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All-Reviews.com Movie/Video Review
Ransom
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  out of 4
 Review by Dragan Antulov 1 star out of 4
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Movies have delicate structure. Remove or misplace one marble in
the mosaic and the whole things comes crashing down. The best
illustration for that could be found in RANSOM, 1996 thriller
directed by Ron Howard.
The plot is based on Cyril Hume's and Richard Maibaum's script for
little known 1956 film starring Glen Ford (itself based on television
play). Protagonist is Tom Mullen (played by Mel Gibson), former
fighter pilot who has built lucrative airline from scratch and now
belongs to Manhattan social elite. His road to top included some
questionable business practices, but in private life Tom Mullen is a
devout family man, utterly loyal to his wife Kate (played by Rene
Russo) and 9-year old son Sean (played by Brawley Nolte). Little boy
becomes target of kidnappers led by corrupt NYPD detective Jimmy
Shaker (played by Gary Sinise). Distraught parents are soon faced
with 2 million US$ ransom demand. FBI Agent Lonnie Hawkins
(played by Delroy Lindo) advises them to pay the ransom, but the
first attempt is botched. Tom Mullen starts doubting that he would
ever see his son alive so he devises desperate scheme to turn tables
on kidnappers - instead of ransom, he publicly offers 2 million US$
as a bounty for their heads.
For the most part, RANSOM is surprisingly well-made thriller.
Characters are well-developed and multi-dimensional, their
motivations are believable and Piotr Sobocinski's photography adds a
lot to the gritty realism of the movie. The acting is also very good -
Mel Gibson is very convincing as a seemingly confident businessman
with his worst nightmare, while Gary Sinise gives chilling portrayal
of ruthless and intelligent villain. The script by Richard Price and
Alexander Ignon even allows room for some intelligent observations
about the state of class relations and corporate morality in
contemporary America. Even the movie's biggest plot twist looks
original (despite being over-advertised in movie trailers) and the
ending is simply brilliant... But the problem is that such ending is not
the real ending of RANSOM. Director Ron Howard is forced to abide
by the rules of 1990s Hollywood commercial cinema and deprive the
audience of the most logical and the most convincing finale. Instead
we are subjected to completely unnecessary 15 minutes that involve
shootouts, chases and utterly predictable outcome. Because of good
acting, RANSOM doesn't represent complete waste of time, but at the
end viewers would be left with the bitter taste of wasted opportunity.
Copyright © 2003 Dragan Antulov
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