Genre: Thriller/Action/Crime
Director: Florent Siri
Starring: Bruce Willis, Kevin Pollak, Ben Foster,
Jonathan Tucker, Marshall Allman,
Michelle Horn, Jimmy Bennett, Tina Lifford, Kim Coates, Serena
Scott Thomas and Rob Knepper
RunTime: 1 hr 53 mins
Released By: Shaw
Rating: NC-16 (Violence)
Release
Date: 17 March 2005
Synopsis
:
Devastated
by a hostage situation that resulted in the deaths of a young
mother and her
child, LAPD negotiator Jeff Talley (Bruce Willis) exits Los
Angeles for a low-profile job as chief of
police in the low-crime town of Bristo Camino in Ventura County.
When three delinquent teenagers follow a family home intending
to steal their car, they inadvertently pick the wrong house
on the wrong day. The trio find themselves trapped in a multimillion
dollar compound on the outskirts of town owned by a corrupt
accountant. Panicked, the teenagers take the family hostage,
placing Talley in exactly the kind of situation he never wanted
to face again.
Soon after, Talley readily hands authority of the hostage
situation over to the Ventura County Sheriff’s Department
and leaves the scene. But inside the compound is digital information
critical to the mysterious criminals and their operation.
They will stop at nothing to get what belongs to them, including
taking Talley’s family hostage, forcing him to resume
the command he had abandoned. The stakes quickly evolve into
a situation far more volatile and terrifying than anything
he could ever imagine.
Movie
Review:
If you’re expecting shouts of “Yippee-kai-yay,”
this is not the film. If you’re expecting John McClane,
then I’m sorry for this is a far cry from that. But
if you’re expecting bullets galore and loud decibels
to whet your appetite for the lack of action films while bursting
your ears at the same time, then you’ve chosen the right
film.
The
plot centres on Detective Jeff Talley (Bruce Willis), a former
hostage negotiator, who gets stuck in the middle of a hostage
situation within a hostage situation. When a “smart”
house owned by Walter Smith (Kevin Pollak) gets intruded by
three delinquent juveniles (Ben Foster, Jonathan Tucker, Marshall
Allman), things get out of control, and they take Smith and
his children hostage. The second hostage situation arises
when an unknown source wants his DVD retrieved from the house
unscathed, taking Talley’s family hostage instead, forcing
the scarred Tally to save the Smith family, retrieve the DVD
and in turn, saving his own family.
If
you entered the theatre without knowing what film you’re
watching, it would be no surprise if you’d thought it
was Sin City. But no, that’s Bruce Willis’ next
vehicle. The introduction has a very Sin City, Ocean’s
Twelve and Metal Gear Solid-ish feel to it. It might have
been the colours and the video-game likeness it had that it
felt like you were given free reign of the analog control
on the Playstation. However, this was no surprise, when a
quick check prompted that the director, Florent Siri had previously
directed two Splinter Cell videogames. Siri does fairly well
in his virgin English language film, directing from a script
by Doug Richardson who is also the scribe for the upcoming
Die Hard 4. At this point, seriously, why could he not write
Hostage as Die Hard 4 instead? Bahhhhh…
Detective
Jeff Talley is by no means John McClane. If McClane was the
obnoxious, gun-wielding m**********r, then Talley’s
the torn, scarred family man. What the audience will be treated
to is a more subdued performance by Bruce Willis that it reminded
me of his character from Unbreakable. Nonetheless, his performance
in Hostage is applaudable though it’s far from his best
work. As Talley, Willis has to play a man with demons of the
past haunting him and at the same time, the family man who
has little time for them. He got himself into a picky spot
trying to play Talley, but he got himself out of there.
The
supporting cast rounded off the film quite nicely as they
fitted into the pieces of the puzzle. But, it felt as if most
of them were mainly just there as collateral damage. Ben Foster
who played Mars, has to be singled out for he stood out like
a sore thumb in his scenes. At times, he looked like a cross
between The Crow and a teenager headed towards the brink of
dementia. Not as freaky as Hannibal Lecter but about as freaky
as a paparazzi reporter.
Hostage
starts off on a right note, capturing the audience and throwing
them right smack into a tense hostage situation. But I must
admit that it almost lost me after three-quarters of the film
as it becomes a gamer’s haven. I felt appalled that
an ingenious script was turned into an out-of-control, shooting
frenzy that almost spiraled into a “Game Over”
situation. In the finale, Siri let loose of his reigns on
the film and allowed himself to be taken hostage by his love
for videogames. Except for the disappointing finale, the film
is a worthy ride if you’re into the action genre. It
holds you captive so closely that it almost feels claustrophobic.
Movie
Rating: B+
Review by Mohamad Shaifulbahri
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