • 1.2K User reviews
  • 227 Critic reviews
  • 55 Metascore
  • 10 nominations

Official Trailer 2

  • Danny Sharp

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II

  • Cam Thompson
  • (as Eiza Gonzalez)

Garret Dillahunt

  • Captain Monroe

Keir O'Donnell

  • FBI Agent Anson Clark

Jackson White

  • Officer Zach

Olivia Stambouliah

  • Lieutenant Dzaghig

Moses Ingram

  • Officer Mark

A Martinez

  • (as Wale Folarin)

Devan Chandler Long

  • (as Devan Long)

Briella Guiza

  • All cast & crew
  • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

More like this

The Guilty

Did you know

  • Trivia The helicopter chase sequence in the Los Angeles River was not in the script; Michael Bay came up with the idea over the weekend after two helicopters became available for use. The scene was shot in 2 and a half hours with the help of helicopter pilot Fred North. Instead of hiring stuntmen for the sequence, Jake Gyllenhaal was actually hanging off the side of the ambulance's door and shooting at the helicopters himself while Yahya Abdul-Mateen II was driving. Surprised by the sudden and speedy filming of the scene, Abdul-Mateen live-streamed the event to his friend as he was driving and later told Bay it was the "craziest shit I've ever done."
  • Goofs When Nitro the dog is in the back of the police vehicle, there's a shot where you see the dog through the rear passenger window with a dog handler (wearing a green sweater) visible in the back seat at 1:06'36".

Danny Sharp : We're not the bad guys, we're just the guys trying to get home!

Will Sharp : Well, we don't get to walk off into the sunset!

  • Crazy credits At the end of the end credits not only director Michael Bay and producer Bradley Fisher get to say their special thanks but also the dog: "NITRO THE DOG WOULD LIKE TO THANK THE SPCA" (Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals)
  • Connections Featured in Teletrece: Episode dated 24 March 2022 (2022)
  • Soundtracks Sailing Written by Christopher Cross Performed by Christopher Cross Produced by Michael Omartian Courtesy of Christopher Cross Records

User reviews 1.2K

  • Apr 22, 2022
  • How long is Ambulance? Powered by Alexa
  • April 8, 2022 (United States)
  • United States
  • Grand Central Market - 317 S. Broadway, Downtown, Los Angeles, California, USA (Where Cam Thompson and EMT Scott stop for enchiladas and sushi, market signs and Kobe Bryant mural can be seen behind them)
  • Universal Pictures
  • Endeavor Content
  • New Republic Pictures
  • See more company credits at IMDbPro
  • $40,000,000 (estimated)
  • $22,781,115
  • Apr 10, 2022
  • $52,303,589

Technical specs

  • Runtime 2 hours 16 minutes
  • Dolby Atmos
  • IMAX 6-Track

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Ambulance Is the Kind of Thrill Ride Theaters Were Made For

Portrait of Angelica Jade Bastién

Ambulance , the latest from director Michael Bay, is a film powered by the jittery force of will and blissful confidence that comes with doing cocaine. Lots of cocaine. If you told me that before every swooning shot setup or bombastic line reading from co-lead Jake Gyllenhaal, people on set dived into mountains of cocaine, I would thoroughly and utterly believe you. This is exactly the kind of ridiculousness I can get behind. It deserves far more love than it got at the box office its opening weekend for putting to the fore the pleasure principle too many filmmakers in Hollywood have cast aside for self-aware quips and broadly connected universes — though I do appreciate the Ambulance characters who quote and reference previous Bay powerhouses Bad Boys and The Rock , meaning Bay exists in the universe of his own film.

Ambulance has been dubbed “small” by Bay standards because of its mid- budget cost of $40 million. For reference, his previous Netflix film, 6 Underground, starring sentient ingrown hair Ryan Reynolds, cost $150 million. But don’t let that amount of money fool you into thinking Ambulance is anything less than a deliciously profane, bonkers thrill that puts audience gratification above things like common sense and characterization. This is a film built to satisfy — teasing laughter and shock out of you at a clip. The intensity starts early. Screenwriter Chris Fedak doesn’t waste time; he efficiently sets up the crime and the trio of stars powering the narrative, relying first on amber-hued childhood flashbacks accompanied by a treacly score, then by the charisma of Gyllenhaal (playing Danny Sharp) and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II (playing Will Sharp) as adoptive brothers on very different sides of the law who share a harrowing adolescence thanks to their bank-robbing psychopath of a father, in whose steps the former walks. Will is at the end of his line. A war veteran and dad himself, he is desperate to get the money necessary to help his wife, Amy (Moses Ingram), pay for an experimental treatment for her hazily defined health issues. He turns to his criminal brother for a job that quickly goes left.

What starts as a secure bank robbery quickly becomes a pulsating chase through the streets of Los Angeles with the tough-broad EMT Cam (Eiza González) trying to keep alive the admittedly annoying cop (Jackson White) whom Will shot in a fit of anxiety. The film builds its twists on moments of luck and ingenuity, roping in a dazzling array of characters — from the cartel members Danny relies on to evade the authorities to FBI agent Anson Clark (Keir O’Donnell), whom Danny went to college with after his father urged him to take criminal-profiling classes in order to better understand the minds that would one day be eager to thwart him. Ambulance builds its emotional life on the ragged link between Danny and Will, juxtaposing their differences at every turn. Danny is beguiling with a hair-trigger temper. Will is stoic and caring, disposed to put his life on the line for his very own hostages.

The characterization doesn’t always sing, especially when you clock the discomfiting exaltation of the armed forces that anchors the story or the fact that the chemistry between Gyllenhaal and Abdul-Mateen doesn’t always hit. When Cam is introduced, it becomes clear just what kind of female character we’re faced with. She’s an EMT who can lovingly aid a young girl with a fence spoke piercing her abdomen, as the groan of metal on metal fills the air, and then want to eat enchiladas in the next breath. She’s rough-hewn and no-nonsense in that effortlessly beautiful way expected of actresses of this range — relatively young, pretty in a way that seems algorithmically designed — who have yet to prove what they can do. Here, she’s gentle when she really needs to be steely. But at its best, Ambulance is brimming with a visual brio that infuses its car crashes, chases, and bevy of explosions with delight.

The continued diminishment of mid-budget films in Hollywood in recent decades is often lamented, particularly for how integral they can be to the development and refinement of a star’s image. But much more has been lost than that. Consider the wealth of character actors in films such as the raucous Keanu Reeves action flick Speed to erotic thrillers like The Last Seduction. Bay and casting director Denise Chamian understand how to build a supporting cast. The film is colored with a variety of excellent character actors with strong turnout, especially Garret Dillahunt as the cunning police captain Monroe and Olivia Stambouliah as the electric smart-mouth Lieutenant Dzaghig, whose line readings got an enthusiastic response from my theater’s audience. Coupled with the surprisingly high body count, Ambulance hits what it needs to hit: visceral thrills, copious amounts of blood and violence (without an overreliance on shoddy CGI), practical effects, and a sincere interest in putting its characters through absolute hell. So when a Birkenstock-wearing robber gets decimated, his legs run over, only for him to look down and ask what the hell happened with the sort of nonchalance of someone acknowledging the pickles were forgotten on their burger, you can’t help but giggle. But your eyes — and the camera, guided by kinetic cinematographer Roberto De Angelis — always fall back on Gyllenhaal and Abdul-Mateen.

As Danny, Gyllenhaal is giving hypermasculine drag. This isn’t new for him. He’s an actor who truly loves to toggle between more experimental art-house fare and big-budget extravaganzas. He’s a wry, flexible performer I have sincerely enjoyed over the decades, but whenever he’s in action of this ilk, it’s as if he needs to desperately remind us he can be a man’s man, throwing off the more feminine or complex dynamics of films such as Wildlife and Enemy , which allow him to sit within a more pluripotent masculinity. Here, Gyllenhaal is going full masc. In his hands, Danny’s charms quickly curdle into selfishness and sharp-edged violence. Still, he’s funny as hell in the role — chewing apart sentences, spitting out one-liners, using his physicality to seduce people into a state of fear, moving with ecstatic grace. He’s giving pure, unabashed gonzo energy. When he says, “It’s not that simple, Will. We’re not the bad guys,” we’re meant to look at his character warily. Yet Bay doesn’t account for the fact that more than a few in the audience of this film (myself included) couldn’t give less of a damn about the cops. It’s the criminals we root for as they flout the system and put a middle finger in the air to propriety.

On the other hand, Abdul-Mateen has been saddled with a character built together with stoicism, a good heart, and the reverence Bay clearly holds for the armed forces. Casting Abdul-Mateen in the role brings to the fore a host of interlocking issues, namely the way Black folks are forced into systems that support the very fascism and imperialism that constrain their lives on the home front. Bay doesn’t wrestle with this dynamic. Hell, he doesn’t even realize it’s there. So when it becomes clear that Danny and Will’s fate is either death or prison, the political discomfort becomes glaring. Here is a Black man trying to aid his family after the government he’s upheld discarded him only to end up a part of an even more damning system that stains this country’s hands with the blood of untold Black and brown folks. Watching Abdul-Mateen — whether he’s belting out a song with Gyllenhaal to burn off some of their anxious trepidation or punching the hell out of his onscreen brother with the sort of aplomb that immediately piques the interest of the authorities nipping at their heels — I couldn’t help but wonder what exactly he wants from his career. In HBO’s resplendent series Watchmen , he plays Doctor Manhattan with a tender heart and prowess. In the silly bombast of Aquaman , he plays my perennial favorite, Black Manta, with sneering force. More recently in Matrix Resurrections , he takes a spin on Morpheus that is self-aware and brazenly confident. He’s an actor with supremely lupine physical ingenuity, the kind of performer who walks into the room and easily charms the eye. But what rooms does he desire to walk into? What heights does he want to reach? Despite his skill and profile, Abdul-Mateen isn’t consistently taking on roles that put his power in the spotlight.

