Ambulance (2022 film)

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Ambulance
A poster featuring the faces of two men and one woman. Underneath them is an ambulance being pursued by the police. The title, "Ambulance", is also present with the letters "LA" in a different color, noting that the story takes place in Los Angeles.
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMichael Bay
Screenplay byChris Fedak
Based on
Ambulance
by
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyRoberto De Angelis
Edited by
Music byLorne Balfe
Production
companies
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release dates
  • March 16, 2022 (2022-03-16) (International)
  • March 20, 2022 (2022-03-20) (UGC Normandie)
  • April 8, 2022 (2022-04-08) (United States)
Running time
136 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$40 million
Box office$52.3 million

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 (Eiza González) and a police officer (Jackson White
) hostage.

The film was first announced in 2015 and went through several crew changes. In 2020, Bay came on board to direct after the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted his plans to shoot a different movie. Filming took place in Los Angeles, in the midst of the pandemic with cinematographer Roberto De Angelis. During post-production, the film was edited by Pietro Scalia and the score was composed by Lorne Balfe.

Ambulance was theatrically released in some international territories on March 16, and then premiered in Paris, France, on March 20, and was theatrically released in the United States by Universal Pictures on April 8, 2022. The film underperformed at the box office, grossing approximately $52 million worldwide on a budget of $40 million. While the story drew some polarized response, Ambulance received praise for the performances, Bay's direction and the action sequences.[2]

Plot

LAPD arrives and shoots down the whole crew except Will and Danny, who retreat toward the garage. Zach attempts to escape and during a scuffle between him and Danny, is accidentally shot by Will. Leaving Zach to die, the brothers attempt to exit through the back of the building but find it surrounded by police. They then hijack an ambulance with EMT
Cam Thompson on board, who is treating the injured Zach. After a chase that leads them into an alleyway, Cam makes a desperate attempt to escape using a fire extinguisher but is quickly recaptured by Danny.

SIS Captain Monroe arrives on the scene and deploys helicopters to chase after the ambulance. Cam gets Danny to help her use a defibrillator and Will to transfer some of his blood to Zach, much to his confusion and frustration. Danny then calls Papi, one of his father's criminal friends, for help losing the police in exchange for $8 million. When Cam stops Danny from shooting Mark, who has been chasing them, Danny threatens to throw her off the ambulance. The police are forced to retreat when it is discovered that Monroe's dog is inside Mark's police vehicle. FBI Agent Anson Clark, a past friend of Danny's, is put on the case. Zach begins to bleed out; Cam, with Will's assistance, begins to perform surgery on Zach. Despite her inexperience and a ruptured spleen, Cam successfully performs the surgery. Cam tries to convince Will to stop Danny, to no avail. Monroe, unaware of the surgery's success, moves forward with the operation and prepares to snipe Will and Danny without negotiating for Cam's life. Clark calls Cam and tells her to get down. Cam, wanting to save Zach's life, alerts Will and Danny about the snipers. Danny, having had enough of Cam, decides to shoot her, but Will intervenes, causing the brothers to fight about their predicament. They later partially reconcile and listen to music together to ease the tension.

In the

C-4 explosives
and deploys machine guns on separate cars to cause additional damage, which ends up wounding Monroe in the crossfire. Mark chases down Roberto and fatally shoots him after a scuffle, leaving Papi angry and distraught. Will and Danny escape to Papi's hideout. Papi demands the brothers leave Zach and Cam with them to deal with; Will refuses to cooperate and teams up with Danny to kill Papi and his crew. In the chaos, Cam accidentally shoots Will using Zach's gun. Danny takes the ambulance to a hospital and discovers Zach's gun. He is enraged when Cam reveals that she was the one who shot Will. Danny vows to kill Cam along with himself on live television before confronting the police. Left with no other choice, Will shoots Danny in the back. Danny apologizes to Will before he dies from his injuries. The police arrest a heavily injured Will and take him inside for surgery, Cam secretly gives some of the heist money to Amy for her surgery, and Zach, when questioned by the police about his injuries, tells them that Will saved his life.

