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A pretty good movie

Posted : 13 years, 4 months ago on 30 November 2010 12:27

Since I kept hearing some really good things about this flick, I was really eager to check it out and I had some rather high expectations. To be honest, I actually ended up with some mixed feelings about the damned thing. I mean, sure, I thought it was pretty good and Casey Affleck gave definitely a really good performance, resulting in his breakthrough. I don’t know, maybe the issue was that my expectations were too high before watching the damned thing but, in my opinion, the story was rather far-fetched like most of the other thrillers out there. Eventually, at the end of the day, it was basically decent and fairly entertaining, absolutely, but it was nothing really ground-breaking, at least, that’s my opinion. Still, I have to admit that it was really neat to see Ben Affleck, one of the most despised actors in the world at the time, making such an impressive come-back as a director and the guy definitely displayed some skills in this area. Eventually, he made afterwards ‘The Town’ and ‘Argo’, both critically praised, so his track-record as a director is pretty impressive so far. Anyway, to conclude, even though it didn’t really blow me away, it was still a decent watch and it is definitely worth a look, especially if you like the genre. 



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Right or Wrong? You Decide

Posted : 14 years, 1 month ago on 17 March 2010 08:38

Patrick Kenzie(Casey Affleck) and his partner Angie Gennaro (Michelle Monaghan)are hired to help the police find a missing child. He promises the child’s mother that no matter what the outcome and no matter what he has do she will have her child back. Even when the story starts to unravel and Patrick fears the results he still keeps his word.

Patrick Kenzie: I always believed it was the things you don't choose that makes you who you are. Your city, your neighbourhood, your family. People here take pride in these things, like it was something they'd accomplished. The bodies around their souls, the cities wrapped around those. I lived on this block my whole life; most of these people have. When your job is to find people who are missing, it helps to know where they started. I find the people who started in the cracks and then fell through. This city can be hard. When I was young, I asked my priest how you could get to heaven and still protect yourself from all the evil in the world. He told me what God said to His children. "You are sheep among wolves. Be wise as serpents, yet innocent as doves."

Patrick Kenzie is one of those characters who believes strongly in right and wrong. He has this sense of understanding; having grown up in Boston he knows what these people are capable of. Half the people Patrick meets up that he once knew through-out the film have taken the wrong path. What I think Casey does so well in this film is he brings to light all the little details of Patrick Kenzie, his accent, his past life and how it shapes the person that he has currently become. Casey is able to make us believe in Patrick Kenzie, the events that took place in this film and wonder about his past.

The entire cast whether they are playing the smallest of parts are still awesome. Amy Ryan shows the desperation of how when a bad thing happens people are willing to make all the promises to change but aren’t willing to follow through with these promises. Morgan Freeman shows us how a cop is willing to lay it all on the line for a certain cause when they know how painful it can be. Ed Harris shows us that even the best of people still rely on breaking the law in order to feel like justice has been served. Amy Madigan shows us how much family can mean to some people and how far they are willing to go to try and help those they care about. And Titus Welliver shows us that families can be torn apart, and when we feel there is no other option perhaps trying to show our loved another possibility is the best option. All of these actors help provide perhaps what is the best film I have ever seen about characters who are divided between what they know is right and what they feel is right. None of these performances will let you down. There are many more characters in this film that help portray these feelings, but these are the main characters that are the focal point and who help further the plot the most.

This film is based on the novel written by critically acclaimed author Dennis Lehane. Lehane has a way of keeping the story woven so tight that we cannot figure out the truth behind the mystery. He keeps an issue in the foreground, a relevant issue where the plot develops one way and then he keeps the truth hidden in the background, and when it all comes together it still all makes sense.

Throughout the film there are certain subplots that take a back seat and then find themselves the center of attention as the story progresses. One of those stories is when Remy Bressant mentions two suspects who could have kidnapped Amanda. Now once the subplot with Cheese is all unravelled and neatly in the films past, we move forward with Patrick watching the news and seeing that a little boy has gone missing. Then one of the guys he talked to about the suspects comes back and he and Patrick go to sell these people Cocaine. This is where Patrick notices a medallion around the molester’s wrist the same medallion the kid was supposedly wearing when he disappeared. This is the kind of subplot most films would have left out, or lightly skimmed over. Not this film, it brings us back, and it leads to Remy and Patrick confronting the kidnapper and his friends. This also leads to Patrick realizing that Remy Bressant is not the cleanest of cops.

Patrick Kenzie: He lied to me. Now I can't think of one reason big enough for him to lie about that's small enough not to matter.


Gone Baby Gone is a film packed with emotion and having to decide what is right and what is wrong. Go see it not for the acting but for the message and the continuing belief that doing the right thing is the way it should be done. I would also suggest a viewing of the extended ending of the film if you have the DVD, there is a final quote by Kenzie that should have made the final cut. In the end Kenzie did what he felt was right and that is all anyone can do in life, we must live with the choices we make.



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Gripping, densely-plotted tour de force

Posted : 14 years, 1 month ago on 23 February 2010 05:43

"You got my money, you leave that shit in the mailbox on your ass way out, you feel me? Some other motherfuckers let fool rob on them. I don't play scrimmage. But I don't fuck with no kids. And if that girl only hope is you, well, I pray for her, because she's gone, baby. Gone."


