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Saturday, September 21, 2013

Review: Prisoners


by Trevor Kirkendall
★★★½


Here we go again, another boring police procedural. Just what we need. As if we don’t have enough on network television every night. As if USA and the Turner networks don’t wear us down with constant “NCIS” and “Law & Order” marathons every weekend. Didn’t we just see one of these? It sure seems like a police procedural comes out once every two months. Or was that just a “CSI” rerun I saw the other day?
 
That’s generally my take on procedure films such as “Prisoners” and I did carry some of that attitude with me into the screening despite how good the TV spots looked. But “Prisoners” is based around the characters and not around the procedure. By putting emphasis on character and story rather than the procedures, “Prisoners” transcends the predictable boundaries of the genre and becomes a much more relatable film.

It's Thanksgiving Day and Keller Dover (Hugh Jackman) is with his wife Grace (Maria Bello), teenage son Ralph (Dylan Minnetta) and six-year old daughter Anna (Erin Gerasimovich) at their neighbor Franklin (Terrence Howard) and Nancy (Viola Davis) Birch’s house for dinner. Franklin and Nancy also have a daughter about Ralph’s age, Eliza (Zoe Soul), and a daughter about Anna’s age, Joy (Kyla Drew Simmons). The two young girls are hanging out together and decide to go look for a lost toy back over at the Dover’s house. The parents allow them to go. That will be the last they see of them.

The girls go missing and the families being to search. Ralph remembers seeing a creepy looking RV parked on the street earlier in the day. Police soon find the RV and its owner Alex Jones (Paul Dano). Alex is said to have the IQ of a 10 year old. He’s quiet and creepy. Keller’s gut feeling is that Alex took the girls. He knows it, even if the police don’t have any evidence. The investigation is left up to Detective Loki (Jake Gyllenhaal) who’s very serious about his job and doesn’t appreciate Keller trying to tell him how it's supposed to be done.

But Keller is so convinced that Alex, who lives with his Aunt Holly (Melissa Leo). Loki investigates Alex and his aunt, but comes up with nothing tying him to the girls’ disappearance. This isn’t enough for Keller. The rage within him and his desire to find his daughter and her friend are too much for him to sit around and let Loki handle this on his own. He decides that it's up to him to find out what Alex knows.

While most police dramas or child kidnapping thrillers can be a very overdone and bland genre of film, “Prisoners” is a much more refreshing take. This is a very patiently paced story and very delicately handled by French-Canadian filmmaker Denis Villeneuve.

Villeneuve has a very strong handle of this exceptionally dark screenplay from “Contraband” scribe Aaron Guzikowski. The script takes the unique perspective of examining each character individually and building the story we are shown around their backstories and personalities. This - as opposed to coming up with a plot and inserting characters we don’t care about into it - works on a much more empathetic level; we can’t help but feel the pain everyone is experiencing.

The plot’s been done before so there’s no need to give us something we already know. By examining the scenario through meticulously designed characters, we have something that is much more engaging. It's a mystery film, but you don’t find yourself trying to solve the mystery before the movie does. You’re too engaged with the characters to be your own detective.

This is not a film of chance or coincidence. Everything here seems very realistic. Even the setting feels real. The decision to set “Prisoners” in an unnamed small Pennsylvania town helps to create a more realistic illusion. The lack of coincidence is also very refreshing, especially for a Hollywood studio film. I’m not saying it's completely free of coincidence, but people don’t just happen to find clues hidden away in plain sight late in the film when they should have noticed them earlier (well, one moment comes to mind, but that’s one moment in 153 total minutes; that’s a much better track record than other films). People don’t just happen to bump into potential killers or stumble over other plot details just to keep it moving. This is a very well thought out and methodically handled film.

The cast is full of talented star power. It makes little sense for me to tell you how good everyone is in this film because you should already know. With the exception of Paul Dano and Maria Bello, each of these main actors have been nominated for Oscars (and Melissa Leo took one home two years ago for “The Fighter”). Dano will get his one day; he’s far too talented to go unnoticed forever as he once again showcases here as the troubled and disturbed Alex Jones. Bello will get hers one day too. It's a crime she wasn’t already nominated for her roles in “A History of Violence” or “The Cooler”.

Jake Gyllenhaal takes a departure from his typical roles by playing this one with a much darker tone. The script is purposefully vague on his backstory, but Gyllenhaal is able to tell you everything you need to know about Detective Loki by the way behaves toward others around him and with his determination in solving this case.

Hugh Jackman is sensational in his portrayal as the desperate father. He is absolutely fearless in this role, so much more than I’ve ever seen him. I hope he doesn’t go unnoticed by Oscar voters because he really is that good in this film. He should absolutely be considered for his second nomination. You are unable to take your eyes off him. Despite questionable measures he takes in trying to find his daughter, you don’t necessarily disagree with him.

And in a complete juxtaposition to Jackman’s Keller is Terrence Howard’s portrayal of Franklin. This man couldn’t be anymore of a polar opposite to Jackman’s character. It’s riveting to watch these two one screen together and to see how each of them in their different lives deal with this unthinkable situation.

Despite the subject matter being similar to movies we typically get each year, nothing feels overdone in “Prisoners”. It’s a film you can really sink your teeth into as you watch. Even if it runs a little long just for the sake of being long, there is a lot of good to take away from this. It’s dark and at times eerie, and it should come across as a very rewarding experience once you make it through. And when you do make it through, “Prisoners” will still be in your head long after you leave.

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