Cast

Jake Gyllenhaal at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France.
Yahya Abdul-Mateen II at the 2017 premiere of "Baywatch" in Sydney, Australia.
Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II play the adoptive brothers who rob a bank together.
  • Jake Gyllenhaal as Daniel "Danny" Sharp, a longtime criminal and Will's adoptive brother
  • Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as William "Will" Sharp, a former U.S. Marine and Afghanistan veteran who joins his adoptive brother Danny for a heist so he can pay for his wife's surgery
  • Eiza González as Paramedic Camille "Cam" Thompson, a young EMT Paramedic of LA Memorial Hospital who is unexpectedly taken hostage by the Sharp brothers
  • Garret Dillahunt as LAPD Captain Monroe, field leader of the LAPD SIS unit in charge of hunting the Sharp brothers
  • FBI
    Agent Anson Clark, leader of an FBI unit who is familiar with Danny Sharp due to their past friendship at college
  • Jackson White as Officer Zach, Mark's partner and a rookie officer who is taken hostage by the Sharp brothers
  • Olivia Stambouliah as LAPD Lieutenant Dhazghig, a surveillance officer of the LAPD SIS unit
  • Moses Ingram as Amy Sharp, Will Sharp's wife
  • Colin Woodell as EMT Scott, Cam's partner
  • Cedric Sanders as LAPD Officer Mark, a young rookie LAPD police officer and Zach's partner
  • A Martinez as Papi, a gang leader
  • Jesse Garcia as Roberto, Papi's son
  • Jose Pablo Cantillo as Jesus, a gang member and Papi's right handman
  • Wale as Castro, a gang member and close friend of Danny
  • Devan Chandler Long as 'Mel Gibson', a gang member of Danny who is referred by that name since he looks like the actor
  • Randazzo Marc as Randazzo, one of Danny's gang member who serves as their getaway escort driver
  • Victor Gojcaj as Victor
  • Briella Guiza as Lindsey, a little girl who is helped out by Cam
  • Brendan Miller as Trent
  • Remi Adeleke as SIS Wade
  • Jamie McBride as SIS Jay
  • Chelsea Harris as bicycle cop

Production

Development

Ambulance is an American remake of the 2005 Danish film of the same name. Producer Bradley J. Fischer said Michael Bay was his first choice to direct the film but that the filmmaker had originally passed on the project.[3] The film was announced on August 28, 2015, with Phillip Noyce attached to direct from a script written by Chris Fedak.[4] Two years later, it was reported that Noyce had been replaced by directing duo Navot Papushado and Aharon Keshales,[5] but this version of the film never entered production.[6]

Michael Bay in Detroit, Michigan, in 2006.
Michael Bay saw the film's script as an opportunity to direct a "small movie" during the COVID pandemic.

In 2020, the

claustrophobic setting.[8]: 0:13–0:39  Bay was reminded of Ambulance and told that the film could be shot on a relatively low-budget in a short period of time. "It kind of suited my needs," he said.[7] On November 11, 2020, Bay was announced as the new director,[9] and the film was referred to as a "character-driven project" that would move away from Bay's normality of "standard explosion-heavy fare" while using elements from Speed (1994) and Bad Boys (1995).[10] Bay did not watch or read the screenplay of the original Danish film because he wanted to make the film his own.[8]
: 1:01–1:17 

The film was financed by Endeavor Content and produced by New Republic Pictures and Project X.[11] Jake Gyllenhaal received the screenplay while shooting a different project in October 2020.[12]: 13:47–14:06  The following month, the film was announced with Gyllenhaal and Dylan O'Brien in talks to star as the two adoptive brothers who hijack the ambulance and Eiza González in negotiations to star as the paramedic.[13][14] Gyllenhaal's casting was a contributing factor in Bay's decision to shoot the film.[12]: 0:49–0:55  To prepare for the role, González spent three months "working intimately with firefighters, EMTs, surgeons, [and] everyone around the medical care system." She also rented an ambulance and had a friend drive her around to improve her balance.[15] On December 11, 2020, Universal Pictures confirmed they would distribute the film and announced O'Brien had dropped out of the project due to scheduling conflicts; Yahya Abdul-Mateen II was cast as his replacement when he was able to fit the film into his schedule, following a production delay on Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom (2023).[16][17][18] González was confirmed to star three days later.[19] The rest of the cast was announced between January and May 2021.[20] On joining the cast, A Martinez said he submitted a self-made audition video from Auckland, New Zealand.[21]

Filming

The film was shot on a $40 million budget in downtown Los Angeles. Filming wrapped after thirty-eight days.[22]

