81 out of 125 people found the following comment useful :- Good enough to be worth your while, probably not to own., 25 January 2008
Author:
RetepAdam
The movie had a few things going in its favor. For one, it used
reasonable technology and background, so the story wasn't far-fetched.
Secondly, and most importantly in my eyes, it did NOT go for shock
value. It didn't try to use gore to elicit a reaction from the crowd.
Not to say that some scenes weren't rough on the eyes, but it was far
from a Saw or Hostel. Thirdly, it honestly kept me on the edge of my
seat for a good portion of the movie. And lastly, the ending does not
drag itself out. It ends at the logical point.
That having been said, this movie will not change your life. It's a
little bit of a commentary on society, but moreso, it's just an
entertaining movie to watch.
38 out of 55 people found the following comment useful :- Strong Performances Compensate, 26 January 2008
Author:
LAKERS34 from Los Angeles
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Diane Lane and a strong supporting cast make up for a "been there-done
that" crime drama. The story contains a few original twists as well as
a few serious implausibilities. Nevertheless, the direction, pace, and
performances, especially Lane's and Bill Burke's, draw you in and by
the abrupt conclusion, you are on the edge of your chair. Burke and
Lane, as rival investigators, develop an interesting chemistry that
builds through the film and is never compromised. Joseph Cross gives a
creepy, effective performance as the deranged techno-killer. The fact
that the story gives him such amazing capability to the point that you
occasionally start rolling your eyes should in no way deter from his
acting.
All in all, nicely packaged if somewhat contrived; The story hinges on
the fact that this "wunderkind" killer can continually crack every
computer in his way, stay one step ahead of the law, and continue to
capture victims for his morbid shows without skipping a beat. All that
IS hard to believe, yet "Untraceable" was still satisfying
entertainment.
67 out of 114 people found the following comment useful :- Same old song, and dance. Not talking about the movie., 4 February 2008
Author:
Mudbug711 from United States
Well, I can say one thing about this movie is that is was very
original. Most of the pessimistic losers out there who are fans of
'Gorror' movies will cry, and complain that it was a rip-off of the Saw
series. Yeah, yeah... whatever. In reality... THIS could ACTUALLY
happen. And the saddest part, is that people would log onto the site to
watch THAT happen.
This movie was a little slow... It is not an action movie, does not
have any nudity, no car chases, no monsters, no sex, no love triangle,
no street fighting.. so the average movie-goer will find it lame, slow,
and boring. I like slower movies, lets you think as you watch. Diane
Lane was good, but not super. She has had better, no... much better
roles. Joseph Cross plays a really creepy bad guy, with sick twisted
emotions.
The movie was not great, but is surely was not a bad film. I believe if
you are a real fan of Murder mystery, police detective films, with some
thriller thrown in, you would, or may like this flick. With ONLY 1 Hr.
and 40 Mins. if someone complains about length, they need to get
checked for A.D.D. or they need to stick to teen-age comedies like
Strange Wilderness, or Meet the Spartans.
Check this movie out with an open mind, don't let the pessimists cloud
your idea of this film. It is an innovative film, with a good cast, and
the shots of Portland, Oregon are not bad at all. I will actually give
this film a 6 1/2 out of 10.
88 out of 160 people found the following comment useful :- Rental at best, 24 January 2008
Author:
huiyt from Canada
Movie was slow moving in general, the plot was simplistic and is a
smash between the Saw series and a CSI episode, but potentially less
entertaining than either of the two. There was gore and disturbing
content which in my opinion may have been inappropriate for the story.
It could have been just as powerful without the disturbing pseudo-snuff
film scenes as a police film and the suspense could be maximized, or
the director should have made the call to make it more like a Saw
movie, maintain the disturbing content and bring that fan base in. The
target in my opinion was broad, drew in viewers who will be
disappointed. Overall, if the movie moved a little quicker, or was
potentially less graphic it might have earned a 6. To sum it all up, it
was 20 minutes longer than it should have been and was misguided.
Potentially worth a rental but even questionable in that case.
