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Budget. $45 million [1] Box office. $94.9 million. Changing Lanes is a 2002 American drama thriller film directed by Roger Michell and starring Ben Affleck and Samuel L. Jackson. The film follows a successful, young Wall Street lawyer (Affleck) who accidentally crashes his car into a vehicle driven by a middle-aged, recovering alcoholic ...
- $45 million
- David Arnold
- April 12, 2002
- Scott Rudin
Apr 12, 2002 · Changing Lanes: Directed by Roger Michell. With Ben Affleck, Samuel L. Jackson, Kim Staunton, Toni Collette. A young lawyer and a businessman share a small automobile accident, and their mutual road rage escalates into a feud.
- (74K)
- Drama, Thriller
- Roger Michell
- 2002-04-12
Apr 12, 2002 · Doyle Gipson ( Samuel L. Jackson) needs to show that he has loan approval to buy a house for his family; he hopes that will convince his fed-up wife to stay in New York and not move with the kids to Oregon. Banek and Gipson get into a fender bender. It's not really anybody's fault.
Apr 12, 2002 · Though some may find its conclusion unsatisfying, Changing Lanes is a tense, well-crafted exploration of meaty ethical dilemmas. A rush-hour fender-bender on New York City's crowded FDR Drive...
- (1.3K)
- Roger Michell
- R
- Ben Affleck
Emotionally violent thriller for mature teens. Read Common Sense Media's Changing Lanes review, age rating, and parents guide.
- Paramount Pictures
- Roger Michell
Just such a moment happens to Doyle and Gavin when a fender bender on New York City’s FDR Drive brings both of their lives up short. Neither man is injured in any way by their collision, at least not physically. But the events that follow reveal how fragile their hopes, dreams and self-made plans really are.
Apr 7, 2002 · Overview. A rush-hour fender-bender on New York City's crowded FDR Drive, under most circumstances, wouldn't set off a chain reaction that could decimate two people's lives. But on this day, at this time, a minor collision will turn two complete strangers into vicious adversaries.