But that’s not why you’re reading this review. You’re wondering, Is Ambulance the kind of fun worth trotting out to the theater for? Hell, yeah, it is. Where do I begin? With the ecstatic color palette? The glossy reverence for a car being flipped several times in the air as if dancing of its own accord? The sheer insanity of the crashes wrought with balletic grace? How about those drone shots? Bay relies on the vertiginous joy of overhead drone shots dangling on the precipice of skyscrapers and atop other squat buildings before swooping down and tracking an eye on the cataclysmic action happening below. This swooning visual style is used again and again to great effect. Another great example of the film’s visual force? When Danny screams that Will is in fact his real brother before they unleash a hail of bullets in slo-mo on a cartel boss and his underlings, spinning in a circle to pick off their rivals. What more can be said but this: Now that’s cinema, baby.

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Ambulance Review

A loud, brash, over-the-top action flick like only michael bay can deliver..

Ryan Leston Avatar

Ambulance will debut in U.S. theaters on April 8, 2022.

Action movies don’t have to be big, bold, brash displays of guns, violence, and car chases. Some take an altogether more measured approach, layering plot and dialogue to underpin a thrilling story, using action sequences to punctuate a gripping story.

Ambulance does absolutely none of that.

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ambulance movie review

Michael Bay has directed possibly the most Michael Bay film of all time as Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II stomp around Los Angeles in a stolen ambulance, evading the police after a heist gone wrong.

It’s a neat setup that borrows a lot from the likes of Speed and the Grand Theft Auto games, with frenzied editing that makes scenes whizz by faster than a getaway ambulance. There’s nothing subtle or understated here – Ambulance is a bold movie from a director renowned for his over-the-top antics. And boy, Bay does not disappoint here.

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Danny (Gyllenhaal) and Will (Abdul-Mateen) are crooks pulling one last big bank job – the one to top them all. But while Danny is keen to follow in his criminal father’s footsteps, Will is a more reluctant bank robber, dragged kicking and screaming into his brother’s scheme.

The heist scenes are a bit rough around the edges, but that’s kind of the point. It all goes sideways very quickly, leaving Danny and Will hot-footing it out of there with bags stuffed full of cash and assault rifles at the ready. Not exactly inconspicuous, and with the cops on their tail, time is running out. If only they could find a way out…

Enter the Ambulance, home to notorious EMT Cam Thompson (Eiza González), who can keep anyone alive for 20 minutes as long as you don’t dare to strike up any kind of personal conversation. She’s essentially a caricature of a grizzled veteran health care worker, but González manages to wrestle with the stereotype to pull out an impressive performance.

Of course, the real star of the show is Gyllenhaal, who spends 136 minutes chewing the scenery so hard, he needs a new set of dentures by the end of it. Expect crazed monologues, hyped-up displays of aggression, and bucketloads of those trademark Gyllenhaal crazed expressions. Abdul-Mateen brings a more measured performance as the humble U.S. veteran who just happens to be related to a serial bank robber. Although he’s underutilized at first, Abdul-Mateen really comes into his own by the third act, building a solid rapport with Gyllenhaal that eventually bursts out of the screen.

But Cam gets plenty of opportunity to shine too. Although the high-speed hijinks of a bank robbery gone wrong provide most of the action, it’s punctuated by excruciating medical scenes which see Cam go beyond the call of duty.

In fact, there’s a lot more to this than meets the eye.

Shot during lockdown in 2021, Ambulance feels like a salute to the frontline healthcare workers who put their lives on the line to keep us safe. Positioning Cam as the trustworthy face of a brutal healthcare system shows us the humanity and sacrifice of the noble EMT, highlighting the bravery of the ordinary nurse or hospital porter.

That being said, it’s not particularly realistic.

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ambulance movie review

After all, one scene sees the EMT perform impromptu surgery using a hair clip while being walked through the procedure by a surgeon friend over Zoom. But González’s no-nonsense heroine is unwavering in the face of danger. She’s not particularly complex – neither are Gyllenhaal and Abdul Mateen’s characters. But there’s joy to be found in the simple plot, executed amid a hail of gunfire, in the back of a speeding ambulance, with Bay’s signature explosions wreaking havoc around them.

It's an audacious film in more ways than one. Only Bay can get away with directly referencing his own movies throughout the film’s already cheesy dialogue. The tongue-in-cheek nature of a cop talking about Bad Boys is more than a little reminiscent of Hot Fuzz .

Pop quiz, hotshot – how exactly does Michael Bay do it?

That’s all down to his signature style. It's a fast-paced thrill ride all round with breakneck cuts and a frantic energy you won’t find anywhere else. Sure, it’s a bit exhausting to sit through over two hours of edge-of-your-seat action and not-quite-whip-smart quips from Gyllenhaal’s cash-obsessed hustler. But you’re rewarded with an action-packed finale that will leave you feeling positively energized.

Ambulance is a high-octane delight for anyone who loves the complete and utter mayhem of an over-the-top action thriller. It’s not particularly clever, or original. But Ambulance does deliver the kind of thrilling, fast-paced action that’s been missing in cinemas for the last few years. It’s perfect popcorn fodder with a healthy dose of explosions, chase scenes, and that signature fast-cutting, frenzied style that made Bay a household name.

Don’t expect too much and Ambulance will give you a healthy shot of adrenaline long before you risk flatlining.

Ambulance is a big, loud action flick that stomps its way through downtown Los Angeles and leaves you wondering what the hell you just witnessed. It’s Dog Day Afternoon meets Speed with all the explosions and car chases you should expect from a Michael Bay movie. Subtlety is off the table when it comes to Jake Gyllenhaal’s performance, who clearly has a blast with his over-the-top scene-chewing, while Yahya Abdul-Mateen II adds a touch of heart to it all. Ambulance is crazy, dumb fun with a plot that often makes no sense whatsoever. But does it really have to? Not if you’re Michael Bay.

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Ambulance

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‘Ambulance’ Review: Jake Gyllenhaal in Michael Bay’s Retro Excessive ‘Die Hard’ on an EMS Van

It takes you back to an age when action thrillers were big, loud, decadent, “rebellious,” and ripped off from "Die Hard." But this one, in its violent throttling way, is joyless.

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Ambulance trailer

Set during one long day in Los Angeles, it’s the tale of a bank robbery gone spectacularly wrong. And what it all comes down to is this: Following a street showdown that tries to out-machine-gun clatter the one in Michael Mann’s “Heat,” two of the robbers hijack an ambulance, with a paramedic and a wounded cop aboard, and they then race through the streets of L.A. pursued by an army of squad cars, police choppers, and news teams. It’s “Speed” crossed with the O.J. Bronco chase crossed with “Die Hard” on an EMS van, and it’s all served up in a pedal-to-the-metal mode of overwrought hyper intensity one could describe as Bay to the Max.

In “Ambulance,” there’s no such thing as an establishing shot of a vehicle cruising along a freeway that isn’t immediately followed by an off-angle, camera-whooshing-through-the-air operatic heightening of that shot. The camera doesn’t just move, it throttles — gliding, plunging and rocketing forward, traveling through tunnels and bending around corners. And the film’s editing revives the old cut-cut-cut machismo of here’s-what-a-former-music-video-director-is-made-of. It’s action montage on Adderall. It’s all supposed to be relentlessly jacked, but too often the folly of the Bay style is that it trowels on aggressive techno filmmaking energy like frosting, substituting it for a situation that’s actually authentically suspenseful.

Does Danny have an ingenious plan to pull off a heist of $32 million? Amazingly, no. He’s got a crew of gnarly henchmen, including one they call “Mel Gibson” (because he looks nearly as scary), but after making the tellers get on the floor, the men walk around without masks, as if no one would be able to identify them. When a naïve rookie cop, Officer Zach (Jackson White), asks to come into the bank because he wants to flirt with one of the tellers, it’s only a matter of time before their cover is blown.

The slovenly lack of design — not just in the robbery but in Chris Fedak’s script, which is longer on late-’80s/’90s attitude (“These sons of bitches are about to have a really bad day!” ) than it is on logic — gives the audience a curious relationship to Danny and his crew. Do we want to see these jokers succeed? Even as movie criminals, they don’t do a lot to earn our affection or respect, and from the start it’s clear that they have almost no chance. (Are they going to escape the entire LAPD in a hard-charging ambulance?) But if not, then what are we spending this 136-minute movie rooting for? Abdul-Mateen’s Will, the noble straight shooter, is our entry point into the film, but for a long time Gyllenhaal, in jabbering-psycho-lite mode, dominates the proceedings, and the character’s scurrilous abrasiveness is more wearying than charismatic.

