The Austin Chronicle reviewed the film, stating that "All told, this is one entertainingly brainless mess of a Nineties B-movie."
TV Guide panned
Red Line, writing "McQueen (son of Steve McQueen) and Madsen both breeze through their parts with a minimum of expression, while Zal jettisons any viewer sympathy when she casually abandons her best girlfriend to an uncertain fate at Keller's hands. She and McQueen are nonetheless heroes-by-default in the pointless script." ==References==