During pre-production, stunt coordinator Mike Gunther put the three leads of the film through stunt driving courses to test their driving abilities. Supervising location manager Rob Gibson obtained driving permits for a large number of city streets and freeway corridors in the city using his close relationship with FilmLA.[23] The cast and crew had to follow safety protocols such as wearing masks on set due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[24] The production borrowed a total of six ambulances from Falck.[23][25]: 25:21–25:32  The scenes inside of the ambulance were captured using three ambulances: one was driven with the crew on board; a second could be dismantled; and a third was rocked on a stage.[8]: 10:21–10:38  According to Abdul-Mateen, the limited space inside of the ambulance required Gyllenhaal to hold the camera for a couple of takes.[26][27]

Several Komodo digital cameras by

first-person view drones by LightCraft. Bay said this way of filming was implemented because he was inspired by Steven Spielberg's direction on War of the Worlds (2005) to come up with new ways to put his stories on screen while simultaneously limiting himself as a director. Executive producer Michael Kase discovered LightCraft after seeing their footage of the top of the Wilshire Grand Center. The drones in the film were flown by Drone Racing League pilots Jordan Temkin and Alex Vanover using head-mounted displays. Footage captured by the drones included scenes in the Los Angeles Convention Center and the city's Fashion District.[23][28] To make the film feel authentic, the cast was allowed to improvise some of their lines.[29][25]: 26:57–28:24  The production also hired real trauma surgeons, firefighters, SWAT teams, snipers, undercover SIS members, and 52 LAPD officers for the shoot.[30][25]
: 15:35–16:18 

On the first day of filming, while shooting footage of the ambulance driving on a freeway, Bay noticed several patrol officers and three motorcycle cops. He asked them if they wanted to star, to which they agreed, and used the opportunity to

rolling roadblock, allowing them to close the freeway for free instead of paying the average $350–400,000 cost.[31][32] On Garret Dillahunt's first day on set, the crew was able to secure access to an area that featured the Los Angeles City Hall, the Times Mirror Square building, and the LAPD headquarters for a mere 19 minutes worth of natural light to film. To describe the gravity of the situation, Bay was told that would be "the only time [and] the last time you are ever going to get this corner, this area." As the time started, Bay realized he had to spend some time fitting the English Mastiff in the film, which was his own dog, into a small vehicle. He would go on to describe it as the most difficult day on set.[30]

The helicopter chase sequence in the Los Angeles River was not in the script; Bay came up with the idea over the weekend after two helicopters became available for use. The scene was shot in two and a half hours with the help of helicopter pilot Fred North. Instead of hiring stuntmen for the sequence, Gyllenhaal was actually hanging off the side of the ambulance's door and shooting at the helicopters himself while Abdul-Mateen 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". Bay also took responsibility for a video shared on his Instagram of a stunt involving the ambulance crashing into several vehicles. The clip was criticized by the mayor and the governor of Los Angeles and censored on Instagram. He explained the logistics behind the stunt and how it was filmed in an interview with Collider and said it was "perfectly planned".[30][33] Elaborating on the filming process, Bay said they shot "90 shots to 120 shots a day. That's a lot of shots. Most movies are 20 to 30 shots a day. But you know I was there with the camera. I'm a director who doesn't have a video village, I don't have a director's chair, I don't have a trailer. I'm right there with the actors and we work fast".[34]: 3:38–4:05 

Post-production

Lorne Balfe composed the musical score; he previously collaborated with Bay on 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi (2016) and 6 Underground (2019).[35] The score was recorded in London's Abbey Road Studios,[36] and released on April 8, 2022, by Back Lot Music.[37] Editing was completed by Pietro Scalia.[38] Due to the film's budget, Bay said he was not happy with some of the visual effects in the film: "There's not a lot of CGI. And you know, some of the CGI is shit in this movie."[8]: 9:58–10:21  In a separate interview, he added, "I don't use CGI much. On Ambulance there's very little CGI on it. It's all real crashes ... If you're using CGI, it needs to be realistic."[39]

Release

The entrance of the UGC Normandie in Paris, France.
The film premiered at the UGC Normandie in Paris.

