When 4 year old Amanda McCready disappears from her home and the police make little headway in solving the case, the girl's aunt, Beatrice McCready hires two private detectives, Patrick Kenzie and Angie Gennaro. The detectives freely admit that they have little experience with this type of case, but the family wants them for two reasons—they're not cops and they know the tough neighborhood in which they all live.
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Reviews
Entertaining from beginning to end, it maintains the spirit of the franchise while establishing it's own seal with a fun cast
The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.
The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
I am a BIG movie buff and can spend days watching them. When I saw this one had Morgan Freeman in it I felt sure I was in for a good movie.....Absolutely not, this movie is so slow and so boring. Casey Affleck really needs to brush up on his speech as I found him really annoying in this movie. Could not follow his dialogue.........very frustrating...... would not recommend this film to anybody......YAWN.....! No offence....just being honest and giving my opinion. BTW, I have never given a review before NOW. Dx
This is the film I created an IMDB account for, just to bring its rating down. And I have watched many, many rubbish films before I felt the need. It must have been the pending GDPR that drove me to it. Anyway. This tv-film scores 7.7 at this moment and for the life of me, I can't imagine why. Grey's Anatomy scores .1 less and that has been running for 14 years!Woe statistics. Anyway.. "Gone baby gone" is a mediocre detective, set in purely American circumstances with a completely foreign (possibly American) idea of justice, child care and social support. And Casey Afflecks voice. That alone should have scored 4.9 or less. You know there's a genre called psychological thriller? Well, this has no psychology in it AT ALL. No depth, not even a good talk. Just guns and assumptions. Boring.
'Gone Baby Gone' is one of the strongest and most realistic mystery/drama films of the last decade. It is often difficult to buy into the storyline of films like this, either because they are too far- fetched, or the plot isn't properly developed. This isn't the case with 'Gone Baby Gone', it is very well-written and the characters all feel very realistic.This is a drama film more than anything and there is a lot of emphasis on the dialogue. The viewer has to pay attention to pick up on plot developments and the film has some very good and well-timed twists. I was impressed and thought that 'Gone Baby Gone' was a good film all round, with a convincing and well constructed plot and an interesting and realistic bunch of characters.
Ben Affleck has shed beautiful light on his talent as an actor on screen. But about his talent behind the camera? Making his directorial debut, Affleck crafts a dark and twisted tale about every parent's worst nightmare: the kidnapping of a child. Packed with unexpected twists and powerful emotional resonance to keep the heart pounding to its very last breath, Gone Baby Gone is an uncomfortably profound experience that dares to leave you convinced of the unsettling events that unfold on screen, the opening minutes of exposition, to the shocking twist of moral dilemmas and the blurred lines between right and wrong. By no means is this a comfortable picture to sit through. It is dark, grisly story where the moments are levity are as scarce as water in the desert. After all, the events are inspired by the novel of the same name by Dennis Lehane who also wrote 'Mystic River'. Set in Boston, the director's hometown, this film follows Patrick Kenzie (played by Casey Affleck, Ben's younger brother) and Angie Gennaro (played by Michelle Monaghan), two private detectives who are hired by Lionel (played by Titus Welliver) and Bea McCready (played by Amy Madigan) to go under investigation for their missing four-year-old niece Amanda, initially against the will of her drug-addicted mother (played by Amy Ryan). As the two dive deeper and deeper into the investigation, they are confronted with suspicious secrets involving local drug dealers, gang members, and the local law enforcement that leaves them questioning everything they about this case. Thanks to Ben Affleck, this is a mystery/thriller that avoids following the tracks of a straightforward narrative, but instead drives its stories through misdirection and moral ambiguity to leave you questioning every character involved with this case. Although the story takes a while to pick up with its slow exposition during the first half, it powerfully builds up the layers of the characters and sets up for the rigid complexity of the story. Much of this pays off during the final stretch when the lead character Patrick and Angie are forced to confront against the demons that threaten their moral pedestals. And Affleck captures the events with pure grit and emotional magnitude with just enough tension leave viewers shivering in their seats. Setting the action in the middle-class Boston is perhaps no surprise as Affleck knows the town very well, but he also uses this location to great advantage by capturing the dour environment of a place riddled with crime, drugs, and prostitution. Once the events finally reach a conclusion, there is still a sense of uncertainty underlined by moral ambiguity of the characters. At the end, viewers are likely to find themselves divided on whether the character made the right decision or not. It comes to show that no goods come without punishment. As for Casey Affleck, he puts on a great performance. Though nothing I would consider Oscar-worthy, it effectively shows he has the acting chops he rarely gets the demonstrate unlike his older brother. Michelle Monaghan makes good use of her talent as well. Again, nothing that shouts for Oscars. Morgan Freeman and Ed Harris, unsurprisingly put on blissful performances. Arguably the most profound display in the roster is Amy Ryan who makes a convincing impression of a mother with a low-life persona who nonetheless is anxious of finding her daughter, even though her volatile personality does little to show it. The movie never lets any of its inspiring stars go to waste. Gone Baby Gone is a profoundly riveting mystery/thriller with a patent of powerhouse performances, an uncompromising package of snappy twists and turns, and a surprisingly strong directorial efforts by Ben Affleck. It is not a pretty picture, it is a dark one bound to leave even the most desensitized viewers squirming in their seats. Bloody is also a word not worth leaving out. Above all, it proves Affleck has just as much charismatic talent behind the camera as does in front.