| Review Date: Director: Taylor Hackford Writer: Tony Gilroy Producers: Taylor Hackford and Charles Mulvehill Actors: Russell Crowe as Terry Thorne, Meg Ryan as Alice Bowman, David Morse as Peter Bowman |
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The film also played out very nicely with alternating scenes between Morse’s time with the kidnappers and Crowe and Ryan trying to save his ass, winding their way through the entire movie. I also dug the fact that they kept writing the number of days of his capture on the screen. God knows that it’s the “little things” that sometimes help audiences stick with the story. And how about David Caruso getting in there with a possible career-resurrecting role! Yup, you heard it here first. Caruso has a very small part here, doesn’t play a cop for once and manages to come through on the dynamic front. Overall, I think this movie will probably play better on video. It’s not necessarily a film that screams to be seen in the theatres, but definitely a solid movie to check out when you’ve got the time. The topic is an interesting one and handled very well. There is a slight romance factor which adds a little bit of extra runtime to the film, which didn’t work for me, but for the most part, the film succeeds as a tense drama with a few thrilling moments. The last 30 minutes pack its most punch, thrill-wise. And heck, if all that doesn’t mean diddly to you, how ’bout the fact that ol’ Russell gets to use his own accent in this film (count the number of times that he says “mate” and you’ll be amazed) and show us his massive biceps in a tanktop scene. You go, man!