Genre: Drama/Crime
Director: Ben Affleck
Cast: Casey Affleck, Michelle Monaghan, Morgan
Freeman, Ed Harris, Amy Ryan
RunTime: 1 hr 54 mins
Released By: BVI
Rating: M18 (Coarse Language & Some Drug
References)
Official Website: http://www.gonebabygone-themovie.com
Opening Day: 31 January 2008 (Exclusive to
GV Plaza & GV VivoCity)
Synopsis:
"Gone Baby Gone" is Ben Affleck's directorial debut
and is based on the novel from the acclaimed author of "Mystic
River." It is an intense look inside an ongoing investigation
about the mysterious disappearance of a little girl. Two young
private detectives (Casey Affleck and Michelle Monaghan) are
hired to take a closer look at the case and soon discover
that nothing is what it seems. Ultimately, they will have
to risk everything -- their relationship, their sanity, and
even their lives -- to find a little girl-lost.
Movie Review:
Boston resides in the marrow of the Afflecks. Ben Affleck
directs his younger brother Casey to an arduously plaintive
performance as an amateur Boston gumshoe in his adaptation
of novelist Dennis Lehane’s “Gone Baby Gone”,
a film that is so quietly accumulative in power when its collapses
in morality become tangled in its web of inescapable rot,
and where those who seem to have good in them always get hurt.
When
4 year-old Amanda McCready is abducted from her working-class
Dorchester home, her aunt and uncle (Amy Madigan and Titus
Welliver) “augment” the limp search conducted
by the police when she hires local detectives Patrick Kenzie
(Casey Affleck) and his girlfriend Angie Gennaro (Michelle
Monaghan) to sift though the neighbourhood and extract information
from its distrusting merchants and volatile proles. The elder
Affleck adroitly portrays Boston’s inherent tribalism
and rotting facades with the duo’s tortured investigations
through the diseased surfaces that recede from the pale daylight
into shadows and grime, and eventually through the city’s
underground of venality so terrible a thing to imagine that
it gets under your skin and stays there.
Closer
to an affecting study of unravelling communal drama than a
riveting crime piece, this urban notturno draws on its mileage
when the investigation into the little girl’s disappearance
reveals dark secrets and a trail that leads in circles, discovering
more than what they sought to know about themselves. Characters
like the girl’s mother, a social parasite named Helene
(played fiercely by a noteworthy Amy Ryan), balances and evocates
the film’s residual outrage and pity for its ravaged
denizens. Further populated by magnificent performances from
Ed Harris and Morgan Freeman as jaded cops, it lends Affleck’s
directorial debut a confident swagger that allows focus on
the material, so unafraid of disturbing its audience, to keep
patience in its mauling eruptions of nihilism.
There's
both a deepness of procedurals and an authenticity of time
and place in the script’s constant turning of the screw,
the narrative wheels churn as damaged children and ineffectual
adults begin to take the stage. It just gets darker and more
intense in the film's inspection of gnarled human nature,
and the reasons that coerce it is at the centre of its slow-burning
style, giving it an effectively sustained dramatic tension
as its moral convictions become no less irreducible.
Ben
Affleck’s ambitious and unremittingly desolate purview
of his turbulent city is never intellectualised, but instead
remains meticulously modulated to the emotional resonance
of Kenzie as he journeys from one stinging moral decision
to another, evincing the confluence of conundrums that's entrenched
into the very fibres of the people we are and aspire to be.
“Gone Baby Gone” presents to us how warped and
strident individual instinctive moralities can be and what
the right thing truly entails in a world that remains unresponsive
to the inner cries of the film’s palpitating bleakness.
Movie
Rating:
(Textured filmmaking, the Affleck brothers are going from
strength to strength)
Review by Justin Deimen
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