Your Ad Here

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Movie : Taken

Share this history on :



Movie Info :

Title : Taken
Release Date: 23 January 2009 (USA),26 September 2008 (UK)
Genre: Action, Crime, Drama, Thriller, Adventure
MPAA Rating: PG-13
Starring: Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace, Famke Janssen, Katie Cassidy, Xander Berkeley, Olivier Rabourdin, Leland Orser, Jon Gries
Pierre Morel (director) / Luc Besson, Robert Mark Kamen (screenplay)
Writers (WGA): Luc Besson, Robert Mark Kamen
Director: Pierre Morel
Producers : Luc Besson, India Osborne, Pierre-Ange Le Pogam
Official Website : http://www.takenmovie.com/

Synopsis :

As the movie opens, the hero of the story, a divorced ex-CIA operative named Bryan Mills (Liam Neeson), is already paranoid about his 17-year old daughter, Kim (Maggie Grace) traveling to Paris for the first time with only one other friend, Amanda (Katie Cassidy). After initially refusing to sign consent for her to travel as a minor without parental supervision, he reluctantly agrees thinking that this may be his chance to bond with his estranged daughter since he has moved closer to her in L.A. although she has told more than a few lies to be able to slide past Bryan’s seemingly overbearing paranoid assumptions. Then, when she arrives in Paris and while on the phone with her, he overhears her being taken away by some group of men.



Movie Review :



By Nix

Here’s a little sound advice to all you would-be criminals out there: if the guy whose daughter you have just abducted tells you in a calm, cool, and incredibly collected voice that he’s going to find and kill you, then maybe you should listen. Having listened, it’s then time to get the hell away from whatever city you’re currently in, and if possible, dig a hole halfway to China and learn how to speak Molemanese. But of course, if the criminals in “Taken” were smart, they wouldn’t have just kidnapped Liam Neeson’s daughter in the first place, so maybe the point is moot. Those poor, poor bastards, they haven’t a clue about the world of hurt they’re about to get into.

“Taken” is a Luc Besson picture, so right away you should expect all semblance of real-world logic to fly out the window from frame one. As with all his movies, Besson and co-writer Robert Mark Kamen establishes their premise the quickest way they know how, so by minute 30 Maggie Grace has been abducted and Neeson, playing her father, is on his way to Paris for some “man on fire” investigating. And of course by “investigating” I mean he beats up everyone in his path, breaks a dozen or so collar bones, and generally shoots up the place. You know, standard “pissed off father who just happens to be an ex-CIA spy” stuff. And did I mention the torturing? Yeah, he does some of that, too. No outsourcing to a third world country here. This is a guy who likes to get his hands dirty. And of course by “dirty” I mean really, really bloody.

It appears some Albanian scumbags have taken Kim (Grace) the very day she landed in Paris with her BFF Amanda (Katie Cassidy), and they don’t exactly have nice plans for the buoyant 17-year old. Yes, that’s right, Maggie Grace plays a 17-year old girl in the movie, and boy does director Pierre Morel (“Banlieue 13”) have no idea how 17-year old California girls act, because Grace so overdoes the “I’m playing a 17-year old girl” part that she comes across as more 12, or maybe 11. Landing in Paris in no time flat thanks to the private jet of his ex-wife’s rich new husband, Bryan (Neeson) begins taking the Albanian white slavery ring apart, starting from the very bottom and working his way to the top. Much karate chopping, bone breaking, and bullet firing ensue.

Anyone who has seen “Batman Begins” (or before that, “Rob Roy”) probably won’t be too surprised to learn that the unassuming Liam Neeson, when given the opportunity, can kick ass with the best of them. Certainly a director who knows how to shoot action helps, but Neeson earns his star salary here, and is onscreen for pretty much the entire movie. Speaking of action, Luc Besson apprentice Pierre Morel offers up a couple of nifty moments, including a tense sequence that has Bryant literally waltzing into the lion’s den with a smooth as silk con. When Bryant goes into action, it’s fast and swift and most of all, brutally to the point. An average looking guy in every respect, Neeson pulls the action off like a champ, delivering precision strikes at throats, arms, and legs like he’s been doing it his entire life. Of course, rapid-fire editing helps, but then again, doesn’t the phrase “rapid-fire editing” go hand-in-hand with action movies nowadays? Ask Matt Damon if he can really kick all that ass.

Unsurprisingly for a Luc Besson actioner, the supporting cast come and go as the plot dictates, leaving no real impressions while they were onscreen. Maggie Grace disappears once she’s been kidnapped, and doesn’t show up again until the final few minutes. Famke Janssen, as Neeson’s ex, along with her new husband Xander Berkeley, are also only there to establish what a deadbeat dad Bryan has been, making his pursuit of his kidnapped daughter all the more desperate. There’s not even a main bad guy for Bryan to pursue, just different rungs of the white slavery ladder to be climbed. It also seems like half of France is involved in the criminal activity, and because Bryan is just so gosh darn efficient, most of them don’t last more than a few scenes before they’re dispatched with extreme prejudice. And just for kicks, Bryan even puts a bullet in one of the bad guys’ apparently innocent old lady. Now that’s hard core.

“Taken” isn’t going to win any awards, but if you’ve seen the trailers, you probably already know that. It’s a smooth actioner, barely 90 minutes long, and the film is one of those high-concept movies sold purely on its single logline: Ex-CIA guy kills half of Paris to get back his kidnapped daughter. Mind you, not that a movie that lives up to its most basic premise is such a bad thing. In fact, knowing Besson, if “Taken” proves to be successful at the box office, I wouldn’t rule out a “Taken 2”. Besson has never been one to shy away from sequels to moderately successful movies; heck, this would just mean he can squeeze out another movie in-between the 20 other action scripts he’s currently involved in next year. Give or take a dozen movies.



Pierre Morel (director) / Luc Besson, Robert Mark Kamen (screenplay)
CAST: Liam Neeson … Bryan
Maggie Grace … Kim
Famke Janssen … Lenore
Xander Berkeley … Stuart
Katie Cassidy … Amanda
Olivier Rabourdin … Jean Claude
Leland Orser … Sam
Jon Gries … Casey

Taken From : http://www.beyondhollywood.com



[OFFICIAL] TAKEN - TRAILER 2 [ 2nd TRAILER] [19 JUNE 2008]



No comments: