12 Rounds 3: Lockdown

2015 "Twelve rounds in the clip. One shot at redemption."
5.1| 1h30m| R| en| More Info
Released: 11 September 2015 Released
Producted By: WWE Studios
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Lockdown Follows a police officer who returns to duty after recovering from a gun shot wound to discover incriminating evidence of illegal activities against those closest to him. He quickly finds himself trapped inside his own precinct, hunted and in search of the truth, as the crooked cops stop at nothing to recover the evidence.

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Reviews

Philip Antwi In fact!!! I didn't see this coming... I have always loved movies that feature guys with well built physiques, but it's rather unfortunate this would have to enter my bad books. The whole movie is just a massive pile of goofs that get you angry as you go along. I wonder why someone would sit to put down a plot that doesn't even pass for a high-school choreography. The movie makes the lead roles look dumb. The lady cop who was captured just disappeared from the story. I guess she had a small nap under the desk after all the intense bouts and long talk. I'm really sad to have wasted my time watching this. ALERT!!! DO NOT WASTE YOUR TIME!!!
Karren Seedial Watched this movie yesterday, reminded me of Bruce Willis at Nakatomi Tower. Nice storyline but honestly Mr. Producer, Mr. Levesque and Ms McMahon think about it, was there really need to include that "porn scene" at the beginning? I mean the WWE Universe consists of so many kids who look up to these superstars didn't you guys spare a second thought for that! That really disgusted me.Dean Ambrose was good being his first movie with the shooting scenes especially the action on the rooftop and I hope he continues but he movie was a bit stagnant no real climax same shooting scenes in the staircase, elevator, cubicles.Keep up the good work Dean you'll only get better as time goes by you'll do great in a Western or Military movie! YOU'VE GOT THE LOOK ;)
jackmeat My quick rating - 5,2/10. Another slightly above average action movie starring a WWE superstar, this time Dean Ambrose. I will say that using him for the main was a good call since he isn't the muscle bound type character such as Cena and Orton were in the previous films. For being his first acting role, he did an adequate job and delivered his one- liners pretty well (yet some were not that funny no matter who said them) The action was edited well so the viewers don't lose track with too much jerky camera work (which seems to be more the norm in action films as of late). This story is more a use of "12 rounds" as in shots left in the gun, not 12 rounds as in a cat and mouse game, but that is OK, at least it was different. Overall, a good addition to the WWE library that did not raise the bar at all, but also did not lower it in the slightest either. Funny thing, I went back to my database and I gave the first one a 5.3 and the second one a 5.1 so at least they are being consistent.
Ian Welch There are some glaringly obvious plot issues with this movie. The re-instated police officer, who's partner was killed, uncovers evidence of foul play. Immediately upon doing so, the perpetrator of said foul play and corruption realizes that he has the evidence and attacks him while he is still in the police station. The antagonist shuts off cell and phone communication and disables the network. He communicates with the outside using radio, the same radio which he communicates with his fellow perpetrators. In addition, the main character either has an IQ of 50 or the writer lacks imagination. At one point the antagonist finds himself in the armory and he grabs a shield with 6 or 7 bullets left whilst being out-gunned. Even a moron, with far below the intelligence required to pass a police competency test, would have gone for some artillery. He communicates on a cell phone to a potential ally from the roof, yet never stops to say "Hey, I am throwing the flash drive down to you", something that would've removed the motivation for the whole thing. Even the basic premise, the corrupt cop explaining that he has disabled communications and put the building on lock down, makes zero damn sense in any real situation. Why would disabling cellular communication help in apprehending a cop suffering from PTSD that had gone on a killing spree. A rating of 4 is based upon the fact that the movie is still entertaining, as long as you can imagine for a second that the multiple cameras in the police station are not recording everything that is happening and that they wouldn't be reviewed after the incident... and everything else.