The most significant aspect of 2007's Gone Baby Gone is that it marks the directorial debut of Ben Affleck. Considered to be among Hollywood's worst actors prior to this filmmaking endeavour (quickly descending from Hollywood A-Lister to late-night talk show host punchline), Gone Baby Gone demonstrates that Affleck's career has a brighter future behind the camera rather than in front of it. Written by Affleck and Aaron Stockard (based on the acclaimed novel by Dennis Lehane), Gone Baby Gone is a gripping, densely-plotted crime thriller able to engage viewers on both an emotional and an intellectual level. The essence of Boston, Massachusetts is expertly captured in this brilliantly gritty tour de force which takes you through a world of drug users, drug peddlers, small-time hoods and big-time dreamers.



Gone Baby Gone is narrated by Patrick Kenzie (Affleck), a young man residing in Boston who works with his girlfriend Angie (Monaghan) as a private investigator specialising in missing persons. When a media frenzy engulfs the kidnapping of a 4-year-old girl named Amanda McCready, and with the police making little headway on the case, the girl's aunt and uncle (Madigan and Welliver) turn to Patrick and Angie in the hope that they can augment the investigation. While Patrick and Angie freely admit that they have little experience with this type of case, the family want to hire them for two reasons: they know the tough neighbourhood, and they have a rapport with the parts of town that don't take kindly to police. As the investigation intensifies, Patrick finds his eyes opened by the depth of betrayal, lies and death that accompany the ostensibly straightforward missing child case.


Affleck's filmmaking debut is based on the novel by Dennis Lehane, whose book Mystic River was very successfully adapted as a feature film by Clint Eastwood back in 2003. Gone Baby Gone works in a similar style to Mystic River since both stories deal with the grief of losing a child. There are probably only a handful of people who've experienced such grief, but even fewer who can question it, and the film will therefore strike a primal nerve in several viewers. The narrative of Gone Baby Gone is excellently serpentine, and its nature keeps a viewer thoroughly involved and uncertain as to what the next corner will reveal. The film is comprised of three distinct acts - the first two acts are only tangentially related, but the third ties everything together in jaw-dropping fashion. The only problem with the movie is a loss of strong dramatic tension as the film nears its conclusion - it becomes too talky, explicative and moralising in the most obvious manner imaginable. The way it beats viewers over the head with long monologues is the only misstep of an otherwise taut, engaging crime thriller.



It's always a dangerous move when actors, especially well-known movie stars, decide to move behind the camera due to the fact that their directorial efforts are at risk of being subsumed by their work in front of the camera, not to mention such a decision is also often perceived as a power move. However, over recent years, the Oscar committee have rewarded well-known actors who've proved themselves to be skilled directors; giving gold statues to such stars as Robert Redford, Kevin Costner, Clint Eastwood and Mel Gibson for their directorial work. With Gone Baby Gone, Ben Affleck can add his name to the list of stars who have successfully pulled off the transition. It's not exactly surprising that Affleck - a high-profile actor with a wildly variable body of work in both style and quality, and who almost lost his career due to tabloid scrutiny - did everything possible to ensure his directorial debut would be taken seriously, and employed every ounce of his directorial skill to do justice to the source material (reportedly Affleck's favourite book).


Ben Affleck has helmed the film with a remarkable amount of skill and confidence (especially for an inexperienced filmmaker). For several sequences, Affleck and director of photography John Toll favoured the use of handheld cameras, with lots of movement to underscore the characters' emotions. On top of this, Affleck's work appears to emulate the gritty crime pictures of William Friedkin and Martin Scorsese - his vision of Boston is not far removed from the hellhole that New York City was depicted as back in the '70s. Gone Baby Gone is a detail-rich film, an atmosphere-rich film, and inexorably a Boston film - it's brimming with local colour, from the accents to the slang. Meanwhile, the extras are dripping with authenticity, and this is because Affleck used actual locals as well as professionals to occupy the background. Gone Baby Gone is permeated by the sense of a real world inhabited by real people, rather than meticulously produced sets on a soundstage inhabited by Hollywood hopefuls. For the finicky detail Nazis, Affleck has directed motion pictures in the past, but Gone Baby Gone is the first of his efforts to reach the multiplexes.



Taking the lead role here is Casey Affleck, yet the casting is simply far too superb to be dismissed as the choice of a freshman director electing his easiest option. Casey, who earned an Academy Award nomination for The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, is extraordinary as Patrick Kenzie; bringing an understated intelligence, a quiet confidence, and an explosive ferocity to the role. Michelle Monaghan is well-paired with Casey, and submits a similarly superb performance. Luckily, the supporting cast is equally impressive, with the always-reliable Morgan Freeman submitting a scene-stealing performance as a police captain, and the duo of Ed Harris and John Ashton both placing forth highly compelling work. The sole Academy Award nomination Gone Baby Gone received was for Amy Ryan's performance as Helene McCready. Though by no means the most note-worthy aspect of the production as the nomination may imply, Ryan nonetheless presents a riveting portrait of a woman who loses her daughter.


