My review was written in June 1987 after watching the movie on Charter Entertainment video cassette.
Robin Spry's "Keeping Track" ia a fast-paced, engrossing little thriller, head and shoulders above comparable pictures being made recently. Benefiting from the comfortable teaming of Margot Kidder and Michael Sarrazin, pic is a treat, though relegated to the now-standard limited theatrical release ahead of home video distribution.
Sarrazin portrays a cocksure Montreal tv anchorman thrust into an adventure straight out of "The 39 Steps" wen he and banking analyst Kidder witness a murdr on a train headed for New York. Soon not only the killers are after them but also the bank, police and government. Sarrazin is determined to get to the bottom of the matter but it is being covered up due to national security implications, as the KGB is involved with stealing U. S. technology. Film's McGuffin is a computer chip that will create a cyborg with artificial intelligence and possibly upset the balance of power depending upon who gets possession of it.
Spry and his writer-co producer Jamie Brown maintain a breathless pace, with the usual mechanical transition footage and extraneous filler left out of an action picture for a change. The stars, particularly Kidder in a followup to her Disney "Trenchcoat" sort of role, are bright and breezy and tech credits are solid down the line.