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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: Unrated
Binding: DVD
Brand: Warner Brothers
EAN: 9780790782942
Format: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, NTSC
ISBN: 0790782944
Label: Warner Home Video
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Warner Home Video
Region Code: 1
Release Date: August 17, 2004
Running Time: 103 minutes
Sales Rank: 38102
Studio: Warner Home Video
Theatrical Release Date: March 19, 2004
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Editorial Review:
Description: A psychological thriller, Taking Lives is the story of an FBI agent who becomes involved with her key witness while tracking a prolific serial killer who assumes the lives and identities of the people he kills. She finds herself surrounded by numerous suspects and no one to trust.
DVD Features: Documentaries:Four probing documentaries with the Cast and Crew. * The Art of Collaboration: How the filmmaking team came together * Profiling a Director: Inside D.J. Caruso's Mind * Bodies of Evidence: Stars confess their secrets of working on an ultra-intense thriller * Puzzle Within The Puzzle: The teamwork of Caruso and veteran editor Anne V. Coates Outtakes Theatrical Trailer
Amazon.com: While it doesn't rank with such grim classics as The Silence of the Lambs and Seven, D.J. Caruso's Taking Lives offers similarly heavy atmosphere, beginning well before fizzling into absurdity. Freely adapted from the novel by Michael Pye, and set in Montreal (although it was filmed in Quebec City), the plot trades in several familiar tropes of the serial-killer genre, beginning with the FBI agent (Angelina Jolie) who brings her unique skills (and brooding, low-key demeanor) to the vexing case of a killer who, out of apparent self-loathing, steals the identities of his victims and lives their lives until it's time for the next gruesome murder. Ethan Hawke plays the killer's alleged next victim, and in a film filled with twists that grow increasingly unconvincing, Keifer Sutherland is menacingly cast as a shifty suspect. Caruso's previous film was the creepy drug thriller The Salton Sea, so he's well-qualified to infuse Taking Lives with a darkly stylish sense of dread and at least one good shock to keep your adrenaline flowing. The second half essentially betrays the promise of the first, but there's enough going on to hold your interest to the end. --Jeff Shannon
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - So-so serial killer thriller
"Taking Lives" had a lot of potential. You've got an interesting story. FBI Profiler, Illeana Scott (Angelina Jolie) is a stranger in a strange land, Montreal Canada. She's been sent there to help track down a serial killer who assumes the lives of the people he's killed and thus becomes pretty untraceable. In the process, she falls for the only witness Art Dealer Costa (Ethan Hawke) who was the only witness to the first crime.
The film offers some serious action and interesting twists, but nothing you wouldn't see on television save for a pretty steamy scene between Scott and Costa which earns the film its R-rating.
The problem is, the film's slow and not quite believable on several levels. It is great if you are a serious fan of either Hawke or Jolie.
Rebecca Kyle, October 2008
Rating: - Taking Time
I have no idea why this movie was on my Netflix list, but after watching all those Ashley Judd movies I figure Angelina Jolie deserves at least as much of a chance.
Taking Lives is the usual FBI agent stalks the serial killer plot. Pretty/creepy FBI agent, Illeana (Angelina Jolie) is a drop-dead hottie who wears a wedding ring to avoid men asking her out, turns down everyone who asks her out, and likes to sleep in graves to literally walk in the footsteps of her victims. You see, Illeana is the best agent for this sort of case, and presumably anyone interested in catching a serial killer has to be a little strange herself. This supposed brilliance almost never actually appears in the film, unless you count breathless close-ups of Illeana staring at pictures or laying in graves.
Illeana is pursuing a serial killer. This serial killer takes peoples' lives and lives in them, "like a hermit crab." He looks for single men with few attachments who won't be missed for months at a time. Why? Because his mother, Mrs. Asher (Gena Rowlands), believed her son killed his twin brother in a boating accident and kept him locked up in the basement for years at a time. So our bad guy wants to live other peoples' lives because...he has really, really low self-esteem. Sure, okay.
For reasons that seem only to further muddle the plot, all this takes place in Canada. There are several actors in Taking Lives who are most assuredly esteemed thespians in their home country ... Read More
Rating: - Searching for a Serial Killer
A man is struck on a highway. Another man takes his wallet and hits his face with a rock. We see newspaper reports of other dead men. Is there a connection between them? (Is the height of 5'10" average?) Then a woman goes to the police, she has seen her dangerous son. The Montreal police have sent for an expert; she gives her opinions about the killer (profiling). Then there is a fresh killing with a witness. The police question the witness about the murder. [Is there corroboration?] A tip brings them to a suspect's empty apartment. But is it empty? More leads turn up and have to be investigated. One involves exhuming a body, the bones testify to an identity. Special Agent Scott discovers a clue about the killer, and theorizes what caused the murders.
Will the trap set by the police catch the killer? If it fails will they try again? There is a very dramatic scene and a chase that seems too clever. The plan to send the witness away goes awry. The scenes seem incredible, as if the story was changed for dramatic action. [But the time element says there is more to this story.] We soon learn about the shocking surprise to this story. The chase is on again. Can they find a needle in the haystack? Agent Scott leaves for a new life. [Believable?] There is another shocking surprise at the end of this story. [Credible to you?]
A better plot, less overly complicated and more believable, would make a better film. There was no reference or use of scientific evidence gathering in this ... Read More
Rating: - intelligent thriller (4.9/5)
i thought this was a very intelligent,well written thriller.the music
puts you on edge from the beginning.the movie has a great dark
atmosphere.there are enough red herrings to keep you guessing,and some
great intensity.this is a very dark,disturbing movie and is also very
graphic at times.to me,this was much better than your standard crime
drama/mystery/thriller.i liked Angelina Jolie's performance as an FBI
profiler .her performance is very subdued,almost sublime,and it
works,in my opinion.the best serial killer movie ever made,in my
mind,is Copycat,at least so far.this one isn't quite as intense,but
it's still a great movie.Like the Bone Collector,also starring Angelina
Jolie(and Denzel Washington)i'd have to rate taking Lives a 4.9/5
Rating: - Killing Time
There's an old expression that claims, "In Hell, the chefs are English, the engineers are Italian, and the comedians are Swiss." Perhaps it's time to add, "Film murder mysteries are Canadian." Test this theory out sometime. The next time you're watching an alleged thriller and find yourself checking to see if Reno 911 is on, look carefully for telltale signs of Canadian-ism. Casual flipping back and forth between French and English? An uncomfortably high number of ice hockey references? Back bacon omnipresent? If your thriller has had a thrill-ectomy, chances are good it's flying a maple leaf flag.
As with comedy, cliff diving, and juggling machetes - thrillers live or die with timing. Canadian thrillers almost invariably use 10 beats where 4 would have been too many and 2 not quite enough. Dramatic tension, creepiness, and anxiety must be cared for and nourished, like pets, if one expects them to survive the long fallow periods separating gruesome revelations. Take a movie like Seven, for instance - almost a textbook example of perfect timing and the gradual escalation of anxiety until it reaches unbearable extremes. If 7 is a 10, Taking Lives is a 4 in the timing department.
The biggest disappointment of this film is that it squanders a very interesting idea. The killer sheds identities like snakeskins, taking over the lives of his victims, moving sequentially through an ongoing chain of assumed personalities. This is a fascinating psychological profile, way ... Read More
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