As a seasoned homicide detective, Thomas Craven has seen the bleakest side of humanity. But nothing prepares him for the toughest investigation of his life: the search for his only daughter Emma's killer. Now, he is on a personal mission to uncover the disturbing secrets surrounding her murder, including corporate corruption, government collusion and Emma's own mysterious life.
Mel Gibson
Craven
Ray Winstone
Jedburgh
Danny Huston
Jack Bennett
Bojana Novaković
Emma Craven
Shawn Roberts
Burnham
David Aaron Baker
Millroy
Jay O. Sanders
Whitehouse
Denis O'Hare
Moore
Damian Young
Senator Jim Pine
Caterina Scorsone
Melissa
Frank Grillo
Agent One
Wayne Duvall
Chief of Police
Gbenga Akinnagbe
Detective Darcy Jones
Gabrielle Popa
Young Emma
Paul Sparks
Northampton Police Detective
Christy Scott Cashman
Detective Vicki Hurd
Dossy Peabody
Annie - Bennett's Asst.
Gordon Peterson
Interviewer
Peter Epstein
Agent Two
Tom Kemp
Paul Honeywell
Timothy Sawyer
Doctor
Molly Schreiber
Reporter #1
Amelia Broome
Tina
Celeste Oliva
Janet
Scott Winters
Northmoor Doctor
Joe Stapleton
State Trooper #1
Sol E. Romero
Hospital Nurse
Ali Reza
Northampton Doctor
Rick Avery
Robinson Jr.
Peter Hermann
Sanderman
Bill Thorpe
Watch Sergeant
Charles Harrington
Neighbor
Lisa Hughes
News Anchor #1
Paula Ebben
News Anchor #2
Kathy Curran
News Reporter #2
Frank Ridley
Automatic Weapons Cop
Nico Evers-Swindell
State Trooper #2
David J. Curtis
Security Officer Northmoor
Thomas B. Duffy
Boston Police Detective
Conor McMahon
Pedestrian (uncredited)
Director
Martin Campbell
Screenplay
William Monahan
Screenplay
Andrew Bovell
December 15, 2022
6
**mixed bag.**
We've seen many movies with the same premise: man seeking revenge for his loved one/child.
This could've been an rare exception sticking out of the plot repetition, but it fails in other aspects.
The good bits:
* We get to actually care for the victims. They are more than just plot triggers, they are persons, and there is an emotional attachment. * The protagonist isn't as over the top as in most revenge flicks. He's an realistic cop who, caused by tragedy, is losing his grip. * In addition to the evil main antagonist, there is a deuteragonist; and I like this type of character very much: independent, but not good. Lots of potential in such a figure. * The violence is naturalistic.
The bad bits:
* Whether as early as in script (several authors), or as late as in post-production cuts - this looks like important bits were simply omitted. * The pacing is OK and follows the story, but at times, it feels a bit slow. * some resolution is too clichéd.
This is an remake of an BBC series, which I haven't seen; my wild guess is: the original is much better.
I don't think this is a spoiler; just give you an idea of the calibre of plot-holes in this: Two criminals are arrested by half a dozen cops, with physical evidence to get them behind bars for years. The TV reports about this incident, so no way this gets hushed up. Yet, two scenes later, we see the same two bad guys strutting and driving around as if police would neither recognise nor bother them. Explanation? None.
Part of this is an unusual variation of the revenge-flick, with a tinge of supernatural; but another, large, part is a failed script or implementation.
4 for the movie as such; +1 for the emotional part, +1 for the deuteragonist, which really improves the potential (though not all of the outcome). I'm giving it a 6 out of 10.
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$80,000,000.00
Revenue:
$81,126,522.00