This is the action-movie machine, whereby special effects become the story rather than a logical result of the story.
Hostage (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:152
Fresh:53
Rotten:99
Average Rating:5/10
Consensus: Grisly and cliched, audiences may feel they're being held Hostage.
Synopsis: This well-made thriller harkens back to the gritty crime films of the 1970s. Bruce Willis plays Jeff Talley, a traumatized ex-LAPD hostage negotiator whose new career as small town sheriff doesn't... This well-made thriller harkens back to the gritty crime films of the 1970s. Bruce Willis plays Jeff Talley, a traumatized ex-LAPD hostage negotiator whose new career as small town sheriff doesn't turn out to be as restful as he had hoped; a hostage situation breaks out on "low crime Tuesday" and he is thrown right back into the business he knows all too well. Some punk kids have shot a cop and are holed up in a local mansion inhabited by crooked accountant Walter Smith (Kevin Pollak), his two kids, and a lot of surveillance cameras. Walter's young son (Jimmy Bennett) escapes his bonds and reports to Talley from the air shafts via his sister's cell phone. The sister--a Goth teen played by Michelle Horn--draws the romantic attention of Mars (Ben Foster), the pot-addled sociopath in the gang, thus adding a unique twist to the damsel-in-distress factor. Meanwhile, amid the buzzing helicopters and mobilizing S.W.A.T. teams, another group of bad guys has kidnapped Talley's wife and daughter, in order to force him to retrieve a secret disc in Walter's study. Florent Siri's efficient direction keeps the action flowing in unexpected directions while allowing for plenty of interesting procedural details and sly bits of humor. The score is ominous and the performances are strong, with Foster memorably creepy and Willis excellent as the frightened hero. [More]
Starring: Bruce Willis, Kevin Pollak, Jonathan Tucker, Serena Scott Thomas
Starring: Bruce Willis, Kevin Pollak, Jonathan Tucker, Serena Scott Thomas, Ben Foster, Johnny Messner, Robert Armstrong, Tina Lifford, Marjean Holden, Kim Coates, Michelle Horn, Jimmy Bennett
Director: Florent Emilio Siri
Director: Florent Emilio Siri
Screenwriter: Doug Richardson
Producer: Arnold Rifkin, Mark Gordon, Bob Yari, Bruce Willis, Richard D. Zanuck
Composer: Alexandre Desplat
Studio: Miramax Films
Reviews for Hostage
Bruce One-Ups the Genre He Helped to Pefect. Sadly, No one Came Along.
The end, which manages to rip off Aliens as well as every other cheesy crime drama ever made, was just too much for me.
Bombastic, audacious and slick, yes -- but in this genre, those are often good attributes.
The very thing that makes Hostage so good is the very same thing that may likely kill its chances at the box office: this film goes to some dark places.
Speaking of torture, if you dig it, by all means lock yourself up for two hours with Hostage, which begins by administering electric shocks to your viscera and keeps upping the voltage.
Any potential is squandered by implausibilities and a stunning lack of originality.
It starts as a tensely twist-filled action thriller, but through some serious missteps in logic and clichéd moments, it ends in a bloody mess.
For action movie fans who require just a touch of depth and mystery between gunshots, Hostage could make for a satisfying night at the movies.
I'd call it ugly and I'd be willing to bet that you won't see anyone climbing on a moral high horse in an attempt to shout it down. Someone should.
Strictly by the book: It's adapted from an airport best-seller by Robert Crais, and its scenes might as well be preceded with chapter headings.
The grisly death scenes make sense considering Director Florent Emilio Siri's used to direct video games...Yes, video games have directors today. And antacids have calcium.
Not that there's anything wrong with testosterone and senseless destruction as long as they're balanced by some true sense of heart and at least a smidgen of believability, neither of which survive here.
French director Florent Siri deserves good marks for ratcheting up the tension in parts, even if he goes cheesy with the overly dramatic music and too many slo-mo shots. Not bad, but hardly captivating.
The subplots are stacked up and nesting into each other like so many Russian dolls, and seeming every bit as precious.
Latest News for Hostage
December 27, 2006:
Foster a Vampire Groupie for "30 Days of Night"
After playing troubled, goth-influenced teens in projects like "Six Feet Under" and "Hostage," it's about time Ben Foster just went right to the vampires. In... More...
March 02, 2006:
Critical Consensus: A Swinging "Party," A Sweet and Sour "16"
This week's wide releases will take us on a journey. We'll walk a couple blocks ("16 Blocks," "Dave Chappelle's Block Party"), take a dip in the ocean... More...
July 18, 2005:
Ben Foster Will Spread His Wings for "X-Men 3"
Variety indicates that Ben Foster, best known for work in movies like "The Punisher" and "Hostage," will play the role of Warren Worthington III (a.k.a.... More...
June 17, 2005:
A Lot More Actors Climb Aboard the "Poseidon"
Last week we announced that Kurt Russell, Richard Dreyfuss, and Emmy Rossum had been signed to star in Wolfgang Petersen's remake of "The Poseidon Adventure," but The... More...
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