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Proof of Life Movie Review
Proof of Life Review

"Proof of Life" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Taylor HackfordProducer : Charles Mulvehill,Taylor Hackford
Screenwiter : Tony Gilroy
Starring : Russell Crowe,Meg Ryan,David Morse,David Caruso,Pamela Reed
Good films are hard to find these days. Great films are beyond rare. Proof of
Life, Russell Crowe's one-two punch of a deft kidnap and rescue thriller, is
one of those rare gems. A taut drama laced with strong and subtle acting, an
intelligent script, and masterful directing, together it delivers something
virtually unheard of in the film industry these days, genuine motivation in a
story that rings true.
Consider the strange coincidence of Russell Crowe’s character in Proof of Life
making the moves on a distraught wife played by Meg Ryan’s character in the
film -- all while the real Russell Crowe was hitching up with married woman Meg
Ryan in the outside world. I haven’t seen this much chemistry between actors
since McQueen and MacGraw teamed up in Peckinpah’s masterpiece, The Getaway.
But enough with the gossip, let’s get to the review.
The film revolves around the kidnapping of Peter Bowman (David Morse), an
American engineer working in South America who is kidnapped during a mass
ambush of civilians by anti-government soldiers. Upon discovering his
identity, the rebel soldiers decide to ransom him for $6 million. The only
problem is that the company Peter Bowman works for is being auctioned off, and
no one will step forward with the money. With no choice available to her,
Bowman’s wife Alice (Ryan) hires Terry Thorne (Crowe), a highly skilled
negotiator and rescue operative, to arrange the return of her husband. But
when things go wrong -- as they always do in these situations -- Terry and his
team (which includes the most surprising casting choice of the year: David
Caruso) take matters into their own hands.
The film is notable in that it takes this very simple story line and creates a
complex and intelligent character-driven vehicle filled with well-written
dialogue, shades of motivation, and convincing acting by all the actors. The
script is based on both a book (The Long March To Freedom) and a magazine
article pertaining to kidnap/ransom situations, and the story has been sharply
pieced together by Tony Gilroy, screenwriter of The Devil’s Advocate and
Dolores Claiborne.
The biggest surprise for me was not the chemistry between Crowe and Ryan, but
that between Crowe and David Caruso. Dug out from B-movie hell, Caruso pulls
off a gutsy performance as Crowe’s right hand gun while providing most of the
film’s humor. Ryan cries a lot and smokes too many cigarettes, David Morse
ends up getting everyone at the guerilla camp to hate him, and Crowe provides
another memorable acting turn as the stoic, gunslinger character of Terry
Thorne.
The most memorable pieces of the film lie in its action scenes. The bulk of
those scenes, which bookend the movie, work extremely well as establishment and
closure devices for all of the story's characters. The scenes are skillfully
crafted and executed with amazing accuracy and poise. Director Taylor Hackford
mixes both his old-school style of filmmaking with the dizziness of a Lars Von
Trier film.
Proof of Life is a thinking man’s action movie. It is a film about the choices
men and women make in the face of love and war, and the sacrifices one makes
for those choices -- the sacrifices that help you sleep at night.
Crowe gets his Proof.
Reviewer: Max Messier
I agree with the above review. I found the movie very watchable and indeed I
have watched it several times. I enjoyed the interchange between Russell Crowe
and David Caruso. The chemistry between Meg Ryan and Crowe was "hot" even
though there was little onscreen action. Also you come to hate the cocaine
terrorists and really enjoy the action when they get blown away by the action
team of Crowe and Caruso. Kidnapping for money is a vile act that deserves a
brutal penalty. I thoroughly enjoyed the movie.
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