It’s every parent’s worst nightmare.
You decide to let your children play outside, and the second
your back is turned, they’re nowhere to be found.
Behold Prisoners, director Denis Villeneuve’s haunting
thriller about the weeklong search for two girls who go missing from their
Pennsylvania neighborhood and the father (Hugh Jackman) and police detective
(Jake Gyllenhaal) who will stop at nothing to find them.
There’s no telling if the girls are alive or dead as false
leads and mysterious connections form an intricate web that keeps audiences
guessing on the edges of their seats for just over two and a half hours.
That’s far too long a run time for a whodunit like this,
even with the inclusion of some confusing edits that seemed to cut out
essential parts of the story.
I thought things escalated a bit quickly when the families
reacted initially, running around the streets and shouting the
girls’ names immediately before Detective Loki (Gyllenhaal) is seen on a stakeout of a
potential suspect.
But despite some murky exposition that nearly put me to
sleep, Prisoners shows us only the bare minimum of what we need to see in
order to understand the conflict at hand and is easily one of the most
terrifying movies never billed as a “horror” film.
This is because of its disturbingly realistic nature.
The angst-ridden father of Anna, Keller Dover (Jackman), is
not your typical avenger.
He possesses no particular “set of skills” that allows him to go
on a gun-slinging, Death Wish-style rampage.
He does not wear a cape or a suit of high-tech armor.
He’s just an honorable family man who finds himself with the
right degree of conviction that allows him to contemplate torture and murder.
The grieving parents of Joy (Terence Howard, Viola Davis) do
nothing to stop Keller’s heated actions, while his wife Grace Dover (Maria
Bello) spends her days sulking in bed, ingesting a steady diet of anxiety
pills.
If nothing else, Prisoners forces the audience to question
not just how far the characters will go, but to what lengths we would go to
find our own children under similar circumstances.
Jackman’s arresting performance as Keller is his best to
date and never feels far from how a typical father might react to having his
daughter taken.
Gyllenhaal’s Detective Loki is skeptical and sensitive, refusing to take anything at face value and providing a welcome contrast to Jackman’s hotheaded character.
The rest of the film’s talented pedigree (Bello,
Davis, Howard, Paul Dano) is convincing, even if they tend to fall by the wayside as
Jackman and Gyllenhaal carry the show.
Prisoners is grueling, intense cinema in which every
grey-hued frame seems to evoke a sense of dread.
I found myself easily taken by its rich story and
fine performances.
I would gladly see it again.
8.5/10
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