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Untraceable (+ BD Live) [Blu-ray]


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Editorial Reviews:  
 
 
Within the FBI there exists a division dedicated to investigating and prosecuting criminals on the internet. Welcome to the front lines of the war on cybercrime, where special Agent Jennifer Marsh (Diane Lane) and Griffin Dowd (Colin Hanks) have seen it all - until now. A tech-savvy internet predator is displaying his graphic murders on his own website and the fate of each of his tormented captives is left in the hands of the public: the more hits his site gets, the faster his victims die. When this game of cat and mouse becomes personal, Marsh and her team must race against the clock to track down this technical mastermind who is virtually untraceable.
 
 
Untraceable fuses Saw with The Net in a perverse yet moralistic story about a psychopath who broadcasts acts of torture over the internet--all to better reveal the twisted underbelly of the American public, who hasten the victims' deaths simply by looking at the website. FBI agent Jennifer Marsh (Diane Lane, her mature-sexy mojo tamped down but still simmering in the corners of her eyes and the nape of her neck) launches a cyberhunt for the killer, only to find herself and her team caught up in his murderous scheme. It's hard to make tapping on a keyboard and staring at a computer screen exciting, but Untraceable does its best by making Marsh and her cybercrimebusting partner (Colin Hanks, King Kong) rattle off cascades of jaunty techno-jargon and do impressive bits of long-distance surveillance. The movie aims for the audience that flocked to see Ashley Judd in thrillers like Kiss the Girls and Double Jeopardy, but it's hard to say if fans of Lane's romantic fare like Under the Tuscan Sun or Must Like Dogs will enjoy the queasy violence. Nonetheless, the cast--including Mary Beth Hurt (The World According to Garp) as Marsh's mother--does a solid job and the movie clips along at an aggressive pace, maintaining tension throughout. --Bret Fetzer

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Beyond Untraceable

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UMD for PSP

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Untraceable (+ BD Live) [Blu-ray]

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User Comments About Untraceable (+ BD Live) [Blu-ray]
 
"The whole world wants to watch you die, and they don't even know you."
 

And soon, members of the task force find themselves targeted. I couldn't help watching the SAW films, and HOSTEL. It's certainly a far cry from SILENCE OF THE LAMBS, or SE7EN, or even SAW. It's too bad, because things do start out promisingly and ominously, and with a kitten. Hell, eons ago, I even saw FACES OF DEATH. It's like this.

Diane Lane and Colin Hanks play two federal agents working out of the FBI's Cyber Crimes Division who become part of a Portland task force assembled to catch a psychopath who conducts online torture and eventual murder of his abducted victims, all done on live streaming video. The visceral torture scenes in UNTRACEABLE invoke a sense of uneasiness, but the rest of the film simply can't maintain the squirmy suspense. Just because a character in the film says mystifying things like "We're blackholing those IPs." or "backdooring those Trojans," that does not a smart film make (and is it me or does "backdooring a Trojan" sound kinda not cool). But, after SAW and Rob Zombie's terrifying flicks, maybe my threshold for the grotesque and the disquieting is now just too high. Diane Lane is solid enough and lends a warmth to her character. The most disturbing things in the film may have been the crudity and mean-spiritedness generated on the snuff site's chat room window.

The website torture sequences are fraught with queasy tension and a certain sicko factor, so the film succeeds from that aspect. Because if it is, then I'll feel better about watching so many low taste films. The film's weak elements serve to drag the whole thing down. By that point, I didn't even mind.

Typically, annoyingly, the agents are undermined by a self-serving and officious boss, and I only wish that he'd been kidnapped and tortured. Yet the villain is unmemorable, and his identity really is revealed too early in the game (so there goes a chunk of the suspense). The world wide web can often times bring out the utter crud in people. It's genetics, right.

UNTRACEABLE, for all its aspirations to being a harrowing psychological techno-thriller, ends up mostly flat and uninteresting. But, by the hammer of Thor, that film had better not bore me. The hook to his website is that it's interactive. There's a triteness to the story, a certain plodding blah-ness to it, and certainly no jaw-dropping twists. This is the morbid onlooker's syndrome as transferred online, and it is unsavory stuff.

But the rest of the cast is unremarkable (sorry, Tom Hank's son). Is it in our DNA that we get our ya-yas gazing at horrifying things, that we can't at all avert our eyeballs. Note that Diane Lane's character is a widowed single mom, so concerns regarding her cute and curious daughter surface quite early. Then there's the anticlimactic and unsatisfying showdown between Diane Lane and the killer, followed by the film ending rather abruptly. And, like most, I'll take an inquisitive peek at a roadside accident. Here's a bit of a rant (sorry, dudes): There's a dubious credo subscribed to by a rude percentage of the web surfing community, that with the ability to anonymously log on comes a certain rush and also a rebuffing of consequences. UNTRACEABLE, being not at all an edgy film, failed to engage me.