Danny and Will aren’t biological brothers — Will was taken in by Danny’s father and raised as his sibling. But that father, we learn, was himself an infamous criminal; the whole family-background thing is a little abstract and a touch ludicrous. Chris Fedak has obviously studied the if-it-feels-good-f—k-it screenwriting method of early Shane Black, and he comes up with at least one scene that’s too nuts for words: Cam (Eiza González), the spitfire paramedic hostage, gets on the cell phone with her surgeon ex-boyfriend to guide her through an impromptu operation, with no anaesthetic, on Zach, who has a bullet in his spleen, which bursts right in front of us. At this point you may seriously wonder if you’re having fun yet.

The ’90s school of overripe action excess (Bay! Willis! “Con Air”!) produced a few classic movies, like the transcendently gonzo-yet-plausible-at-every-moment “Speed,” but mostly it was about turning off your brain and turning up the volume. There’s a place for that, and I’ll confess that as a critic I was too harsh at the time about a poker-faced preposterous intergalactic ballistic romp like “Armageddon.” Yet “Ambulance” is simply too much of a not-so-good thing. It never stops huffing and puffing to entertain you, but it’s joyless: a tale of escape that’s far from a great escape, because for all its motion it’s going through the motions.

Reviewed at AMC Lincoln Square, March 23, 2022. MPAA rating: R. Running time: 136 MIN.

  • Production: A Universal Pictures release, in association with Endeavor Content, of a Bay Films, New Republic Pictures, Project X Entertainment production. Producers: Michael Bay, Bradley J. Fischer, James Vanderbilt, William Sherak, Ian Bryce. Executive producers: Michael Kase, Mark Moran.
  • Crew: Director: Michael Bay. Screenplay: Chris Fedak. Camera: Roberto De Angelis. Editor: Pietro Scalia. Music: Lorne Balfe.
  • With: Jake Gyllenhaal, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Eiza Gonzalez, Moses Ingram, Jackson White, Cedric Sanders, Garret Dillahunt, Keir O’Donnell, A Martinez.

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Ambulance review: Michael Bay goes full-crazy in a wildly adrenalized action throwback

Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II take the wheel in the director's berserk but frequently entertaining L.A. heist thriller.

Leah Greenblatt is the critic at large at Entertainment Weekly , covering movies, music, books, and theater. She is a member of the New York Film Critics Circle, and has been writing for EW since 2004.

ambulance movie review

Early on in Ambulance , a minor character, a cop, starts riffing on an old Sean Connery quote from the 1996 action thriller The Rock . "You know, The Rock ?" he prods his partner, a rookie just out of the academy. "Yeah, he was a wrestler," the partner replies happily, "Then he became an actor." Of course this kid doesn't know that it's the name of a Michael Bay movie, why would he? He probably wasn't born yet.

He also probably wouldn't know how very Bay Ambulance (in theaters Friday) is: way Bay, peak bay, Bay über alles. That is to say, at one point someone will squeeze a human spleen until it bursts, and someone else, two people actually, will sing Christopher Cross's yacht-rock apotheosis "Sailing" during a high-speed police chase in off-key harmony. Many day-rate extras will die anonymous explosive deaths, but the hero will survive bombs, bazookas, and a tank. And all will follow the first law of the Bay Cinematic Universe: If a thing can go boom, it will go boom.

Ambulance is also, it turns out, better than most of the movies in Bay's catalog, though the bar for Armageddon , Pearl Harbor , and five Transformers arguably has only itself to clear. Better in that it immediately sets the dial at 11, action-wise, and stays there, constantly defibrillating, for the next 130-plus minutes. And better in that its leads are played by two actors who work far more than they probably need to to sell this particular brand of rococo madness. Jake Gyllenhaal is Danny Sharp, a maniacally cheerful freelance bandit; Yahya Abdul Mateen II ( Candyman , The Matrix Resurrections ) is his adopted brother Will, a former marine with a wife and new baby. (Their late father, it is mentioned several times, was a criminal and a "total psycho"; how he ended up taking in Will remains a mystery, but we're not here to sweat the details.)

Though the brothers are semi-estranged and seemingly live in different worlds, Bay and screenwriter Chris Fedak ( Prodigal Son , DC's Legends of Tomorrow ) dispense breezily with Will's motivation in the first scene: He's a veteran, broke and unsupported by the country he served, and his wife needs experimental surgery they can't afford. So hey, phone a friend! Conveniently, Danny has a job planned for that very afternoon, a $32 million drop in downtown Los Angeles. Never mind that his crew is so casually ill-prepared for a heist that one shaggy Z-boy arrives in open-toed sandals ("Who wears Birkenstocks to a bank robbery, Trent?").

When things go awry, as they do, Will and Danny are forced to flee the scene in an ambulance with a critically injured cop (Jackson White) and an EMT named Cam ( I Care a Lot 's Eiza González) on board, and the entire air, land, and sea fleet of the LAPD in hot pursuit. There's an ornery police captain (Garret Dillahunt, who looks very much like Josh Duhamel but isn't), his impatient lieutenant (Olivia Stambouliah), and an FBI agent (Keir O'Donnell) with the clearest read on Danny and a husband who just wants him to come home.

There's also some ambiguous business with a short-fused crime lord (A Martinez) everybody calls Papi, but the dramatic thrust of the movie mostly takes place behind the wheel, while the passengers bicker and bargain and attempt to perform several ill-advised emergency medical procedures. Bay shoots these scenes as if he's just been injected with several kinds of lightning, the camera swooping and corkscrewing at seasick angles over freeways and fireballs and blaring California sunshine. And Gyllenhaal, fully going for baroque, seems almost giddy, throwing off one liners like they're beads at Mardi Gras and making Nic Cage crazy eyes.

Gonzalez, infuriated and blood-spattered, gets more to do than the average decorative female in a film like this, somehow without losing her lip gloss, and Abdul-Mateen II imbues Will with far more pathos and humanity than his hasty sketch of a character deserves. It all goes on too long and eventually wears itself out (the 2005 Danish original on which the screenplay is based clocks in almost a full hour shorter). The violence is cartoonishly casual and the ending pure Hollywood corn. The absurdity, though, is the point: They're just two brothers on the run, and escape is what we came for. Grade: B

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Review: Can Michael Bay save the blockbuster? Nutso ‘Ambulance’ is his best in decades

Jake Gyllenhaal in “Ambulance”

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Is Michael Bay feeling OK? Has anyone checked his blood pressure recently? Offered the man a nice cup of camomile and verbena? These are legitimate questions to ask, as one emerges punch-drunk, blinded by lens flare and dripping with second-hand testosterone transfer, from “Ambulance,” his latest — and by the standards of his 2000s output, best — assault on the occipital lobe.

Just to watch this deliriously dumb actioner is an amber-threat-level event best avoided by those with pacemakers or PhDs; imagine actually making it. Probably wise that it is set in the titular emergency response vehicle, ensuring easy access during shooting to defibrilllators and tongue depressors. Because the issue of Bay continuing in the rudest of health is not merely idle chit-chat. With this noisy, nonsensical, nutso movie careening, crazy-eyed onto a cinematic freeway otherwise choked with interchangeably airless superhero properties, this most inessential of blockbuster filmmakers has suddenly proved himself weirdly valuable. Mr. Bay , please get your thyroid checked out, because apparently, we need you.

For your safety

The Times is committed to reviewing theatrical film releases during the COVID-19 pandemic . Because moviegoing carries risks during this time, we remind readers to follow health and safety guidelines as outlined by the CDC and local health officials .

“Ambulance” is based on a Danish thriller, in the sense that Bay has taken that film’s lean little premise — about bank-robbing brothers commandeering an ambulance that also contains an EMT and her dying patient — put it on a protein-and-steroid diet and sent it to the gym to bulk up till its veins pop.

Less care was taken beefing up the screenplay (adapted by Chris Fedak), but one hardly comes to a Michael Bay movie for the Wildean wordplay. To give you some idea, the wittiest exchange (apart from a genuinely delightful interlude scored to Christopher Cross’ “Sailing) is a labored bit about one of the heist crew (Devan Chandler Long) looking so like “Braveheart”-era Mel Gibson that Jake Gyllenhaal’s Danny insists on calling him “Mel Gibson.” It’s particularly baffling given Long looks nothing like Gibson, and is actually a ringer for MMA fighter Conor McGregor, but that would be a reference too up-to-date for “Ambulance,” which, even when it refers immodestly to Bay’s own back catalogue, name checks “The Rock” and “Bad Boys” rather than anything from this millennium.

Danny is the wildcard adoptive brother of straight-edged Army vet Will ( Yahya Abdul-Mateen II , making light work of a rather 2D good-guy role), whose wife is in dire need of a life-saving treatment, which their health insurance will not cover.

Thus Will turns to Danny on the very day — wouldn’t you know it — that Danny is planning to rob a local bank and is one man short for the job. By appealing to their shared past (the Will-Danny relationship is steeped in brotherly Baythos, and damned if it doesn’t kind of work) Will gets talked into it, but the heist goes awry early when lovelorn Officer Zach (Jackson White) pushes his way into the bank at exactly the wrong moment and gets shot for his trouble. Luckily for him, unfeasibly attractive EMT Cam ( Eiza Gonzalez ), a.k.a. the “best paramedic in town” — and certainly the one with the most unsmudgeably luscious lipgloss — is nearby, but when Danny and Will need a getaway vehicle for themselves and all their stolen money, they commandeer her ambulance with Cam and a dying Zach still in it.

