PRISONERS, the latest film from Oscar-nominated director
Denis Villeneuve, is a film which tries to be many things at once; a whodunit,
a family-drama, a police procedure and a cold-case solver. Cramming in so many
different genres and storylines into a single film isn’t unheard of, nor is it
always a mistake; which puts the burden on PRISONERS to make everything blend
together.
Keller (Hugh Jackman), his wife Gracie (Maria Bello) take
their family to spend Thanksgiving at their neighbor’s and best friends family
home (Terrence Howard and Viola Davis). After dinner, their daughters vanish,
which causes Keller to kidnap and punish the lone suspect in the case (Paul
Dano); a dimwitted young adult with a poor IQ who is cared for by his aunt
(Melissa Leo). The mystery of the missing girls is tackled by Detective Loki
(Jake Gyllenhall).
PRISONERS sets itself up to be a complex whodunit film with
lessons of morality sprinkled all over it. The film seeks to explore just how
far a person would go to find their missing children, and the places it goes
are dark and meant to disturbing. However, PRISONERS often gropes around in the
dark with no light to guide it. Once Keller takes matters into his own hands
and begins his rite of torture against the lone suspect in the case, the film
loses focus and goes all over the place. Detective Loki goes and does his thing
while Keller does his, which involves a pointless time-waster of a subplot
involving a priest, and the storylines never quite mesh and PRISONERS
completely loses its way. The many complexities strip the emotion from the
film, and for a story that is supposed to make us feel for parents of missing children…you
won’t find yourself giving a rats ass about any of it.
Director Denis Villeneuve was smart enough to hire Roger
Deakins as his cinematographer for PRISONERS, which is about the highlight of
the technical side of things. Deakins does his usual brilliant work here; using
excellent dim lighting techniques to match the grim nature of the film.
Villeneuve in the meantime derails all that with very pedestrian directing as
his camera never does anything inspired. He also seems to feel that the
audience is full of idiots; objects and places are shown over and again as if
we missed it the first 50 times. Dialogue through the entire film is full of
melodrama; every line over-reaches and we are punished with cringe-worthy crap
that no human being would ever say in real life, not to mention untimely curse-words that always feel out of place. The film also has some
sluggish pacing; it’s running time of two-plus hours feels more like a
thousand.
Acting is decent throughout, although every cast member
seems to be grasping for something to latch onto. Hugh Jackman shows much of
the ferocity that he has been known for, and can occasionally bring the tears.
Maria Bello works the hardest and does well, while Terrence Howard might as
well have been a chair on set. Paul Dano turns in his creepiest performance
ever, and Melissa Leo is brilliant as always. The movie belongs to Jake
Gyllenhaal, who gets the most screen-time (an odd move since we’re supposed to
be empathizing with the parents), and makes the most of it.
The last act is loaded with many twists and turns, many of
which are clever and almost salvage the ride. By that time however the convoluted
storytelling and painfully slow pacing has taken its toll, and the ending
(which is a weird one), can’t come soon enough. PRISONERS has a lot going on
inside, but nothing to show for it.
BOTTOM LINE: Fuck it
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