Gone Baby Gone is a smart and remarkably honest motion picture, and it's riddled with moral questions that challenge the notion of what's truly right without pretending to offer clean, convenient answers. Commendably, it also manages to be emotionally wrenching without revelling in any syrupy melodrama or resorting to manipulation - the impact is earned from sure-handed direction, a phenomenal cast, and one hell of a script. It's this reviewer's fondest wish that Ben Affleck writes and directs more movies as excellent as this highly satisfying, morally complex crime thriller.

9.2/10



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The Loss of Innocence.

Posted : 15 years, 2 months ago on 17 February 2009 04:17

''I couldn't stop running it over and over and over in my mind. The vague and distant suspicion that we never understood what happened that night; what our role was. Or maybe it was just like the hundreds of other children who disappear each year and never return. Amanda was even more haunting for never being found.''

Two Boston area detectives investigate a little girl's kidnapping, which ultimately turns into a crisis both professionally and personally. Based on the Dennis Lehane novel.

Casey Affleck: Patrick Kenzie

In his directorial debut, Ben Affleck has completely morphed himself into an emerging artist and even more talented director. Gone Baby Gone might be the most innovative and moral challenging film of recent years. This is the story of young Amanda, a little girl who mysteriously disappears from her home and the activity and dangers that befall upon the people involved in her rescue.



The film stars Affleck's brother Casey as Patrick, in his most challenging and engrossing performance to date. Not since Sean Penn in Mystic River has a role been so subdued yet immensely victorious and depth defying in choice of delivery and spot on emotions. Casey Affleck has paved the way for himself in roles that demonstrate the actor's showcase and give the performer range. It's a bit odd what to make of the younger Affleck in the upcoming awards season. He fairs a better shot for his earlier raved performance in The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford for a nomination, but his performance in Gone Baby Gone is just as important.
Ed Harris, who's been long overdue for Oscar recognition is purely haunting in his role as Remy, a hard-nosed cop looking for young Amanda. In one scene in particular, Harris shines and gives his best portrayal since The Hours. Although his character is a bit one-dimensional, Harris elevates the material and turns it into his show and steals frame after frame in a role easily submerged in a picture like this.
Morgan Freeman, in a role we have not seen him in before, plays Captain Jack Doyle, the head of the missing persons unit with personal experience in the loss of a child. Freeman, although absent for most of the narrative, sugar coats the top acting talent in the picture. Freeman's agenda into more range projects in his older career is reaffirming his Oscar win in 2003 for Million Dollar Baby, but now with the more rewarding films worthy of consideration.
Michelle Monaghan plays Angie, Patrick's significant other who's personal fears interfere with her involvement in the case. To be honest, Monaghan gets lost in the shuffle and while the audience empathizes with her throughout the latter of the film, she's placed into a role easily overshadowed by stronger supporting casting. Perhaps being the only strong woman role would have gave us something to awe at, but not with the guns at full blaze at the hands of Amy Ryan.
Ryan plays Amanda's mother Helene, definitely not the most likable of characters but tragic in character arc. It's like a full on tennis match going back and forth with Ryan and audience; the viewer is hating her one moment and then needing to hold her the next. Helene is multi-layered and grasps her own importance of parenting and the whole film it becomes a fallen angel lost in the crossfire of conception. That is the tragedy of the film, a film not only about the loss of a little girl, but the loss of innocence and the torment that betrayal brings, guilt and corruption can weigh heavily upon our very soul.

Ben Affleck is completely in control of proceedings, which he has lacked in his acting. He knows what the mission is of this picture and would gladly take a spot amongst some bigger, older talents among Oscar prospects this year. Along with Co-adapting the film with Aaron Stockard, if Oscar is feeling like inviting Affleck to the Kodak, the screenplay category seems like a better fit, especially with an already win for Good Will Hunting. Other possibilities for consideration is wonderful cinematography by John Toll and a great musical score by Harry Gregson-Williams.

Comparisons to Mystic River are all about, being done by the same author how could we expect no less. Mystic River had more of the message of the domino effect of one's actions on others, Gone Baby Gone brings it to a whole new level and scope. This film is about a society, a society who has lost the importance of innocence and the beauty of life. It focuses on the beauty of children and rest assure, when the film is over, if you're not yearning to be a better parent of embrace a child as a blessing, there is probably emptiness in your chest. This film is altogether realistic, truthful, beautiful and spectacular. A must-see film of the year and a pleasant surprise coming from Ben Affleck.


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Excellently made film.

Posted : 16 years, 1 month ago on 1 March 2008 04:22

"Gone baby gone" is an excellent piece of filmmaking. I thought it was one of the best films of 2007, and I highly enjoyed it. The character development is excellent. Casey Affleck, put on a great acting show, and did not disappoint. His acting might be better than his brothers. Morgan Freeman was great in this film as well. His acting was one of the strong points of this film. All of the supporting cast was also excellent including Ed Harris, Amy Ryan, Michelle Monaghan, and many others. The story was extremely in depth, and I did not see any plot holes. The cinematography was beautiful, and made the film much more enjoyable. This is an excellently made film.


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