Cam — gratifyingly, by some distance the least ogled of Bay’s female leads — valiantly tries to keep Zach alive, which Danny and Will soon realize is in their best interests too: The pursing police, led by Garret Dillahunt’s Capt. Monroe and Keir O’Donnell’s FBI Agent Clark, are much less likely to simply blow the vehicle up if they know that “one of their own” is alive inside it.

Don’t worry if this makes “Ambulance” sound a bit copagandist — you’d be hard pushed to find a coherent political agenda in a movie this anarchically dedicated to ensuring no one scene has any bearing on the one that came before. It’s weird that a film so thuddingly simplistic in its two-hour-plus arc should be so utterly mystifying on a moment-to-moment basis, but that’s “Bayhem” for ya.

A man grabs the arm of another man holding a rifle in the movie “Ambulance”

There’s a lot of zooming about (it’s never exactly clear where to) as medical complications ensure Cam has to improvise a grisly surgery on the go, Will has to give blood while driving and Danny has to shout and bug his eyes a lot (which Gyllenhaal is great at, like a very handsome Angry Bird). A whole lot more characters are briefly introduced, given one defining characteristic, like “wears Birkenstocks,” “is gay,” “has a dog” or “constantly bitches about his wife” and then just as quickly dispensed with. But then, mostly the actors seem hired less for their roles than for their agility in stepping nimbly away when one of Bay and director of photography Roberto De Angelis’ drone-mounted cameras comes barreling at them with the unstoppable force of a surface-to-air missile.

But as lunatic as the filmmaking is, and as much as Bay’s style tries to divorce it from actual physics entirely, it’s also reassuringly real: There’s something almost quaint about knowing that when the battered van is speeding down the concrete channels of the L.A. River, being pursued by two police choppers and a kamikaze squadron of police cars, they are actual vehicles, going actually fast in an actual place. It’s so nice to see money inexcusably wasted this way, rather than on the inflated salaries of movie stars halfway through their nine-picture contracts, waving their arms around in front of a green screen. The CGI here is minimal, and Bay recently clarified comments he made about its quality, saying there are, in fact, only two shots he doesn’t like in the whole movie. Two! Considering it contains roughly 12 billion shots, that’s a pretty good average.

So “Ambulance” is not good, exactly. Still it is an enjoyable, oddly inspiring reminder of how many more flavors not-good used to come in, in the olden days, back when we had the luxury of regarding Michael Bay’s brand of adrenalized, lobotomized moviemaking as a menace to blockbuster cinema, rather than — gulp — one of its potential saviors.

'Ambulance'

Rated: R, for intense violence, bloody images and language throughout Running time: 2 hours, 16 minutes Playing: In general release

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“Ambulance,” Reviewed: Michael Bay Plays Himself

ambulance movie review

By Richard Brody

Jake Gyllenhaal seen through a bullet hole in the back window of an ambulance.

Michael Bay’s new film, “Ambulance,” which opened in theatres last Friday, is being hailed as an exemplary Michael Bay film: a large-scale delivery device for quick-cut action sequences, explosions, quips, and more explosions. It’s Bay’s first theatrical release in five years, and one of the few non-“ Transformers ” movies he’s done in fifteen. Yet, despite the Bay imprimatur, the main quality of “Ambulance” is its virtual anonymity. In both his methods and his attitudes, he empties the film of any trace of creative personality. “Ambulance” reminds me of one of the few good films of the misbegotten Dogme 95 movement, “ The Boss of It All ,” in which the director Lars von Trier used a system that he called Automavision , a computerized control of his camera: “We push this button on the computer and we get given six or eight randomized set-ups—a little tilt, or a movement, or if you should zoom in.” So it is with “Ambulance,” in which Bay sacrifices his modicum of directorial originality in order to whip up a frenzy of mechanized excitement with a story that could have been generated by Automatext.

“Ambulance” is a post-heist movie—the botched bank robbery at its center is merely the pretext for an extended chase. Two brothers in Los Angeles—Danny Sharp (Jake Gyllenhaal), a career criminal who’s the ringleader of the job, and Will Sharp (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II), a Marine veteran in need of fast money—are the two survivors of the heist. They get away (toting thirty-two million dollars in cash) by hijacking an ambulance in which an E.M.T. aide, Cam Thompson (Eiza González), is tending to the police officer, Zach (Jackson White), whom Will shot during the escape. The premise of the chase is that only Zach’s grave wounds, and Cam’s exacting care to keep him alive, are restraining the authorities from swooping in and stopping the vehicle. The intrepid Danny, who is on his thirty-eighth bank robbery in ten years, declares, “We’re a shark: we don’t stop.”

The bulk of the film—and bulk it is—is tactical: Will (an expert driver) and Danny take daring, evasive measures; Cam’s formidable medical skills are pressed by Zach’s deteriorating condition; law enforcement, its command split between the crusty Captain Monroe (Garret Dillahunt) and the starchy, young F.B.I. agent Anson Clark (Keir O’Donnell), tracks the robbers and tries to trap them. As Danny makes increasingly bold and complicated plans to elude capture, he sparks conflict with another gang of criminals led by a man known only as Papi (A Martinez), a ruthless agent for drug cartels.

Each of the characters has a salient trait or two to explain his or her actions with a forensic specificity that takes the place of any dramatic curiosity. Yet the script, by Chris Fedak (based on a Danish film from 2005), is gaudily decorative—it adorns the characters with patter and riffs, with extraneous details that simulate the stuff of life without any substance. These verbal ornaments give the actors something to work with, lines to inflect and emotions to contrive, as hectic distractions from the fact that their characters are purely puppets, pulled by the dictatorial strings of plot. The flashy performances are a tribute to the actors’ talent—especially Gyllenhaal, González, Dillahunt, and O’Donnell, who conjure a sense of spin on leaden absurdities. Abdul-Mateen II has the hardest job, because the script gives him even less to work with: Will, a slightly more malleable character, is entirely in the service of filling plot holes, and Bay doesn’t even feign interest in his personality.

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What Bay is up to in “Ambulance” is motion, which isn’t quite the same thing as action. It isn’t enough that there are car crashes—drivers losing control, vehicles losing traction, concrete shards flying at the camera like sand kicked by a beach bully, people scattering and smashing with a casual indifference befitting only clay figures. It isn’t enough, because much of the movie—with its negotiations and decisions, its wrangling and planning—involves talk, and Bay films it to appear continuous with the copious scenes of violence. Even when the characters are sitting still, the camera doesn’t stop moving. The panoply of angles, realized seemingly with handheld cameras subject to jolts from the hazards of the shoot, merely simulates substance and emotion; the images suggest expressive inflections that they don’t actually provide. Moreover, these neutral images are edited together at a pace that’s frenetic even for Bay. The montage offers giant helpings of images, furnishing infinitesimal substance; for the viewer, it’s a mental race to keep up with the jumble—and that jumble is what takes the place of bodily movement. Bay makes generous use of drones to follow vehicles from overhead, but much of the drone footage is similarly ornamental and provisional, swooping between a billboard’s stanchions or gyrating haphazardly around the vehicular drama to splatter the movie with more movement than its characters and vehicles alone can furnish.

The handful-of-confetti approach to cinematic composition matches the skittering script in almost entirely lacking a point of view. The few moments that provide one—overhead surveillance images of the ambulance that show only what the pilots see—do evoke, a few seconds at a time, method and thought. Even the aesthetic sensibility that Bay flaunts in the “Transformers” franchise is mostly missing from “Ambulance,” too—although it’s hinted at, during the robbery scene in the bank lobby, in a few quick shots of characters in closeup from a very low angle that seems to press them against the crosshatched, light-stippled ceiling. It lasts maybe a total of two or three seconds, but it sparks imagination.

It’s the very sense of nothingness, of frantic agitation that surrounds and even distracts from the action, that is the movie’s main distinction. Bay’s images may be empty or trivial, but they do far more to give the film its identity and its substance than the performers do. (One scene, involving a bit of surgical derring-do under pressure, winks at the giddy absurdity of the movie’s entire conceit, brandishing a sense of cartoonish hyperbole that the movie otherwise suppresses.) The whirlwind of empty images of arbitrarily infinitesimal durations taken from an arbitrary abundance of angles suggests the vague desire for anything but realism. For better or worse, Bay is immune to the myth of cinematic transparency, the belief that it suffices to depict an action in a plain, unadorned way in order to capture its substance, significance, and physicality. That’s why Bay, at his best, is a lighthearted cynic, a casual ironist, whether expressing his tall-tale delight in inexcusable dimness, in “ Pain & Gain ,” or, in the “Transformers” franchise, his sensual delight in aestheticizing its trivialities.

In “Ambulance,” however, Bay tries to have it both ways. He takes the plotting very seriously, burdens characters with earnest motives and troubles, yet presents them in a throwaway style and allows them no self-expression, no identity. The movie is indifferent to the humanity of its characters, is detached from the realities of its recognizable setting, and takes a nearly pornographic delight in the depiction of pain and discomfort. If the movie has any merit at all, it’s in the seemingly unintentional mockery of the conventions and styles of far more purposeful and intention-laden films. In its chaotic whirl of tinsel images, it thumbs its nose at the kind of plain realism that too often passes as synonymous with sincerity. Yet Bay’s substitute for realism isn’t imagination or fantasy but merely unrealism. His naïve insolence punctures the vanities of other filmmakers while offering no alternative, and the movie that results is a joyless, confused self-abnegation.

