The Next Three Days (2010) [Blu-ray]
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close  The Next Three Days (2010) [Blu-ray]
Rated:  PG-13 
Starring: Russell Crowe, Elizabeth Banks, Liam Neeson (cameo), Brian Dennehy, Olivia Wilde, Rza.
Director: Paul Haggis
Genre: Crime | Drama | Romance
DVD Release Date: 03/08/2011

Life seems perfect for John Brennan until his wife, Lara, is arrested for a murder she says she didn't commit. Three years into her sentence, John is struggling to hold his family together, raising their son and teaching at college while he pursues every means available to prove her innocence. With the rejection of their final appeal, Lara becomes suicidal and John decides there is only one possible, bearable solution: to break his wife out of prison. Refusing to be deterred by impossible odds or his own inexperience, John devises an elaborate escape plot and plunges into a dangerous and unfamiliar world, ultimately risking everything for the woman he loves.

Storyline: Lara Brennan is arrested for murdering her boss with whom she had an argument. It seems she was seen leaving the scene of the crime and her fingerprints were on the murder weapon. Her husband, John would spend the next few years trying to get her released, but there's no evidence that negates the evidence against her. And when the strain of being separated from her family, especially her son, gets to her, John decides to break her out. So he does a lot of research to find a way. Written by rcs0411@yahoo.com

Cast Notes: Russell Crowe (John Brennan), Elizabeth Banks (Lara Brennan), Michael Buie (Mick Brennan), Moran Atias (Erit), Remy Nozik (Jenna), Toby Green (Three Year Old Luke), Tyler Green (Three Year Old Luke), Jason Beghe (Detective Quinn), Aisha Hinds (Detective Collero), Ty Simpkins (Luke), Veronica Brown (Female Guard #1), Olivia Wilde (Nicole), Leslie Merrill (Elizabeth Gesas), Alissa Haggis (Junkie), Daniel Stern (Meyer Fisk), Liam Neeson (Damon Pennington).

User Comment: *** This review may contain spoilers *** Greg (gregmoroberts@yahoo.com) from Oakville, Ontario, 7 November 2010 • In Paul Haggis' new thriller, The Next Three Days, Laura Brennan (Elizabeth Banks) is accused of killing her boss and is sent to prison. Her husband, John Brennan (Russell Crowe) battles through the legal system for nearly three years before seemingly running out of options. Choosing not to go the Hilary Swank route a la Conviction and spend the next 30 years trying to learn and eventually beat the system, John elects instead to speak to an expert on prison escapes (a wonderfully placed cameo by Liam Neeson) to get pointers on what to expect in a daring prison break attempt. The Neeson character gives important advice in reference to the time it takes for authorities to seal off a city's exits, but also gives insight into what his plan should include – "You have to have the entire plan already in place. And you have to ask yourself, can you kill a guard, leave your kid at a gas station…cause to do this thing, that's what you have to become." Audiences are then treated to a taut and thrilling attempt by John to free his wife out of prison and reunite the family which includes their young son Luke (Ty Simpkins).

The Next Three Days is a better than average thrill ride filled with equal moments of edge-of-your-seat action and true emotion that spurs the entire cast. Crowe quickly makes us forget that Robin Hood stole our box office money earlier this year and turns in a top-rate performance as the husband who must become a criminal himself in an attempt to pull off the impossible. The supporting cast which includes a non-glamorous Banks and small but memorable turns by Daniel Stern and Brian Dennehy help bridge the quieter moments of the 2+ hour film.

As John maps out his intricate plan, he is met with obstacles that force him to revise his original course of action to supplement for the unforeseen complications. His attempts at securing financing and proper papers (Drivers License, Passport) take the majority of the film's running time and helps provide insight into the transformation of John's character that goes from college professor to cold blooded killer.

When John does launch his intentions, The Next Three Days soars as an exciting chase throughout the Pittsburgh streets and sidewalks as a group lead by Lt. Nabulsi (Lennie James) gives relentless chase to the fleeing Brennans.

Paul Haggis (who also penned the screenplay) directs for the first time since the underrated In The Valley of Elah in 2007 and crafts an exhilarating cat and mouse game that involves audiences in a root-for-the-family emotional ride all the while suggesting that protagonist John is equally guilty in his relentless pursuit. Surprisingly not complicating our support is the idea that Laura may indeed be guilty of the crime to which she was convicted.

The ever twisting screenplay shows Haggis' knack for writing scripts that don't allow audiences to get too far ahead of the story developments as unexpected and plausible scenarios affect even the best laid out of plans. This may leave lesser minded cinephiles wondering why certain scenes were not left on the cutting room floor (a DVD chapters worth of making a specific key, for example), but for those engrossed in the ongoing struggle of John's pursuit should appreciate the occasional red herring.

The sum of the above leaves The Next Three Days as on par or better than Ben Affleck's well-received The Town earlier this fall. It's a throwback to the superior thrillers of the late 1970's where the story journey's down unexpected highways while enthralling an audience along the way.

Summary: Great thriller in line with The Town.

[CSW] -3- The show starts one hour in because the first hour is character development with a tiny bit of back story.

IMDb Rating (02/27/11): 7.4/10 from 10,458 users

Additional information
Copyright:  2010,  Lionsgate
Features:  Feature Commentary by Haggis, co-producer Michael Nozik and editor Jo Francis. This is an above-average commentary, at least for most of the feature, which goes into quite a bit of interesting information, including dealing with the toddler twins who played the child in the early part of the film, as well as various editing choices Haggis and Francis made along the way. The filmmakers discuss what they meant to convey with the title The Next Three Days, which they point out refers to what happens after the film ends. Haggis also insists, not exactly convincingly, that Lara's innocence or guilt is still left ambiguous by the end of the film, which is certainly not how 99% of viewers are going to take it. The commentary tends to trail off a little bit toward the end, with some gaps.
Making The Next Three Days (HD; 18:31) talks about the French source material, Pour Elle, how it was adapted for this American remake, and various other production issues.
The Men of The Next Three Days (HD; 7:38) profiles Crowe, Neeson and Dennehy.
True Escapes for Love (HD; 7:38) is hosted by co-star Jason Beghe, and talks about true-life prison escapes, as with the 2010 Arizona break inspired by Bonnie and Clyde.
Cast Moments (HD; 2:25) is a pretty forgettable gag reel.
Deleted Scenes (HD; 13:09) is, like the Extended Scenes, hobbled by a really clunky interface, where no "Play all" for every scene is included. Instead "sub-categories" of scenes need to be accessed and then the viewer can "play all" of those categories. The best elements here help to give a little more emotional shading to Crowe's character as he begins to do questionable things in the pursuit of justice.
Extended Scenes (HD; 4:06) are similarly weirdly indexed on the disc, but include some nice additional moments for John, his brother and his father.
Subtitles:  English SDH, English, Spanish
Video:  Widescreen 2.35:1 Color
Screen Resolution: 1080p
Audio:  ENGLISH: DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1
FRENCH: Dolby Digital 5.1
Time:  2:02
DVD:  # Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1
UPC:  031398132639
Coding:  [V4.0-A5.0] MPEG-4 AVC
D-Box:  No
Other:  Director: Paul Haggis; Writers: Paul Haggis (screenplay), Fred Cavayé (screenplay); running time of 122 minutes.

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