Town
Ben Affleck Actor , Rebecca Hall Actor , Jon Hamm Actor , Jeremy Renner Actor , Blake Lively Actor
MPAA Rating:
R
Contains:Violence,Profanity,Sexual Situations,Drug Content
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Town
Theatrical Release Date: 2008 (USA) / 2010 09 17 (USA) / 2009 (USA)
UPC: 883929106288
Studio: Warner Home Video
MPAA Rating: R Contains:[Violence, Profanity, Sexual Situations, Drug Content]
Summary: Boston bank robber Doug MacRay (Ben Affleck) falls for a woman his gang had previously taken hostage after feigning a chance meeting with her to ensure that she can't identify them in Affleck's adaptation of author Chuck Hogan's novel Prince of Thieves. The son of a tough Charlestown, MA thief, Doug passed on his chance to walk the straight and narrow in favor of becoming a career bank robber. Not only is Doug's crew one of the most ruthless in Boston, but they're also one of the best; they never leave a trace of evidence, and always make a clean break. Over the years, Doug's fearless partners in crime have become something of a surrogate family to him; Jem (Jeremy Renner), the most dangerous of the bunch, is the closest thing Doug has ever had to a brother. But a divide begins to open between the two career criminals when Jem takes bank manager Claire Keesey (Rebecca Hall) hostage during a particularly tense heist, and the group subsequently discovers that she hails from their own tight-knit suburb. When Jem proposes that the gang make an effort to find out just how much Claire recalls about the crime, Doug fears that his volatile partner may do more harm than good and volunteers himself for the job. Later, Doug turns on the charm while pretending to bump into Claire by chance, and becomes convinced that she doesn't suspect him of being the same man who just robbed her bank. As the feds turn up the heat on the gang, Doug finds himself falling for Claire, and searching desperately for a means of cutting his ties to his criminal past. But with each passing day, Jem grows increasingly suspicious of Doug's true motivations. Now caught between two worlds with no chance of turning back, Doug realizes that his only hope for finding a happy future is to betray the only family he's ever known. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Category: Crime
Awards: Film Presented – Toronto International Film Festival Best Ensemble Cast – National Board of Review Best Picture – National Board of Review Best Supporting Actor – Screen Actors Guild Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Adapted Screenplay – Writers Guild of America Best Adapted Screenplay – Writers Guild of America Best Adapted Screenplay – Writers Guild of America Best Supporting Actor (Runner-up) – National Society of Film Critics Best Art Direction in a Contemporary Film – Art Directors Guild Best Supporting Actor – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Supporting Actor – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Film Presented – Venice International Film Festival
Features:
The Real People of the Town - Meet The Real People of Charlestown
Ben Affleck: Director & Actor Profiles the Academy Award-Winning Filmmaker
Town
Format: DVD
Release Date: 12/17/2010
Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1
Runtime: 125 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Language(s) English,French,Spanish
Subtitles: English,French,Spanish
Region: USA & territories, Canada
Chapters:
Disc #1 -- Town
1. Scene 1 [10:13]
2. Scene 2 [7:36]
3. Scene 3 [11:28]
4. Scene 4 [9:25]
5. Scene 5 [11:56]
6. Scene 6 [7:57]
7. Scene 7 [2:43]
8. Scene 8 [7:42]
9. Scene 9 [8:23]
10. Scene 10 [10:36]
11. Scene 11 [9:49]
12. Scene 12 [10:43]
Jason Buchanan
Director/co-writer Ben Affleck delivers a satisfying blend of heist thrills and human drama in The Town, a tightly scripted adaptation of author Chuck Hogan's novel Prince of Thieves. Far from original yet confidently executed, Affleck's sophomore outing as a director shows that he has a good eye for action and character detail, two factors that help to keep The Town fresh even when it starts feeling overly familiar. It's easy to get caught on the film's ingenious hook (a bank robber discovers that a former hostage lives in his neighborhood, and befriends her in order to ensure she can't identify his gang), and the more screenwriters Affleck, Peter Craig, and Aaron Stockard reel us in, the clearer the film's theme about taking control of your own fate becomes. Yet despite the deeper subtext, it's the action that serves as the bait to draw us in, and once we bite on the opening scene, there's no letting go. In Charlestown, MA, bank robbery is a family business. Doug MacRay (Affleck) grew up there, and inherited the tools of the trade from his father, Stephen (Chris Cooper), a former thief serving a handful of consecutive life sentences for the slaying of two armored truck drivers. Unlike