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‘Ambulance’ Review: Michael Bay’s Absurd Chase Film Is His Best in Decades

Bay scales back for a wild and crazy action film that is a hell of a ride.

“We don’t stop” almost becomes a mantra for Will Sharp ( Yahya Abdul-Mateen II ) and his adopted brother, Danny ( Jake Gyllenhaal ), who have hijacked an ambulance after a bank robbery gone wrong. Not only has their attempt at a big score left a pile of bodies in its wake, but they’re driving around with a hostage EMT, Cam Thompson ( Eiza González ), who is trying to keep police officer Zack ( Jackson White ) alive, after Will shot him in their attempt to escape. To make matters worse, this ambulance is flying through the streets of Los Angeles, chased by cops and helicopters, and attempting to avoid pretty much any obstacle one can imagine. Will and Danny don’t stop because they can’t stop. Like a shark, if they stop, they know they’ll die.

Similarly, Michael Bay is also someone who at times doesn’t seem to know when to stop. While the beginning of Bay’s career was packed with over-the-top action films that were a joy to revel in, like Bad Boys , The Rock , and Armageddon , his work can often feel like a slog that doesn’t know when to quit. The last two decades of Bay's work have been packed with five different Transformers films, and while we occasionally got glimpses of the absurd fun that started Bay’s career with something like 2013’s Pain & Gain , Bay has mostly become known for his excess and exhaustion.

Yet with Ambulance —Bay’s fifteenth film and first theatrical release since 2017’s Transformers: The Last Knight —Bay has tapped into that earlier version of himself, back when he could go big, ridiculous, and maintain a level of excitement and fun throughout an entire film. From the moment Ambulance gets going, it doesn’t stop, and for the first time in a long time, Bay makes this adventure compelling from beginning to end.

RELATED: 'Ambulance' Trailer Promises Pulse-Pounding Action From Michael Bay's Latest Movie

In Ambulance , Will Sharp is a veteran who needs $231,000 for his wife’s surgery. With his benefits falling short, Will talks to his brother Danny, who convinces him to help with a bank heist that will earn the entire crew $32 million. Of course, the robbery goes south, and as the only surviving members of their team, Will and Danny take control of an ambulance, complete with the aforementioned EMT and injured officer along for the ride. Trying to stop these two are Captain Monroe ( Garret Dillahunt ) and FBI Agent Anson Clark ( Kein O’Donnell ), along with what seems like the entire Los Angeles police department.

As one would expect from Bay, Ambulance is still packed with plenty of illogical moments that are as preposterous as they are laughable. Written by Chris Fedak ( Chuck , Prodigal Son ) and based on the 2005 Danish film of the same name, Ambulance embraces the inherent ludicrous nature of a Michael Bay film. For example, on their spree to safety, it doesn’t seem to matter than Will and Danny likely cause the death of dozens of police officers, only that they save the one they’re driving. Bay and Fedak pack Ambulance with outlandish surprises, character connections, and a truly unbelievable amount of close calls. But Ambulance is also a film that Bay and Fedak know people will either embrace for what it is, or completely disregard, and Ambulance rightfully decides to play to the audience that is ready to go along for this ride.

And what a ride this is. Bay’s camera also truly can’t stop, as drone shots fly around with almost no clear intent but to add to the insanity, and even the simplest shots are filmed in the most grandiose and extravagant ways possible. But again, Bay seems inspired by the simpler, more straightforward action that he started his career with. Ambulance even directly quotes The Rock and Bad Boys , as if Bay knows these are exactly the types of films audiences want from him as a director. Yet with Ambulance , Bay is borrowing heavily from Michael Mann ’s Heat , mixed with a copious amount of Jan de Bont ’s Speed . The result is unpredictable and always compelling, a film that would be insane for anyone else, but feels like Bay going back-to-basics for the first time in a while.

But elevating Ambulance are the three performances at the center of the film, all of whom manage to avoid feeling like typical Bay stock characters. Before the action begins, Bay takes the time to set up the hopelessness in Will’s financial struggle, as well as Cam’s compassion for her patients that only lasts until she gets them to the hospital. Meanwhile, Gyllenhaal’s Danny is more of an uncertainty, a criminal who clearly loves his brother, but his shady past shows that he will also do anything to survive. Both Abdul-Mateen II and González are solid in sympathetic roles, but it’s Gyllenhaal’s ability to match Bay’s craziness that makes him a fascinating antihero.

It’s rare to find a film as gleefully wild as Ambulance , a balls-to-the-wall, a frenetic film that doesn’t attempt to make sense of all its craziness, but simply surrenders to it. Over the decades, Bay has continuously increased the scale of his action spectacles, and in doing so, has lost what made him such an entertaining action director in his earlier films. By cutting back and simply sticking to the thrills and the madness of this situation and little else, Bay has made one of his best films in decades.

Ambulance comes to theaters on April 8.

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Jake Gyllenhaal as Danny.

Ambulance review – a decent B-movie spoiled by the Michael Bay treatment

The maximalist director overcooks his adaptation of a 2005 Danish thriller, while Jake Gyllenhall lets rip

A n endless sprawl of a film set in the endless sprawl of LA, Michael Bay’s Ambulance is well over two hours long, and most of the running time is taken up by “a very expensive car chase”, as one supporting character points out, while cop cars perform slow-mo somersaults from the freeway. A tale of two estranged brothers, Danny (a vein-popping Jake Gyllenhaal , giving arguably the most Michael Bay performance in the history of Michael Bay films) and Will (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II), and a heist gone wrong, Ambulance is based on a 2005 Danish picture of the same name. The original clocked in at a lean 76 minutes, but in the hands of Bay, a long-term advocate of the maxim “more is more”, the story is pumped up, steroidal and unwieldy. It’s a pity, because at the core of the film, partially concealed by Bay’s posturing and swagger, is a bracing, slickly executed B-movie – Danny and Will hijack an ambulance: inside is a critically injured cop and a ballsy paramedic (Eiza González); outside are guns, explosives and a lot of very angry law enforcement officers.

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Ambulance Review

Ambulance

25 Mar 2022

Ambulance (2022)

Michael Bay ‘going small’ is everyone else’s ‘going absolutely bloody massive’. Ambulance , the action specialist’s 15th feature film, was trumpeted as a return to the director’s roots, shot rapidly in the summer of 2020 on a fraction of the budget he usually plays with. His roots, of course, were hardly subtle affairs, and neither is Ambulance — but it’s the closest to his career-high, The Rock , that he’s been in years.

After the self-indulgent misfire of his last film, 6 Underground , this is a cracking example of how Bayhem can work (to an extent) within some tight parameters. The straightforward premise, taken from the Danish film of the same name, is sound: two brothers, one of good heart ( Yahya Abdul-Mateen II , on steadfast form), one near-psychopathic ( Jake Gyllenhaal , on deranged form), one paramedic hostage ( Eiza González , the grown-up in the room), and one ambulance, versus the entire LAPD. On paper it’s about a bank heist, but the film rattles through that part fairly quickly, because this is to its core a chase movie; like Speed before it, it takes the concrete highways of Los Angeles as its grand stage.

Ambulance

Almost reassuringly, Bay’s hallmarks are still here. Golden hour is still 24 hours long. Clichéd dialogue still abounds (“Nobody knows this city better than you!”). Bay has still never met a lens he doesn’t want to flare. Anything that can explode probably still will. But he’s added some new feathers to his cap: in an audaciously meta move, Michael Bay characters are now able to reference and even quote previous Michael Bay films; his camera is nowhere near as sleazy as it once was; and spiralling drone shots give his frame dizzying new perspectives.

At times you will wonder how the hell a camera even fitted between the congruence of speeding metal and conflagrations.

Those acrobatic angles, in fact, add an entirely new dimension to Bay’s action, and the action is really the only reason we’re all here. At times you will wonder how the hell a camera even fitted between the congruence of speeding metal and conflagrations. The pace, meanwhile, is relentless and white-knuckle. “We’re locomotives,” screams Gyllenhaal’s character at one point, “we don’t stop” — which really sounds like Bay describing his own work ethic. Lord knows how a man approaching 60 can keep these energy levels up.

It’s by no means always coherent: that relentless pursuit of pace often results in hard-to-follow editing, and the director seems to share the same philosophy towards sound-mixing as Christopher Nolan, with sonic fury sometimes prioritised over audibility. Much of the film pays serious respect to police militarisation, too, which seems out of step with the mood of America. And a lot of it is just tremendously silly: a farting dog is a key plot point, while someone yells at a crucial moment about their cashmere jumper.

It doesn’t all work. But when the sirens are blaring at their best, it is a reminder of why nobody does bold, brash, bonkers blockbusting quite as thrillingly — or loudly — as Bay.

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Screen Rant

Ambulance review: michael bay delivers an intense, entertaining actioner.

It’s one of the most fun Bay movies in a long time, with a great cast that elevates the somewhat thin plot that results in an engaging actioner.

