TL;DR – When it gets to the emotional core of music Stuck has some real emotional weight, but it has issues getting between those moments.
Score – 2.5 out of 5 stars
Post-Credit Scene – There is no post-credit scene

Review –
There are many things that can make a bad day and I can tell you that being
stuck in a train carriage with a bunch of strangers for an indeterminate amount
of time would be very high on that list. With this in mind, I was captivated
with the idea of setting a musical in that setting and where you could go with
the pressures and opportunity of keeping everyone in that one space. What we
get in the final film is a story with two halves, however, unfortunately, they
don’t quite work together.
So to set the scene, it is a day in New York and disconnected strangers are
running around in their day trying to get from one place to another. You have
Lloyd (Giancarlo Esposito) a homeless gentleman who is getting ready for the
day in the actual train carriage. Alica (Arden Cho) a dancer trying to get home
and avoid her stalker Ramon (Omar Chaparro), Caleb (Gerard Canonico) who is
running between his many jobs, then Eve (Ashanti) and Sue (Amy Madigan) who are
just trying to get home on a difficult day. Fate is a precarious thing at
times, and this day as they board the train everything grinds to a halt as a
police incident closes the train lines trapping the train in-between stations,
and as the carriages are locked there is the realisation that they are trapped
and the only thing you can do is sing.