Prisoners (2013) [Blu-ray]
Crime | Drama | Thriller
Tagline: A hidden truth. A desperate search.
Tagline: Every moment matters
Storyline: How far would you go to protect your family? Keller Dover is facing every parent's worst nightmare. His six-year-old daughter, Anna, is missing, together with her young friend, Joy, and as minutes turn to hours, panic
sets in. The only lead is a dilapidated RV that had earlier been parked on their street. Heading the investigation, Detective Loki arrests its driver, Alex Jones, but a lack of evidence forces his release. As the police pursue multiple leads and pressure
mounts, knowing his child's life is at stake the frantic Dover decides he has no choice but to take matters into his own hands. But just how far will this desperate father go to protect his family? Written by Warner Bros.
Pictures
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Kenneth Brown on December 14, 2013 -- And yet it isn't. There aren't any easy choices in director Denis Villeneuve's darkly disturbing, morally murky Prisoners. Like Incendies,
Villeneuve's excellent Academy Award-nominated Canadian drama, nothing is as it seems and nothing comes without consequence. Much more than the story of two kidnapped children and the desperate father willing to do whatever he can to find them,
Prisoners is an unsettling labyrinth of impossible decisions, gut-knotting powerlessness and a twisting, turning Zodiac-esque procedural and mystery more complex than the film's straightforward trailers suggest. Villenevue and screenwriter
Aaron Guzikowski strike a difficult balance too, teetering between hyperrealism and incredulity; between the spectacularly performed human drama that is the film's first ninety minutes and the more calculated, nearly overcooked police procedural that
dominates its third act.
When Keller and Grace Dover (Hugh Jackman and Maria Bello) sit down to a warm Thanksgiving dinner with good friends Franklin and Nancy Birch (Terrence Howard and Viola Davis), they set aside the sorrow and struggles of their lives. All that changes in an
instant, though, when their daughters, Anne and Joy (Erin Gerasimovich and Kyla Drew Simmons), make a quick run to the Dovers' house and never return. Local police detective Loki (Jake Gyllenhaal) soon brings in the case's chief suspect for questioning:
an emotionally unstable, mentally challenged young man named Alex Jones (Paul Dano). But with no hard evidence and diminishing suspicion, Loki's department is forced to release Jones into the care of his mother (Melissa Leo), believing he lacks the acuity
to commit a premeditated kidnapping of two victims in broad daylight. Keller, however, believes otherwise. Taking the law into his own hands, he captures Jones, retreats to an abandoned building and tortures him day after day in the hopes of learning the
whereabouts of his daughter. Whether his decisive actions will actually benefit her is another matter entirely.
Jackman is terrific; raw, broken, frightening and, above all, a convincing everyman. He handles Keller's seemingly contradictory beliefs with a deft touch, managing everything from the man's faith to his survivalist reason and willingness to do what
others won't, or shouldn't. Bello, Howard and Davis, meanwhile, tackle disquietingly different facets of panic, fear, denial and grief, each to heartwrenching ends. (Particularly Davis, whose cold detachment resonates the most despite her limited
screentime. Most every parent will identify with one of the four; were I thrust into the situation, I suspect I would react much like Nancy.) Dano is suitably unnerving and eerily effective, both as a caged animal and a childlike enigma. And Gyllenhaal
wrestles scene after scene away from his Academy-bait co-stars in what could have been a rather thankless, perhaps even forgettable role. His detective is a rarity in movies: a diligent career cop who's grown weary of dealing with victims' families. Of
being a bearer of crushing news. A siphon for others' anger, hopelessness and frustration. A man tasked with witnessing acts of unthinkable depravity. Loki has tremendous empathy for families like the Kellers and Birches, but that empathy takes such a
tremendous toll that he's bottled it away, irritated whenever it threatens to claw its way to the surface.
Had Prisoners just been another home-brewed vigilante drama, though -- another ordinary-husband-and-father-pushed-to-his-limits thriller -- there wouldn't be much to it beyond the impeccably cast actors, other than Roger Deakins' bleak but
breathtaking cinematography. It's the moral and ethical ambiguity that makes the film so intensely watchable, gripping even, and leaves room for forgiveness on the few occasions Villenevue and Guzikowski overplay their hand. (After an unbearably
distressing opening act and riveting middle stretch, the film takes a slow right turn down a very familiar genre road, with one twist too many.) Villenevue's unflinching confidence and command of the material leaves little room for predictability or
relief, and beneath Keller's rage and anguish lies an endless stream of impossible-to-answer questions. Parents, myself included, take comfort in thinking we know exactly how we'd handle a similar situation. In these dark hypotheticals we talk about late
at night, we fancy ourselves closet vigilantes. In reality, the fear that our involvement would only lead to the further endangerment of our child would surpass any belief that we would do any good by intervening. Interestingly, Villenevue and Guzikowski
are willing and more than eager to entertain the possibility that Keller's involvement only make things worse, if he accomplishes anything at all.
Prisoners is a more eclectic, divisive film than I was anticipating, and not for the reasons its trailers suggest. Waxing between intimate drama and complex procedural, it's nearly ripped in two. Villenevue forges a gripping balance, though, and
doesn't take the easy road, even when traveling winding, twisting paths with which cinephiles will be most familiar. Jackman, Gyllenhaal and their co-stars are uniformly excellent as well, Deakins' cinematography is a character in and of itself, and the
story of the Kellers and the Birches is the stuff of every parent's worst nightmares. Which brings us to Warner's Blu-ray release. Slim supplemental package aside, the Blu-ray edition of Prisoners is a strong one, with a striking video presentation
and immerssive DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 surround track.
[CSW] -3.6- This is an outstanding crime thriller, chilling and terrifying in parts; and one of the best I've seen in a long while. The main protagonist delivers an electrifying performance as a deeply religious and protective father, who becomes frantic
and brutal in his pursuit of and questioning of the prime suspect in the abductions. Driven almost to madness in his spiral downward he still manages to put some of the pieces together but that only tends to makes his situation worse. The lead detective
Loki, is a hard character to explain, he is one of the main characters, but we see him go through so many events that it's hard to explain him. This is a film for mature audiences only...the violence is brutal and the profanity is pervasive. From its
torture scenes to watching a man put a bullet in his mouth, Prisoners might be to dark and disturbing for some, but for those who can stomach to handle this terrifically directly, well written, and well-acted movie, can expect a edge of your seat
Drama/Thriller... even if it is a bit slow paced.
[V4.5-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box.
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