Ambulance premiered at the UGC Normandie in Paris, France, on March 20, 2022.[40] It also had screening events in Berlin on March 22, London on March 23, Spain on March 24, Los Angeles at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on April 4, and Miami on April 5. The Los Angeles event was attended by Jason Momoa, who went out to support Abdul-Mateen, his Aquaman co-star.[41]

The film was released internationally on March 15, 2022, and in the United States by Universal Pictures on April 8, 2022. It was originally set to be released on February 18, 2022, coinciding with the release of

Russian invasion of Ukraine, Universal "paused" the theatrical release of the film in Russia.[43]

Home media

The film was released digitally and on

video-on-demand on May 23, 2022, with the 4K UHD, Blu-Ray, and DVD being released on June 14, 2022.[44]

Marketing

The first trailer was shown at

CinemaCon on August 25, 2021,[45] and released online on October 21, 2021.[46] It featured a cover of the song "California Dreamin'" sung by Bobby Womack.[45] The Hollywood Reporter compared the footage to Heat (1995) and Training Day (2001),[47] and Deadline Hollywood noted "the rapid rhythm that Bay does best."[48] Entertainment Weekly said the film looked like "pure chaos, thanks to a lot of quick camera cuts, loads of gunfire, a high-speed ambulance chase, and Jake Gyllehaal [sic] doing the absolute most with his bank robber character."[49] A second trailer was released on March 24, 2022. It featured the song "Sailing" by Christopher Cross.[50] Entertainment Weekly wrote, "The latest trailer for the chaotic heist-gone-wrong film is peak Michael Bay, with everything you could possibly want from an action flick".[51]

The film was marketed as a

NBA games, men's college basketball, Super Bowl LVI and the Winter Olympics, as well as re-runs of The Big Bang Theory.[53]

Reception

Box office

Ambulance grossed $22.8 million in the United States and Canada, and $29.5 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $52.3 million.[54]

In the US and Canada, Ambulance was released alongside Sonic the Hedgehog 2 and the wide expansion of Everything Everywhere All at Once. It was projected to gross $8–14 million from 3,412 theaters in its opening weekend.[52] Variety's Rebecca Rubin believed the "comparatively lean production budget ... could soften the blow in the event the film doesn't connect with audiences."[52] The film made $3.2 million on its first day, including $700,000 from Thursday night previews.[53] It went on to gross $8.7 million in its opening weekend, finishing fourth at the box office.[55] Men made up 62% of the audience during its opening, with those above the age of 25 comprising 77% of ticket sales and those above 35 comprising 49%. The ethnic breakdown of the audience showed that 38% were Caucasian, 29% Hispanic and Latino Americans, 22% African American, and 11% Asian or other. Deadline Hollywood's Anthony D'Alessandro noted the reluctance of older male audiences to return to theaters and said, "when it comes to action films in today's cinemas, it's the superhero films that have it all, everything else is B-rated. They've stolen the air away from something as standard as Ambulance."[53] The film made $4.1 million in its second weekend,[56] $1.8 million in its third,[57] and $1.2 million in its fourth before dropping out of the box office top ten.[58] Rubin deemed the film a box-office bomb, citing its release in a crowded marketplace, lukewarm reviews, the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on moviegoing habits, and the action genre's steady decline in popularity.[59]

Outside the US and Canada, the film earned $4.4 million from 35 international markets in its opening weekend.[60][61] It made $6.6 million in its second weekend,[62] $2.8 million in its fourth,[63] $1.4 million in its fifth,[64] $1.8 million in its sixth,[65] and $572,000 in its seventh.[66]

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 67% of 252 critics gave the film a positive review, with an average rating of 5.8/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "At top speed and with sirens wailing, Ambulance comes riding to the rescue for audiences facing an emergency shortage of Michael Bay action thrills."[67] It is the second highest-rated film directed by Bay on the site, as well as the second to hold a "fresh" rating, alongside The Rock (1996).[53] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 55 out of 100 based on 55 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[68] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale, while those at PostTrak gave it a 77% positive score, with 61% saying they would definitely recommend it.[53]

Bay's direction was well received by critics. John Nugent of

B-movie stretched out to an interminable 136 minutes", Leigh said it was "hard to resist" and that audiences "would miss Bay if he vanished from the Hollywood menagerie."[38][71] Kevin Maher of The Times wrote, "Everything here is Bay squared. It's a film that simply does not stop."[72]

The story and performances received some criticism.

Screen Daily, said the film "spotlights [Bay]'s visual panache alongside his considerable storytelling weaknesses."[75] The Guardian's Peter Bradshaw said "Ambulance has everything ... except actors giving a decent performance as believable characters in a workable script."[76] The Evening Standard's Charlotte O'Sullivan said the film picks up once the characters enter the ambulance, and that "the B-movie [Gyllenhaal] and Bay have cobbled together is genuinely diverting."[77]

Collider praised Ambulance as Bay's best film since The Rock and Bad Boys II as well as his "most human film to date", citing its emphasis on character development and emotional depth beyond his signature explosive action set-pieces.[78]

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