his father, Doug doesn't have a taste for violence, and prefers to leave the rough stuff to his volatile best friend and partner in crime, Jem (Jeremy Renner), who's quick with a pistol whip and twitchy on the trigger. When someone hits the alarm during their latest robbery, Jem takes bank manager Claire Keesey (Rebecca Hall) hostage, only freeing her once the gang has made a clean getaway. But when Jem checks her driver's license and realizes she lives just a few blocks away, he tells the gang that he's going to stalk her to see what she knows. Fearing that Jem's true intentions may be more insidious than precautionary, Doug volunteers for the job and quickly becomes romantically involved with Claire. Meanwhile, crafty FBI S.A. Adam Frawley (Jon Hamm) is given evidence that implicates one of Doug and Jem's colleagues in the recent robbery, and he starts to build a case against them. When a subsequent robbery goes awry and Ben announces that he's quitting the life, local heavy Fergus "Fergie" Colm (Pete Postlethwaite) forces him to take part in the ultimate heist -- a daring daytime robbery of Fenway Park. The Town fits snugly into the tradition of heist films featuring a sympathetic protagonist who seems to have fallen into his trade by fate rather than choice and is constantly searching for a way out. Caught between the grim reality of his situation and his optimistic hope for starting a new life, Affleck's working-class thug serves as an effective emotional access point for the viewer thanks to the fact that he operates by a strict (albeit criminal) code of ethics. And while his may be the most identifiable character in the film, Renner's and Hamm's remain the most compelling -- the former offering a carefully textured performance of a criminal who allowed his environment to shape his personality, and the latter portraying a lawman whose unnerving frankness and underhanded techniques have no doubt served him well over the course of his career. Hall handles the role of a trusting soul betrayed with the skill of a seasoned veteran, and Postlethwaite might just be the most menacing florist ever to befoul the big screen. Given his background in front of the camera, it comes as no surprise that Affleck is able to coax some convincing and impressive performances from his talented cast. The real revelation here is his ability to handle action; not only do his heist scenes display a particular talent for timing and tension, but a claustrophobic chase scene through the back alleys of Boston is more informed by a controlled 1970s aesthetic than the current trend toward camera flailing, and the approach helps to give the film a more timeless, classic feel than many of its flashy counterparts. Affleck deploys subtle character cues, such a as a timely cut to Renner after a telling line, and cleverly mirrors the robber's brutal techniques with those of the FBI during a chaotic raid in a way that keeps the story moving forward while simultaneously deepening the themes. As crime dramas go, The Town is a solid take on a tried-and-true genre with sly touches of dark humor that offer a satisfying sense of levity. Though it isn't the type of film that's likely to spark any major cinematic trends, it has all the familiar ingredients blended together in a way that gives its strengths more impact than its minor shortcomings, resulting in a genuine crowd pleaser. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Ben Affleck
Director
Ben Affleck
Screenwriter
William Fay
Executive Producer
Harry Gregson-Williams
Composer (Music Score)
Graham King
Producer
Jon Jashni
Executive Producer
Basil Iwanyk
Producer
David Crockett
Executive Producer
Thomas Tull
Executive Producer
Aaron Stockard
Screenwriter
David Buckley
Composer (Music Score)
Peter Craig
Screenwriter
Ben Affleck
Actor
Rebecca Hall
Actor
Jon Hamm
Actor
Jeremy Renner
Actor
Blake Lively
Actor
Slaine
Actor
Owen Burke
Actor
Titus Welliver
Actor
Pete Postlethwaite
Actor
Chris Cooper
Actor
Dennis McLaughlin
Actor
Corena Chase
Actor
Brian Scannell
Actor
Kerri Dunbar
Actor
Tony V.
Actor
Isaac Bordoy
Actor
Michael Yebba
Actor
Daniel Woods
Actor
Jimmy Joe Maher
Actor
Mark Berglund
Actor
Ralph Boutwell
Actor
Michael Romig
Actor
Michael Malvesti
Actor
Jack Neary
Actor
Edward O'Keefe
Actor
Joe Lawler
Actor
Ben Hanson
Actor
Brian A. White
Actor
Richard Caines
Actor
Frank Garvin
Actor
Danny Ring
Actor
Gary Galone
Actor
David Catanzaro
Actor
Jeremiah Kissel
Actor
Malik McMullen
Actor
Charles C. Winchester III
Actor
Adam J. Husband
Actor
Susan Rawlinson
Actor
Sean Locke
Actor
Peter Looney
Actor
Lennin Pena
Actor
James McKittrick
Actor
Ted Arcidi
Actor
Bryan Connolly
Actor
Quan Liang Chen
Actor
Alex Winston
Actor
Michael F. Murphy
Actor
Michele Cressinger
Actor
Kimberly Mahoney
Actor
Bobby Curcuro
Actor
Ginaya Green
Actor
Nicole Page
Actor
Georgia Lyman
Actor
Robert Boyden
Actor
Jamie Ghazarian
Actor
Country: USA

