Source Code

Jake Gyllenhaal  Actor Michelle Monaghan  Actor Vera Farmiga  Actor Jeffrey Wright  Actor Michael Arden  Actor

PG13

MPAA Rating: PG13
Contains:Violence,Profanity

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Source Code

Theatrical Release Date: 2011 04 01 (USA)

UPC: 025192104893

Studio: Summit

MPAA Rating: PG13   Contains:[Violence, Profanity]

Summary: Jake Gyllenhaal headlines this sci-fi time-travel thriller directed by Moon's Duncan Jones from a script by Ben Ripley and Billy Ray. A bomb explodes on a Chicago train, derailing the locomotive and killing hundreds. In an attempt to identify the bomber and prevent another, larger attack on downtown Chicago, Captain Colter Stevens (Gyllenhaal) agrees to take part in a clandestine government experiment dubbed "Source Code," which allows him to enter the body of a male passenger during the eight minutes before the man is killed. But during his first trip back, Capt. Stevens fails to gather enough clues to prevent the second attack. With time quickly running out, he repeats the mission ad nauseam in a desperate race to head off one of the most deadly terrorist attacks ever to take place on American soil. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

Category: Thriller

Awards: Film Presented – SXSW

Features: Audio Commentary with Director Duncan Jones, Writer Ben Ripley and Actor Jake Gyleenhaal

Source Code

Format: Blu-ray

Release Date: 07/26/2011

Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 Alternate Wide Screen

Audio: DHMA null, DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1, DD2 Dolby Digital Stereo

Runtime: 94 Minutes

Sides: 1

Number of Discs: 1

Language(s) English

Subtitles: English,Spanish

Region: USA & territories, Canada

Perry Seibert

If Rod Serling, Christopher Nolan, and Stephen Hawking had collaborated on a sci-fi remake of Groundhog Day, it might have come out a whole lot like Duncan Jones' Source Code. The film is so full of obvious subtext that it feels like an elongated Twilight Zone episode, but because it jumbles up time structures with such willing abandon, and ends with a nod toward the possibilities of the infinite, Jones' sci-fi thriller has an undeniably contemporary vibe. Jake Gyllenhaal plays Captain Colter Stevens, a brave military man seemingly trapped inside a dank cockpit-like container from which he has video and audio contact with Colleen Goodwin (Vera Farmiga), who, under orders from the stern Dr. Rutledge (Jeffrey Wright), forces Colter to relive the same few minutes of someone else's life over and over in order to find out who bombed a commuter train in Chicago that morning. Colter quickly memorizes the order of the events he sees repeated again and again, and through trial and error figures out how to manipulate his surroundings in order to get the information the mission requires. As he starts asking questions about the true nature of his mission, however, Colter uncovers the truth about himself, as well as the universe. Source Code is the kind of movie that draws in viewers by keeping them in the dark narratively. Tiny dollops of plot revelations are doled out intermittently until the whole picture is revealed in the film's closing minutes. For that to work, you need actors who are instantly sympathetic and can keep an audience hooked even if they're not sure why. Gyllenhaal does have that kind of charisma, although not necessarily in abundance, and the film is at its best when it's in whodunit mode, with our smart and charming hero slowly putting together the clues. However, this aspect of the movie takes a backseat to the sci-fi storyline going on at the command center, and those lengthy, dialogue-heavy sequences lack the immediacy and tension of the scenes on the train. During these scenes, Colter has nothing to do other than think and try to cajole explanations out of Colleen, who responds with portentous non-answers. This would work if there were a huge dramatic payoff at the end of the movie, but Jones' conception of how the universe works pretty much eliminates the possibility of drama. The ideas he has are fun to talk about -- it's not hard to imagine Jones hatching the whole project during lengthy late-night drug-and-alcohol-fueled conversations with friends -- but the movie itself seems entirely superfluous once he's laid out his grand design. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

Cast and Crew: Mark Gordon  Producer 
Hawk Koch  Executive Producer 
Philippe Rousselet  Producer 
Ben Ripley  Screenwriter 
Fabrice Gianfermi  Executive Producer 
Jeb Brody  Executive Producer 
Chris P. Bacon  Composer (Music Score) 
Jordan Wynn  Producer 
Duncan Jones  Director 
Jake Gyllenhaal  Actor 
Michelle Monaghan  Actor 
Vera Farmiga  Actor 
Jeffrey Wright  Actor 
Michael Arden  Actor 
Cas Anvar  Actor 
Russell Peters  Actor 
Brent Skagford  Actor 
Craig Thomas  Actor 
Gordon Masten  Actor 
Susan Bain  Actor 
Paula Jean Hixson  Actor 
Lincoln Ward  Actor 
Kyle Gatehouse  Actor 
Albert Kwan  Actor 
Anne Day-Jones  Actor 
Clarice Byrne  Actor 
James A. Woods  Actor 
Joe Cobden  Actor 
Tom Tammi  Actor 
Matt Holland  Actor 
Jasson Finney  Actor 
Kyle Allatt  Actor 
Frederick De Grandpre  Actor 
Pierre LeBlanc  Actor 
Raynald Lapierre  Actor 
Scott Bakula  Actor 

Country: Canada,USA

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