Taxi 2 | -2000- Fixed
| | Information | |------------|------------------| | Title | Taxi 2 | | Release Date | 29 March 2000 (France) | | Director | Gérard Krawczyk (Luc Besson served as writer and producer) | | Writer | Luc Besson | | Running Time | 88 minutes | | Country | France | | Language | French (with some Japanese and German) | | Budget | ~€10.6 million | | Box Office | ~€64.9 million (France only), over $64 million worldwide |
Two decades after its release, holds up as a benchmark for high-concept action comedies. Its success proved that French cinema could compete on a global scale, combining the visionary storytelling of Luc Besson with the breakneck direction of Gérard Krawczyk. taxi 2 -2000-
Beyond the burning rubber, the true heart of Taxi 2 lies in its characters. The chemistry between Naceri and Diefenthal is sharper than ever. Daniel’s cool, confident demeanor perfectly balances Émilien’s frantic neurosis. The chemistry between Naceri and Diefenthal is sharper
The film successfully exported French pop culture, blending the gritty aesthetic of American buddy-cop movies like Lethal Weapon with local French humor and geography. It also established a formula that Besson would replicate for years to come with franchises like The Transporter and Taken : fast cars, highly choreographed fight scenes, and a relentless pace. It also established a formula that Besson would
Taxi 2 is a "good story" because it knows exactly what it is. It doesn't try to be a serious crime film. It is a film about It takes the "buddy
The year 2000 was a massive milestone for global cinema, but in France, it belonged to a highly modified white Peugeot 406. Directed by Gérard Krawczyk and written by the legendary Luc Besson, . Released in French theaters on March 29, 2000, the film did not just replicate the formula of its 1998 predecessor—it supercharged it. Breaking box office records with over 10.3 million admissions in France alone, it solidified the Taxi franchise as a cultural phenomenon that blended Hollywood-style stunts with uniquely French, anti-authoritarian wit. The Plot: From Marseille to Paris with Love (and Yakuzas)
While Taxi 2 was a massive box-office success in France and abroad, its production was marred by a tragedy. During the filming of the final stunt—where the taxi jumps over tanks—a stuntman named Alain Dutartre was killed, and another was seriously injured. This led to legal battles that overshadowed the film’s release and served as a somber reminder of the risks taken to achieve the film's "real" feel. Final Verdict: The Peak of the Series