Ambulance is certainly a Michael Bay movie, if the amount of destroyed cars and explosions are any indication. The film’s action is intense and the stakes incredibly high. While the director’s movies from the last decade haven't necessarily been memorable or often good, Ambulance is a return to form. Adapted from the 2005 Danish film of the same name, and from a screenplay by Chris Fedak, it’s one of the most fun Bay movies in a long time, with a great cast that elevates the somewhat thin plot that results in an engaging actioner.

Will Sharp (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II) is a U.S. Marine veteran who is struggling to find work. He’s doubly stressed because his wife Amy (Moses Ingram) needs an experimental surgery that their insurance refuses to pay for. Desperate, Will goes to his brother Danny (Jake Gyllenhaal) for a loan. An expert bank robber, Danny convinces Will to help him pull a bank heist that would leave them with $32 million. Will agrees and things seem to be going smoothly enough when a rookie cop, Zach (Jackson White), gets involved unknowingly, leading Danny and Will to hijack an ambulance with EMT Cam Thompson (Eiza González) inside to get away.

Related:  Michael Bay Interview: Ambulance

Ambulance is a thrill ride from start to finish, though it does go on for 15 minutes too long, which undercuts the momentum of the film quite a bit. For the majority of the film’s runtime, Danny and Will are inside the ambulance with Cam, stuck in a high-speed chase with the Los Angeles Police Department and one FBI agent (Keir O’Donnell) on their tail. It’s a tight space in the vehicle, and one would think that the suspense would start to taper off rather soon after the brothers take it, but it only amplifies the tension and makes the payoff all the better. The action itself is impressive. There are, of course, exploding vehicles and high octane chase sequences that will entertain audiences.

The camerawork is also great here, often panning up the side of a building before plummeting down and around in a 360-degree rotation that can be nauseating and exciting all at once. Such moments ramp up the intensity of every scene, leaving viewers continuously wondering how Danny and Will are going to escape. While the film is big on action and spectacle, it’s grounded by the relationship between Danny and Will, brothers who don’t see eye-to-eye on a lot of things but care for each other quite deeply. Will is calm but intense, whereas Danny sounds like he’s about to lose it at any given moment. They balance each other quite well, and the audience gets a glimpse into their strained dynamic, the pain of the past and different perspectives that have driven them apart as much as it has brought them together.

Jake Gyllenhaal as Danny delivers an over-the-top performance that works because it's so ridiculous. The actor delivers certain lines with a charm that is underlined with frustration. Gyllenhaal plays Danny with a lot of barely held back anger and in moments where he’s shouting about blue vs. green paint or pondering on people’s perception of his sensitivity compared to Will, it comes off as (perhaps unintentionally) comedic. Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, on the other hand, imbues Will with a sense of unease that is tinged with desperation to save his family and not see anyone hurt. Abdul-Mateen is the heart of the film; he has a striking presence and conveys a lot of his character’s emotions through his eyes. He and Gyllenhaal make for a great pair, which becomes all the better when Eiza González’s Cam is thrown into the mix. González nails her performance as an emotionally closed off Cam, holding everyone at arm’s length. She brings a sense of rationale to the proceedings and the actress certainly delivers.

Ambulance is a good time at the movies and one of the most fun Bay films in a long while. The editing elevates the high-stakes tension and the action sequences are exciting, rarely losing their edge. While the film meanders for a bit and is longer than need be, it maintains a good balance between character dynamics and the thrill of the chase. And with a fantastic cast at its center, audiences will surely be entertained overall.

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Ambulance released in theaters April 8, 2022. The film is 136 minutes long and is rated R for intense violence, bloody images and language throughout.

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Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II face off, holding automatic weapons, in Ambulance

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Michael Bay defibrillates old-school action cinema with Ambulance

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“People still rob banks?” someone asks about halfway through Michael Bay’s heist-gone-wrong/car-chase thriller Ambulance . She might as well have asked, “People still make movies about people robbing banks?” Or, more to the point, “People still make movies like this about people robbing banks?” It’s a rare self-aware moment in an otherwise very un-self-conscious throwback: an action movie that could be straight out of the mid-’90s, but that most definitely is not being clever about it.

Ambulance belongs to a specific breed of action film that has been chased out of theaters over the last couple of decades by the fantastical, digital franchise blockbuster. It’s a one-shot idea that sets off a practical spectacle of car crashes, gun battles, stunts, and sweaty acting, orchestrated by a deranged ringmaster of a director who will stop at nothing to get the shot he has in mind. It’s stupid, exciting, unruly (with a 136-minute run time), and strangely refreshing.

The really strange thing is that this shock to the system for old-school action filmmaking comes from Bay, who has been a bête noir for film critics and cinephiles for the best part of two decades. This is the director whose taste for frenetic cutting and camerawork turned action movies into barely legible visual assaults. This is the director whose five increasingly dire Transformers films represent the nadir of the Hollywood intellectual property strip-mine. This is the director who, until now, had only managed a single “fresh” rating on Rotten Tomatoes , for his 1996 prison caper The Rock . Funny kind of savior.

Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II sit in the cab of an ambulance in Ambulance

Ambulance doesn’t register as an actual departure for Bay, although it is modest by his standards, with a $40 million budget and a down-to-earth setting on the streets of Los Angeles. Based on the 2005 Danish film Ambulancen , Ambulance follows adoptive brothers Danny Sharp and Will Sharp (Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II). Danny is a bank robber, following in the footsteps of their notorious father, while Will is a combat veteran who left the criminal life behind. Will’s wife Amy (Moses Ingram) needs expensive surgery, which insurance won’t pay for; in desperation, Will appeals to Danny, who draws him into a big score: an armed raid on a federal bank. The heist goes wrong, rookie cop Zach (Jackson White) gets shot, and as Will and Danny look for an escape route, they hijack the ambulance carrying the injured cop and the paramedic treating him, Cam Thompson (Eiza González). The hostages give the brothers a level of protection from the pursuing forces of the LAPD, but also complicate things for them — especially for Will and his conscience — as an escalating chase roars across the city.

It’s an effective premise that sets up both the outward action of the chase and the pressure-cooker drama inside the ambulance. Bay is also completely unafraid to exploit and echo two iconic L.A. thrillers of the ’90s, Heat and Speed . He borrows extensively from the imagery of both films: Heat in a ferocious, shatteringly loud downtown firefight between cops and robbers outside the bank; Speed in all the aerial and zoom shots of a municipal vehicle being chased around the freeway system by a battalion of police cruisers and choppers that have to keep a wary distance. Does Bay also stage slow-motion footage of the ambulance plowing through standing water along the concrete bed of the Los Angeles River, Terminator 2 -style? Of course he does.

An ambulance is chased by two helicopters down the L.A. River in Ambulance

Ambulance ’s greatest strength is how quickly it builds tension. The plot and main characters are set up with brisk efficiency to get us to the action as quickly as possible, and the pace and pressure pile on steadily from there. The film’s structure has an inherent momentum that Bay supercharges with his relentless filmmaking energy. The middle third of the film, as the first stage of the chase and the tensions inside the ambulance reach a simultaneous climax, is truly breathless stuff. But it’s simply not possible to sustain that level of excitement over such a long running time, and the air goes out of the movie toward the end, especially after some overdeveloped plot mechanics require the ambulance to stop and start again more than once. Bay and screenwriter Chris Fedak didn’t learn Speed ’s lesson: Never, ever stop rolling.

It’s a minor mystery what actors as talented as Gyllenhaal and Abdul-Mateen II are doing in this film. Not because it’s beneath them, but because Bay, a director with an overbearing style and an itchy trigger finger in the edit suite, rarely sees actors as anything more than moving elements in the frame, and he’s unlikely to give them much room to do their work. Abdul-Mateen II, an actor of tremendous physical and emotional gravitas, looks slightly, stoically lost, like he’s struggling to keep up with the film’s gonzo energy — although he does have good sympathetic chemistry with González. Gyllenhaal, who has few inhibitions and an instinct for pulpy intensity, finds the film’s level with ease, however. To his credit, Danny remains an unpredictable and morally ambiguous character, as well as an entertainingly unhinged one, for longer than the film’s simple schema should allow.

Jake Gyllenhaal and Eiza González hang out of the back door of an ambulance in Ambulance

But the main character in Ambulance is really Michael Bay, who, even in a comparatively grounded piece like this, attacks every single moment in his urgent, maximalist style. That style — often known as “Bayhem,” and analyzed in an excellent Every Frame a Painting video essay — is much derided for its incessant camera movement; its disorienting, rapid cuts; and its lack of nuance. It should not be mistaken for incompetence or incoherence, however: It’s a deliberate stylistic choice, implemented with tremendous technical skill.

There’s no denying that Ambulance is a dizzying assembly of footage that’s twice as impressive for being (mostly) in-camera, practical effects and stunts. The shotmaking can be breathtakingly audacious, and it comes in a delirious barrage, driven by Lorne Balfe’s pounding score. Drone cameras plunge down the sides of buildings, wheel through mazes of pillars at speed, and glide underneath leaping cars. Shots other filmmakers would linger on with pride, Bay gives one or two seconds before lining up five more. The excess is sinful, the storytelling is garbled, the effect is overpowering (especially in a theater). It made me laugh, half in mockery, half in elation.

