Tags
Language
Tags
May 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
28 29 30 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 1

Arlington Road (1999)

Posted By: Someonelse
Arlington Road (1999)

Arlington Road (1999)
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | Cover + DVD Scan | 01:57:34 | 6,09 Gb
Audio: Engish AC3 5.1/2.0 @ 384/192 Kbps; Spanish, Portuguese - AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps (each)
Subtitles: English, Spanish, Portuguese
Genre: Mystery, Thriller

Director: Mark Pellington

Widowed when his FBI agent wife is killed in an operation against suspected terrorists, a college professor becomes increasingly obsessed with the culture and sub-society of these dangerous groups. The arrival of new neighbors, gives him new spirit, as they are gregarious and friendly, with a ten year old boy that his son can be friends with. He is even beginning to see another woman. However, he begins to suspect something is odd about the neighbors, something about the way they don't want him to see certain parts of the house, or a set of blueprints they have there. Are his neighbors terrorists… or is the stress of losing his wife merely driving him past the point of paranoia?

IMDB

Arlington Road (1999)

I am sure if Alfred Hitchcock had been around and making movies at the back end of the 90s he would have made "Arlington Road". It is the sort of thing which Hitchcock would have made, a thriller which grows building intrigue the longer it goes on, making you question everything before surprising you with various twists. In fact in some ways it is similar to Hitchcock's "The Man Who Knew to Much" with terrorists and kidnapped children but it is also more and although has a few flaws draws you in to the storyline and keeps your gripped to every single second as you are never sure how it will all end up.

Arlington Road (1999)

Still struggling to deal with the loss of his wife, an FBI agent, who died on an anti-terrorist operation, professor Michael Faraday (Jeff Bridges - Seabiscuit) is obsessed with the terrorist culture. But when he helps save an injured boy he meets his new neighbours, Oliver (Tim Robbins - Mystic River) and Cheryl Lang (Joan Cusack - Working Girl) who along with their children befriend Michael and his son. But whilst Michael is initially grateful to have new friends he begins to suspect all is not as it seems in the Lang house and begins to wonder whether he has terrorists living next door.

Arlington Road (1999)

"Arlington Road" starts in quite a shocking manner, a state of confusion as we watch this injured child walking down the middle of a road cradling his bloody arm. It's distressing and intentionally confusing but provides a powerful intro to the movie and the initial set up of Michael Faraday and his neighbours the Lang's. What follows is layers of background storyline where we learn that Faraday's wife, an FBI agent, died whilst tracking down a suspected terrorist, that his son hasn't got over the death of his mother and to be honest nor as he as he is infatuated by terrorist activities. It's a brilliant clever build up because grabs your attention and keeps it whilst we learn about the important characters.

Arlington Road (1999)

Set up out of the way and "Arlington Road" steps up a gear as Michael begins to question who the Lang's are as he becomes suspicious. It continues to build as he becomes more and more suspicious of them and starts digging around in their backgrounds expecting them of being terrorists. It is all very clever stuff and surprisingly feasible as we learn things which are cleverly explained in the narrative such as why Oliver Lang changed his name when he was younger. And what this does is make you question things, are the Lang's terrorists, has Faraday's obsession with terrorists become paranoia and are his friends really his friends. Whilst visually it's not Hitchcock, the way "Arlington Road" makes you question, makes you second guess what is what most certainly is.

Arlington Road (1999)

And then as it reaches the pinnacle having drawn us in to this intriguing story causing us to question everyone and everything it brings in an element of action. But rather than letting the action dominate the climax it enhances it as Faraday becomes convinced that Oliver Lang and his wife are terrorists. And as intentionally confusing as the storyline is the frenetic styling of the action just adds to the heady sensation of chaos especially as Faraday is pushed to the point of breaking, a deranged mess of a man.

Arlington Road (1999)

As such part of the reason why "Arlington Road" is so good is that it features Jeff Bridges on stellar form as Michael Faraday. Bridges delivers such a believable dad, the single father who is trying to look after his son whilst dealing with an underlying emotional rage over the death of his wife. And he keeps it believable when Michael begins to doubt his neighbours creating a character which could be right but also could be paranoid before going full out deranged. But Bridges is not alone and Tim Robbins is just as impressive as neighbour Oliver Lang making him mysterious, dangerous and a little creepy without being a caricature. Robbins makes Lang real but makes him an uneasy character someone we can suspect of hiding something but equally someone who is just that little bit edgy. The one on one scenes between Bridges and Robbins are brilliant, intense to the point it gets you on the edge of your seat.

Arlington Road (1999)

Jeff Bridges and Tim Robbins are not alone in giving brilliant performances as "Arlington Road" has a solid cast. Joan Cusack as Cheryl Lang is perfectly creepy, making us question her from the start but then adding a touch of normality so we actually feel bad for doubting her. And then there is Hope Davis and Robert Gossett who both deliver strong performances making their background characters more than just 2 dimensional props.

Arlington Road (1999)

What this all boils down to is that "Arlington Road" is a very good thriller, a thriller which I am sure Hitchcock would have made if he had still been alive. It draws you into the story building a sense of intrigue which makes you question and doubt everything before giving a frenetic, action packed climax which packs a few surprises. It's not perfect but great performances from Jeff Bridges and Tim Robbins as well as solid direction from Mark Pellington makes up for the few minor issues.
Arlington Road (1999)

Special Features:
- Audio Commentary by Director Mark Pellington and Actor Jeff Bridges
- "Hidden Vulnerability" making-of featurette (19:33)
- Theatrical Trailers: "Arlington Road" (2:32), "The Last Picture Show" (2:54), "Starman" (2:21)
- Talent Files: Jeff Bridges (2 pages), Tim Robbins (2 pages), Joan Cusack (2 pages), Mark Pellington (2 pages)
- Alternate Ending (9:59)

Many Thanks to Original uploader.


If you want to download it, but found out that links are dead,
just leave a comment or PM me!


No More Mirrors.