Vehicle 19 is a 2013 American action thriller film written and directed by Mukunda Michael Dewil. The film stars Paul Walker as a parole breaker who finds himself hunted by the police in Johannesburg after he picks up a rental car containing a phone, a gun and a kidnapped prosecutor. He races against time to dodge the police, expose their corruption and eventually reunite with his estranged wife.

Vehicle 19
Theatrical poster
Directed byMukunda Michael Dewil
Written byMukunda Michael Dewil
Produced by
StarringPaul Walker
CinematographyMiles Goodall
Edited byMegan Gill
Music by
  • Daniel Matthee
  • James Matthes
Distributed byThe Safran Company
Forefront Media Group
Release dates
  • February 7, 2013 (2013-02-07) (South Africa)
  • June 14, 2013 (2013-06-14) (United States)
Running time
85 minutes
Countries
  • United States
  • South Africa
LanguageEnglish
Box office$2.1 million

Vehicle 19 was released on February 7, 2013, in South Africa and on June 14, 2013, in the United States.

Plot edit

Michael Woods is an American parolee who arrives in Johannesburg, after being released from prison, to meet up his wife Angie who works in the U.S. embassy.

Michael orders a rental car at the airport but is lost while on his way to the embassy. During his trip, Michael comes across a cellphone and a suppressed pistol inside. Afterwards, a police detective calls Michael who advises him to hand in the vehicle in exchange for a replacement.

Michael agrees to deliver the car only to find a gagged woman inside. Both Michael and the woman are soon attacked upon reaching the rendezvous point, causing Michael to drive away from the firefight. After several escape attempts, the woman reveals herself to be Rachel Shabangu, a prosecutor who gathered evidence against a criminal named Rhodes, due to which the latter kidnapped her. Furthermore, the police, including the detective, are on Rhodes' payroll. Michael and Rachel try to get help from her friends to no avail.

Helpless, Michael decides to drive to the courthouse with Rachel before realizing Angie might become involved. He succeeds in making sure Angie stays inside the embassy but Rachel is shot in the process. Before dying, she records her testimony using Michael's phone and entrusts him to expose Rhodes and the corrupt police department.

Saddened by Rachel's death, Michael leaves her body behind and is contacted by the detective who reveals he has framed Michael for Rachel's murder. Michael successfully dodges the police and gets his car sprayed to avoid being recognized. Following Rachel's earlier suggestion, he contacts a court judge who agrees to help Michael but also warns him to avoid going to the court as the police are already there and waiting. When the phone runs out of battery, Michael uses the car adapter to recharge it.

Michael successfully makes it to the courthouse as more police arrive, resulting in a hostage situation as Michael holds a news reporter at gunpoint. However, the detective shows up and, trying to defuse the situation, shoots Michael at point blank. As the detective argues with his other police officers for injuring Michael, Rachel's testimony is seen playing over the reporter's microphone. With Rhodes' criminal activity exposed, he, the detective, and the rest of the corrupt officers are arrested. As the film ends, the titular vehicle is seen in the parking lot while news reports praise Michael for his heroism and bravery. It is implied that he had reunited with Angie while in critical care.

Cast edit

  • Paul Walker as Michael Woods
  • Naima McLean as Rachel Shabangu
  • Gys de Villiers as Det. Smith
  • Leyla Haidarian as Angelica Moore
  • Tshepo Maseko as Lieutenant
  • Andrian Mazive as Benji
  • Welile Nzuza as Mohawk
  • Mangaliso Ngema as James Muzuka
  • Ernest Kubayi as Mr. Crackhead
  • Elize Van Niekerk as Car Rental Receptionist

Distribution edit

Home media edit

In the United States, Vehicle 19 was released on DVD and Blu-ray on July 23, 2013. The film's original theatrical aspect ratio was 2.40:1, but the DVD and Blu-ray have cropped transfers framed at 1.78:1. The making-of featurette on the Blu-ray includes film clips in the original 2.40.1 aspect ratio. U.K. Blu-ray is in the original aspect ratio.

Reception edit

Box office edit

Vehicle 19 has grossed for a worldwide total of $2,145,231.

Critical response edit

Vehicle 19 has a 23% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 26 reviews.

See also edit

External links edit