Me, I'm not really one to talk. The more hits the site garners, the faster the torture goes, and the sooner the victim dies, thus rendering the viewer an accomplice to murder. As the FBI and the Portland police desperately pursue leads - but mostly flounder around, feeling helpless - the killer begins to engage them in a cat & mouse game. Fine by me. A film can flirt with snuff & torturerama and then can have the gall to sermonize about voyeurism and the growing desensitizing of the masses. Can't lay the blame too much on Diane Lane (although her character does some unclever things).



Serial Killer Thriller
 

This casts a dark cloud of foreboding over the proceedings. Elevated by the presence of Diane Lane, it combines the procedural nature of "Zodiac," the cat-and-mouse interplay of "Silence of the Lambs," and the ghastly images of "Seven." Lane gives her character authority and intelligence. This is sort of a running gag in a film that is otherwise deadly serious in tone. An early scene shows how effectively she does her job.

About halfway through the movie, however, the turf becomes all too familiar. A new website, KillWithMe.com, pops up with real images of a cat innocently lapping up milk from a saucer. If handled with tact, it can underscore drama and add tremendous tension. Burke's Detective Box is the typical movie cop strong, resourceful, efficient, resolved, yet impotent because he's up against something he's never encountered before. Screen violence is not always reprehensible.

The images are disturbing, but without them, the movie would be just another TV flick. "Untraceable," starring Diane Lane as Jennifer Marsh, head of the FBI Portland Cyber Crimes unit, uses as background gruesome, horrifically twisted crimes. What's more, he seems to enjoy baffling the authorities while brazenly continuing his bizarre program of murder. The computer hacker has arranged that, the more people hit the website, the faster the cat will be killed through a contraption he's hooked up. . "Untraceable" is competently made and benefits from a solid, believable performance by Lane, a good supporting cast, and a series of disturbing set pieces depicting the assorted ways in which the killer lays the groundwork for his victims' demise.

Rated R for strong images of violence and language, "Untraceable" is a well made thriller. Because the deaths are keyed to hits by computer users, the victims are slowly tortured to death. Compared to such recent movies as the "Saw" and "Hostel" franchises, "Untraceable" is fairly tame. When she is thoroughly perplexed and rendered helpless in the wake of this new, horrrifying crime, we see her frustration and determination to shut down the website and nail the perpetrator.

As in countless thrillers before it, "Untraceable" switches gears into formula, making its resolution both predictable and disappointing. Despite all-out efforts on the part of the FBI and local police, the killer appears unstoppable. Colin Hanks (Tom's son) plays Jennifer's cyber crimes partner, Griffin Dowd, whose job always seems to interfere with his attempts to meet interesting, eligible women.

Soon after, the stakes are raised when a human being appears on the website, his destiny linked to the number of curiosity seekers who tune in to watch. Teamed with local Portland police Detective Eric Box (Billy Burke), Jennifer races to close down the website and find the hacker/killer.

Both are bright, both have the ability to checkmate the other's moves, and both are motivated to prevail. So it's a game of wits, really, between Jennifer and the killer, whose identity is not revealed until halfway through the movie. It uses its grisly images as integral plot points, not as the centerpiece and raison d'etre.



Not for Cat or animal people
 

If you are a cat person to preserve your sanity do not watch this movie. At minimum skip the first 15 to 20 minutes.



Untraceable (Blue Ray)
 

If you are squeamish at all don't watch this, but if you like suspense till the end than this is for you. This movie was very intense. I couldn't watch the whole thing the first time. I just wasn't in the mood. The second time I watched with friends and it was intense, but it was very good.



I hope the real life FBI agents are smarter than these guys...
 

If somebody was murdered by hundreds of heating lamps. And of course the killer was hiding in the back seat the whole time. at least put some effort into writing a decent script. The main character, who is a trained FBI agent has no idea how to protect herself knowing that someone's out there to kill her.

But come on. . So many plot holes. Do they think it's a football game. maybe the FBI should try to find out who the heck bought all those lamps.

and now that it's started back up again. A middle schooler. yes, things are getting perverted and people are getting more and more desensitized. Are you kidding me. I understand what they're trying to say. she enters the freaking car without even checking it out.

Her car got broken into and reprogrammed (huh).

Who the heck wrote this script.

And what's with the FBI agents cheering as the main character kills the killer at the end.

Her computer gets broken into.and she's supposed to be a cybercrime expert.

If somebody got burned to death in a pool of sulfuric acid, maybe, just maybe, they need to find out who purchased tanks and tanks of sulfuric acid.

It's not one of those everyday items you buy at your local walmart.

Are you kidding me.

What.

It's scary.



 

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