 |
15
Minutes |
| Rated
R |
| Runtime:
1 hours 59 minutes |
| Starring:
Robert De Niro, Edward Burns, Melina Kanakaredes, Kelsey Grammer,
Avery Brooks |
|
MFG
Rating: 3/5
|
We
went into 15 Minutes with pretty low expectations based on the trailers
and commercials. Although it starts a little slow and wanders a
bit at points, it really comes on strong for the last third or so
of the movie and was very enjoyable. There's alot of mystery and
suspense in this flick and at least a couple of surprises not given
away by the trailer that you really do not want to know before seeing
it unfold for yourself, so be careful around the water cooler if
this film is the topic.
Robert
De Niro and Edward Burns are the stars. De Niro is the wiley old
homicide detective who has become a bit of a media hero through
his friendship with a tabloid TV reporter played by Kelsey Grammer.
This is the type of role where you cant really fully appreciate
De Niro's skills because he can do this type of role in his sleep.
Edward Burns plays an arson investigating Fire Marshall. A case
involving a fire and homicide brings the two together.
The
case they are investigating is what makes this movie unique. A couple
of guys go on a bit of a killing spree. But they video tape everything
they do including their faces, narration, etc. Sound crazy? They
certainly hope so! Their plan is to sell the tape, plead insanity,
spend a little time in a mental institution and then come out and
get rich selling their story.
The
movie takes a really harsh cynical look at our society, particularly
beating up on the media and judicial system. The fire and police
department trip over one another to get media exposure as that is
the key to getting the public to support additional funding for
each. In this world, public perception is more important than the
truth. And the media controls that perception. Lives are made or
ruined based on what people see on TV, not due process.
15
Minutes will inevitably make you ask yourself, are we, as a society
really as bad as this movie portrays us? Could the scenarios presented
in the film, happen in real life? Voyeurism is a strong urge that
everyone has whether they admit it or not. We can't help but be
tempted to watch anything provocative or intense even if we know
we shouldn't. Satellite, high speed networks and omnipresent video
cameras means when something interesting happens anywhere in the
world, we can see it often in a matter of minutes.
In
the real world, a great tragedy such as a kid who takes a gun to
school and busts a cap in several of his classmates is on every
channel and the internet almost instantly. The cameras show all,
they want to interview grieving families, students still in a state
of shock, and society soaks it all in. The more tragic the event,
the higher the ratings. 15 Minutes will make you really question
where news ends and right to privacy begins as it really explores
sensationalism and so called reality TV.
We
give 15 Minutes 3 stars, but it is a very strong 3 stars. It started
off slow, but the movie really picked up the pace toward the end.
We do recommend you catch this one on the big screen if for no other
reason than to make sure some inconsiderate person ruins it for
you by wanting to talk about it.
-
Billy Bob
Talk
about this movie
|
Gun Play
Very
few people in this movie who aren't packing.
Blood & Gore
Gun
shot wounds, stabbings, basic NYC life.
Car Chases
De
Niro drives his Ford P.O.S. like he stole it.
T&A
None
of the gal's we really wanted to see, but we'll take what we
can get.
Chuckles
This
is some dark cynical subject matter, but we did laugh a few
times. |
|