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MOVIE REVIEW
'Captivity'Logic and taste take a holiday in this Elisha Cuthbert vehicle, another in a long line of torture films exploiting women.
By Robert Abele, Special to The Times
The vile billboards heralded it, the controversy stoked it, and now it's loose in public: "Captivity," the latest in check-in-but-don't-check-out torture films. A spirit-sapping exercise in female degradation fantasy, it was directed by Roland Joffé, who has seen his career go from bewailing "The Killing Fields" of Cambodia to slobbering over the hell-maze of a hooded kidnapper/murderer. It's the movie business equivalent of encountering someone you once knew begging for money on the street.
Here's a question: Why do movies with Rube Goldberg-style tormenting contraptions avoid screenplay reason? The dumb logic ranges from head-scratching — as in the abduction scene, where a famous model (Elisha Cuthbert) is strangely unencumbered by friends, reps or hangers-on at a charity event — to offensive, when we're asked to believe our later-confined heroine would strip and have hot sex with a handsome fellow abductee (Daniel Gillies), as if she could turn off her brain and imagine her death chamber as a danker-than-usual lovers' hideaway.
All others, remember that theaters have exits. They can be put to use too. "Captivity." MPAA rating: R for strong violence, torture, pervasive terror, grisly images, language and some sexual material. Running time: 1 hour, 25 minutes. In general release. To order a reprint of this article, please click here. |
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