Unknown Movie Review
Unknown Review
"Unknown" Overview

Rating: NR
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Simon BrandProducer : Rick Lashbrook,Darby Parker,John S. Schwartz
Screenwiter : Matthew Waynee
Starring : Jim Caviezel,Greg Kinnear,Barry Pepper,Joe Pantoliano,Jeremy Sisto,Peter Stormare,Bridget Moynahan
The way it plays out is elegantly simple: Five men find themselves in a
warehouse unsure of who they are or how they got there. One of the men is tied
to a chair. One is handcuffed to a railing and has been shot in the shoulder.
One has a broken nose. The remaining two are bruised and bloodied. The
warehouse is secured with bulletproof glass and bars. It's in a desert
somewhere. There is no hope of escape.
As the men talk memories filter back slowly: The man in the jean jacket (Jim
Caviezel, Passion of the Christ) recalls a violent kidnapping, the man with the
broken nose (Greg Kinnear) recalls running, the man in the rancher shirt (Barry
Pepper) is sure he can only trust one of them. They cannot decide if they
should free the bound man (Joe Pantoliano) or help the handcuffed man (Jeremy
Sisto) who is barely conscious. These desperate men slowly come to the
realization that they are all involved in a kidnapping that went horribly awry.
The question is: Who are the kidnappers and who are the kidnapped?
Matthew Waynee's taut and clever script is quite stunning in its setup. Few
films outside of the ridiculous Saw series have so deliciously intriguing a
start. Where Saw descended into butchery and sadism, Unknown plumbs the
psychological depths of the situation. Who can you trust? How quickly can you
remember who you really are? And even better, when you do remember, how do you
decide if you still want to be that person?
First-timer Simon Brand (a vet of music vids) dabbles in a few technical
whiz-bangs -- some fast cutting, a few fast forwards -- but avoids most of the
cliché camera swoops and '70s style zooms that have proliferated in crime
cinema since Tarantino dropped the Pulp Fiction bomb. Mostly he just lets his
fine cast do their best with the dialogue. Caviezel is again excellent, perhaps
a bit too stoic but believably confused. Barry Pepper is rugged and smart.
Kinnear plays a nice slimeball and Pantoliano is as annoying as ever. The cast
is rounded out by a few peripheral characters that appear outside the warehouse
(Peter Stormare, that wacky Swede; Bridget Moynahan) but to discuss them would
ruin the surprise.
While there are a few absurd and hoary plot devices -- the last minute reveal
(now required in any thriller) and the magical bathroom mirror as revealer of
truth for every character -- Unknown is fairly straightforward. In a very good
way, in fact. Devoid of Tarantino-isms and the shop talk that's become a staple
of crime flicks, Waynee's script is square-jawed and pragmatic. This film's
brief (a rigid 86 minutes) but thrilling defibrillator shock to the moribund
crime film genre.
The DVD includes a few deleted scenes.
Reviewer: Keith Breese