Nothing is too much for Bay. That is why Ambulance eventually flags under its own overindulgence. That is why what should be a lean and efficient thriller has a surprisingly huge and complex cast of supporting characters. (Garret Dillahunt, approachably macho, stands out as the captain of the crack LAPD squad.) That is why there’s a ludicrous subplot involving a gangster cartel and a radio-controlled minigun, and a scene of improvised surgery using a mobile phone, a hair clip, and a face-punch for anesthesia. But it’s also what makes it a thrill, and a kind of luxury, to watch Bay take Bayhem out of the CGI workstation and back out onto the streets. Out there, his technical ingenuity can shine, and his proud tastelessness starts to look like a kind of retro cool.

Ambulance is in theaters now.

Flickering Myth

Geek Culture | Movies, TV, Comic Books & Video Games

Movie Review – Ambulance (2022)

April 1, 2022 by Shaun Munro

Ambulance, 2022.

Directed by Michael Bay. Starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Eiza González, Garret Dillahunt, Keir O’Donnell, and Moses Ingram.

Needing money to cover his wife’s medical bills, a decorated veteran teams up with his adoptive brother to steal $32 million from a Los Angeles bank. However, when their getaway goes spectacularly wrong, the desperate thieves hijack an ambulance that’s carrying a severely wounded cop and an EMT worker.

Michael Bay is the oft-vaunted god-King of maximalist filmmakers – a vulgar auteur in the most literal sense who is both maligned and celebrated in near-equal measure for his tireless, exhausting commitment to sensory bombast.

To that end, a Bay-directed film centered around an ambulance fleeing the cops might seem positively modest, even quaint for an artist best known for spectacles involving apocalyptic threats and shape-shifting intergalactic robots.

Yet  Ambulance is actually an act of cinematic expansion, based on Danish director Laurits Munch-Petersen’s 2005 film of the same name. The original, a modest high-concept production clearly hemmed in by its low budget, in many ways feels like the perfect project for a Michael Bay remake, no matter Hollywood’s history of rubbing its dirty mitts all over robust international cinema.

The 2005 film isn’t really robust at all, though, and certainly doesn’t have the cultural cachet to make a remake seem sacrilegious. And so Bay, Hollywood’s living embodiment of a rich boy playing with every Hot Wheels car in the box, elevates that tantalising initial premise with his big-budget, mega-scale retooling, defined by epic swooping drone shots, big dramatic acting, and so, so many explosions (of which the original had precisely none).

Much as this might all sound like a series of back-handed compliments to Bay, there’s an odd purity to Ambulance that his more scornful, adolescent-skewing movies – especially his Transformers films – lack. It is a fascinating example of a filmmaker using all the available tools to push the bounds of action cinema in directions both exhilarating and utterly draining.

The plot is mercifully devilishly simple; war vet Will Sharp (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II) needs to come up with more than $200,000 in order to cover his wife’s much-needed surgery, and so touches base with his wheeler-dealer brother Danny (Jake Gyllenhaal).

But rather than offer a loan or lump sum, Danny invites him to join a bank heist, which he does out of desperation. It all predictably goes horribly wrong, leaving the brothers the only survivors and fleeing an aggressive fleet of LAPD officers. Things only get worse when Will and Danny hijack an ambulance, which in the back contains two passengers – a cop (Jackson White) wounded during the heist, and the EMT, Cam Thompson (Eiza González), trying to save his life.

As storytelling,  Ambulance is built from the most basic parts imaginable; a “hero” driven to do a morally questionable, highly destructive thing to save his love, as is basically the primer for a propulsive if certainly not-lean 136-minute chase film.

Yet while it may eventually tire, Bay’s latest is mostly a thunderously entertaining piece of work while you’re living in it; the almost impossibly slick, roving camerawork – Bay using drones with all the enthusiasm of a kid who just got one for Christmas – married to blistering sound design and an electrifying score from regular Bay collab Lorne Balfe.

While certainly lacking the artistry of recent blockbuster  The Batman ,  Ambulance is similarly a ruthlessly persuasive advertisement for the merits of the cinema experience. Those who invest will certainly get their money’s worth with every damn penny of the production evidently splashed across the screen.

Again, not a smart movie, and there are moments where the fitful editing and spasmodic camerawork will overwhelm even the hardiest viewer, but on the balance of assessment, Bay’s commitment to sustained intensity is both impressive and weirdly charming.

Preventing it from being a wholly empty-calorie affair, however, is the skilled acting triumvirate at the core. Jake Gyllenhaal, who has never found a movie he couldn’t class-up, is clearly having a whale of a time as the unstable loose canon of the two brothers, pulling just far enough back from the edge of camp to ensure there’s still a palpable sense of danger about him. Yahya Abdul-Mateen II is his straight-laced confederate and the more personable of the two siblings, though as beleaguered first responder Cam, Eiza González gets the most human character to sink her teeth into.

Yet for fans of pure action cinema the appeal will primarily rest in watching Bay soar his camera around the streets of Los Angeles as it becomes a wreckage-strewn battleground between an improbably-armoured ambulance and the assembled might of the LAPD.

Throw in some cheesy character melodrama, an unexpected wealth of genuinely solid humour – including some hilarious winks to Bay’s own work – and the sly suggestion that the director is more acutely aware of the silliness than he first seems, and Ambulance becomes an easy film to recommend as a big, dumb rollercoaster ride.

Michael Bay injects a weapons-grade dose of steroids into his remake of the so-so 2005 Danish thriller of the same name, which is powered at all times by the director’s shameless commitment to ludicrously entertaining excess. It may, however, understandably be both too much and too little for some audiences to take.

Flickering Myth Rating – Film: ★ ★ ★ / Movie: ★ ★ ★

Shaun Munro – Follow me on Twitter for more film rambling.

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Lots of crashes, blood, swearing in Michael Bay chase movie.

Ambulance Movie: Poster

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this movie.

Movie asks questions about what makes a hero and w

Cam can be a bit short and unemotional, but she's

The three main characters are a White man, a Black

Lots of blood: spurts, puddles, etc. Heavy gun use

Brief, affectionate kisses between couples.

Very strong language, with uses of "f--k," "mother

Several brands showcased: Nike swoosh on character

Character says that she was addicted to speed. Cig

Parents need to know that Ambulance is director Michael Bay's action movie about two thieves hijacking an ambulance and starting a massive chase across Los Angeles. It's chaotic, show-offy, and too long, but it has likable characters and an offbeat, appealing sense of humor. Violence includes guns and…

Positive Messages

Movie asks questions about what makes a hero and what makes a villain. Even while it oversimplifies things in some ways, it's still an interesting theme worth discussing.

Positive Role Models

Cam can be a bit short and unemotional, but she's also heroic and strong and saves lives. Will, despite making a poor choice, is decent and helpful; he gives blood to save a life, tries to do the right thing whenever possible. Other main character Danny is a through-and-through villain.

Diverse Representations

The three main characters are a White man, a Black man, and a Latina. Two secondary male characters are married. Wide range of diverse background characters. Brief "dragon lady" stereotype of an angry Asian woman.

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Violence & Scariness

Lots of blood: spurts, puddles, etc. Heavy gun use/shooting. Characters are injured and killed. Gory operating sequence. Bloody wounds. Tons of car crashes. Explosions. Punching, fighting. Child in car crash, metal post impaled through her torso, in pain. Fire extinguisher to face. Man grabs a woman, holds her down. Frequent arguing.

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Sex, Romance & Nudity

Did you know you can flag iffy content? Adjust limits for Sex, Romance & Nudity in your kid's entertainment guide.

Very strong language, with uses of "f--k," "motherf----r," "s--t," "bulls--t," "bitch," "son of a bitch," "a--hole," the "N" word, "goddamn," "ass," "dumbass," "moron," "d--k," "balls," "Jesus Christ." Middle-finger gestures.

Did you know you can flag iffy content? Adjust limits for Language in your kid's entertainment guide.

Products & Purchases

Several brands showcased: Nike swoosh on character's shirt, characters eat/discuss Cheetos, Keurig Coffee mentioned, Oxygen banking app shown, Birkenstock sandals shown and mentioned. References to earlier Bay movies Bad Boys and The Rock .

Drinking, Drugs & Smoking

Character says that she was addicted to speed. Cigar smoking. Pill bottles shown (to indicate that a character is ill).

Did you know you can flag iffy content? Adjust limits for Drinking, Drugs & Smoking in your kid's entertainment guide.

Parents Need to Know

Parents need to know that Ambulance is director Michael Bay 's action movie about two thieves hijacking an ambulance and starting a massive chase across Los Angeles. It's chaotic, show-offy, and too long, but it has likable characters and an offbeat, appealing sense of humor. Violence includes guns and shooting, deaths, blood spurts/puddles, bloody wounds, crashes, explosions, fighting, punching, a gory operation, and a child in pain and peril (a metal post is shown protruding from her torso). Strong language includes frequent uses of "f--k," "s--t," and more. Several brands are shown or mentioned, including Nike, Cheetos, Birkenstocks, Keurig Coffee, etc. A character says that she was addicted to speed, there's brief cigar smoking, and prescription pills are shown. Two couples kiss briefly. To stay in the loop on more movies like this, you can sign up for weekly Family Movie Night emails .

Where to Watch

Videos and photos.

ambulance movie review

Community Reviews

  • Parents say (4)
  • Kids say (8)

Based on 4 parent reviews

What's the Story?

In AMBULANCE, former U.S. Marine Will Sharp ( Yahya Abdul-Mateen II ) is out of work, has a small child, and needs more than $200,000 for an operation for his wife. He goes to his adoptive brother, Danny ( Jake Gyllenhaal ), a career criminal, to ask for help. Instead, Danny asks Will to come along on a bank robbery, which he promises will go off without a hitch. Meanwhile, a rookie cop ( Jackson White ) who's worked up the nerve to ask out one of the bank tellers, talks his way into the bank while the robbery is in progress. The cop upsets the robbery and is shot. Will and Danny see their chance for escape when an ambulance arrives to pick up the wounded man. With kidnapped EMT Cam Thompson ( Eiza González ) in tow, the robbers must go on the run while keeping the bleeding cop alive -- or face the wrath of the entire LAPD.

Is It Any Good?

A typically over-the-top Michael Bay production, this exhausting, far too long action movie still surprisingly passes muster with its batch of colorful, likable characters and wiry sense of humor. With the bulk of the movie's running time following the ambulance racing through city streets while pursued by cops, as well as multiple crashes and shoot-outs, Ambulance certainly could have benefited from some tightening. One of the biggest twists -- a plan to use decoys to finally evade the police -- takes a very long time from conception to execution, and a good deal of momentum is lost along the way. Plus, it's just hard to be constantly gripping your armrests for that long.

Additionally, Bay's pointless, show-offy camerawork, with daredevil swoops from bizarre, impossible angles, may cause headaches. Even so, Ambulance has so many quirky touches -- and such an appealingly strange sense of humor -- that moments like a desperate, ruthlessly gory life-saving operation or a break to listen to a little Christopher Cross are irresistible. Gyllenhaal, especially, is at the top of his game, as manic and zany here as he was in Bong Joon-ho's Okja , barking one-liners in a way that suggests he's really enjoying all this. His enthusiasm seems to lift up co-stars Abdul-Mateen and González, and they feed on his energy. A fine use of Los Angeles locations and backdrops completes the picture, ultimately making this a not bad big-screen offering.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

Families can talk about Ambulance 's violence . How did it make you feel? Was it exciting? Shocking? What did the movie show or not show to achieve this effect? Why is that important?

Are Danny and Will heroes? Villains? Anti-heroes? Were you rooting for them to get away or to get caught? Why?

Are characters three-dimensional and powerful, or are stereotypes used? Why is diverse representation important in the media?

Do you consider Cam a role model? Does she have agency? Why is that important?

Movie Details

  • In theaters : April 8, 2022
  • On DVD or streaming : April 29, 2022
  • Cast : Yahya Abdul-Mateen II , Eiza Gonzalez , Jake Gyllenhaal
  • Director : Michael Bay
  • Inclusion Information : Black actors, Female actors, Latino actors
  • Studio : Universal Pictures
  • Genre : Action/Adventure
  • Topics : Cars and Trucks
  • Run time : 136 minutes
  • MPAA rating : R
  • MPAA explanation : intense violence, bloody images and language throughout
  • Last updated : September 11, 2023

Did we miss something on diversity?

Research shows a connection between kids' healthy self-esteem and positive portrayals in media. That's why we've added a new "Diverse Representations" section to our reviews that will be rolling out on an ongoing basis. You can help us help kids by suggesting a diversity update.

Suggest an Update

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IMAGES

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  2. Ambulance movie review & film summary (2022)

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COMMENTS

  1. Ambulance

    Two brothers pull off a bank heist and hijack an ambulance with a wounded cop and a hostage on board, triggering a city-wide chase. Critics are divided on the film's quality, but audiences enjoy the adrenaline-fueled ride and the star power of the cast.

  2. Ambulance movie review & film summary (2022)

    Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II star as brothers who rob a bank and hijack an ambulance with a wounded cop and an EMT. Director Michael Bay delivers a chaotic, explosive, and hilarious thrill ride that pays homage to his own films.

  3. 'Ambulance' Review: Michael Bay Is Our Emergency Movie Technician

    Ambulance - Official Trailer [HD] Watch on. That's partly because "Ambulance," built on the chassis of a 2005 Danish movie of the same name, is advancing an argument, or maybe a meta ...

  4. Ambulance (2022)

    Ambulance: Directed by Michael Bay. With Jake Gyllenhaal, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Eiza González, Garret Dillahunt. Two robbers steal an ambulance after their heist goes awry.

  5. 'Ambulance' Movie Review: Michael Bay's Thrill Ride

    movie review Apr. 12, 2022 Ambulance Is the Kind of Thrill Ride Theaters Were Made For By Angelica Jade Bastién , a New York and Vulture critic covering film and pop culture

  6. Ambulance Review

    Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II star as bank robbers in a stolen ambulance, pursued by the police and a nurse (Eiza González) who can keep anyone alive. Ambulance is a fast-paced, explosive, and cheesy film that pays homage to Bay's own movies and the frontline healthcare workers.

  7. 'Ambulance' Review: Michael Bay's 'Die Hard' on an EMS Van

    'Ambulance' Review: Jake Gyllenhaal in Michael Bay's Retro Excessive 'Die Hard' on an EMS Van Reviewed at AMC Lincoln Square, March 23, 2022. MPAA rating: R. Running time: 136 MIN.

  8. Ambulance review: Michael Bay's heist thriller goes full-crazy

    Ambulance. review: Michael Bay goes full-crazy in a wildly adrenalized action throwback. Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II take the wheel in the director's berserk but frequently ...

  9. 'Ambulance' Review: Jake Gyllenhaal Stars in Michael Bay Action Flick

    Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II in Michael Bay's 'Ambulance': Film Review. Eiza Gonzalez also stars in the director's latest action movie, about the aftermath of a Los Angeles bank ...

  10. 'Ambulance' review: Michael Bay firing on all brain-numbing cylinders

    Michael Bay's L.A.-set gonzo action thriller 'Ambulance' stars Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Jake Gyllenhaal and Eiza Gonzalez.

  11. "Ambulance," Reviewed: Michael Bay Plays Himself

    April 11, 2022. In "Ambulance," starring Jake Gyllenhaal, what Bay is up to is motion, which isn't quite the same thing as action. Photograph courtesy Universal Pictures. Michael Bay's new ...

  12. Ambulance Review: Michael Bay's Best Film in Decades

    Written by Chris Fedak ( Chuck, Prodigal Son) and based on the 2005 Danish film of the same name, Ambulance embraces the inherent ludicrous nature of a Michael Bay film. For example, on their ...

  13. Ambulance review

    Ambulance review - a decent B-movie spoiled by the Michael Bay treatment. This article is more than 2 years old. ... slickly executed B-movie - Danny and Will hijack an ambulance: inside is a ...

  14. Ambulance Review

    A bank robbery gone wrong leads to a high-speed chase with an ambulance and a paramedic hostage in Michael Bay's return to his roots. Read Empire's review of this noisy, messy and frequently absurd thrill ride, with references to Bay's own films and explosions galore.

  15. Ambulance Review: Michael Bay Delivers An Intense, Entertaining Actioner

    Ambulance is certainly a Michael Bay movie, if the amount of destroyed cars and explosions are any indication. The film's action is intense and the stakes incredibly high. While the director's movies from the last decade haven't necessarily been memorable or often good, Ambulance is a return to form. Adapted from the 2005 Danish film of the same name, and from a screenplay by Chris Fedak ...

  16. Ambulance review: Michael Bay defibrillates old-school action movies

    Ambulance doesn't register as an actual departure for Bay, although it is modest by his standards, with a $40 million budget and a down-to-earth setting on the streets of Los Angeles. Based on ...

  17. 'Ambulance' review: Michael Bay delivers a wild ride you won ...

    Directed by Michael Bay, "Ambulance" stars Jake Gyllenhaal, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, and Eiza González in a heist thriller that's wild fun. Review.

  18. Ambulance

    Decorated veteran Will Sharp (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II), desperate for money to cover his wife's medical bills, asks for help from the one person he knows he shouldn't—his adoptive brother Danny (Jake Gyllenhaal). A charismatic career criminal, Danny instead offers him a score: the biggest bank heist in Los Angeles history: $32 million. With his wife's survival on the line, Will can't ...

  19. Ambulance (2022)

    Ambulance, 2022. Directed by Michael Bay. Starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Eiza González, Garret Dillahunt, Keir O'Donnell, and Moses Ingram. SYNOPSIS: Needing money to cover ...

  20. Ambulance (2022 film)

    Ambulance is a 2022 American action thriller film directed and co-produced by Michael Bay and written by Chris Fedak. A co-production between New Republic Pictures, Project X Entertainment and Bay Films, it is a remake of the 2005 Danish film Ambulancen.It stars Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as adoptive brothers who hijack an ambulance after robbing a bank, and take a paramedic ...

  21. Ambulance Movie Review

    Cig. Parents Need to Know. Parents need to know that Ambulance is director Michael Bay's action movie about two thieves hijacking an ambulance and starting a massive chase across Los Angeles. It's chaotic, show-offy, and too long, but it has likable characters and an offbeat, appealing sense of humor. Violence includes guns and….

  22. 'Ambulance' Review: Unhinged at Any Speed

    In Michael Bay's latest film, Jake Gyllenhaal plays a quick-witted, charming psychopath. Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, left and Jake Gyllenhaal. Photo: Universal Studios. The main thing you need to ...