40 out of 66 people found the following comment useful :- Diane Lane get's it done again, 31 January 2008
Author:
texrangers31 from United States
As I have stated before, I love scary movies even though I get
frightened by everything. Untraceable caught my eye the first time I
saw a trailer for it. The plot is very fast paced, and you will find
yourself playing detective while watching. The best part of this movie
is that it doesn't go for cheap scares, such as something jumping out
or ominous music at key points in the film. If you can handle a little
bit of gore, you should be fine. The ending won't blow you away, but
you shouldn't be disappointed either. This is a solid film that isn't
too scary, but it's no Muppet movie. Colin Hanks is solid as usual. The
killer didn't quite meet my expectations on the creepy scale, but he is
serviceable.
28 out of 44 people found the following comment useful :- Untraceable (2008) ***, 10 February 2008
Author:
JoeKarlosi from U.S.A.
Entertaining thriller about a crazed young computer geek who becomes
the deranged moderator of his own "Kill With Me" live internet feed
where he displays new victims being slowly tortured to death. The more
hits he gets at his site, the faster the people featured on his webcam
die.
This is disturbing in making us realize what depths we've sunk to in
our society, and what morbid curiosities can do. I especially liked
that the 40-something Diane Lane is the star as the police woman who
tries to apprehend the killer, instead of relying on the usual Jessica
Alba or Sarah Michelle Gellar "honeys" of late.
22 out of 34 people found the following comment useful :- Not as bad as I feared, 14 February 2008
Author:
Ric-7 from New Orleans LA
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I was not bored and did not want to walk out in the middle of the film,
but I guess this is faint praise. I thought the murders were a bit more
gruesome than they needed to be, but perhaps that was necessary because
the plot was the weakest thing in this film.
The story moves along fairly quickly--there is no time to get bogged
down in a subplot. The quick pace does not allow time for thinking
about whether the various plot developments actually make sense, and
whether there are just too many coincidences for the plot to be
credible.
And the film just sort of ends. The villain does not make surprise
encores at the end, nor do the survivors get together for a
post-mortem. TG.
The performances were excellent. Diane Lane had the right blend of
toughness and vulnerability. Billy Burke did the most he could with an
rather underwritten character. Mary Beth Hurt was fine (and wasted) in
what was just a bit part.
This film will disappear from theatrical release soon (if not already),
and then enter the home video/DVD market. It's not that horrible--just
don't expect The Silence of The Lambs.
24 out of 39 people found the following comment useful :- Another Below-Average Typical Thriller, 15 May 2008
Author:
Munyurangabo from Fraggle Rock
While it has some effective cinematography and nice-to-look-at
high-tech, 'Untraceable' is nothing but a typical snuff thriller. The
characters are all clichéd, unintelligent and, with the exception of
Hanks's Griffin and Diane's Jennifer they lack dimension. The plot is
predictable and uninteresting. The story suffers from too many plot
holes. The ending is funny (though the director's intention was clearly
something other than drawing laughter from the viewer). It's very funny
how the director portrays all American internet surfers to be thirsty
for a glimpse of torturous death. Among the plus points, Diane Lane
performs well (but her character is the typical crime-fighting single
mom/widow which one has seen in n number of movies. Colin Hanks gives a
natural performance but one wonders why an actor of his calibre chose
to play a less significant role in a below-average thriller. The same
question applies to Ms. Lane. Billy Burke is abysmally wooden and his
dialogue delivery is laughable especially when he swears. The swearing,
while adding to another movie stereotype where the coppers swear a lot,
feels too forced. Joseph Cross horribly plays the typical teen psycho.
There's really nothing else to say. 'Untraceable' has nothing to offer.
The only thriller concerning snuff movies that is of high quality is
Amenabar's 'Tesis' and 'Untraceable' is nowhere near that.
28 out of 48 people found the following comment useful :- The new computer crime of hostage taking and gruesome torture it's internet terror., 1 February 2008
Author:
Danny Blankenship from Petersburg, Virginia
With the internet and cyberspace so common in everyone's life today,
plus with the reported upswing of crimes like identity theft and
pornography on the net in it's own way "Untraceable" is very relevant
and common with today's times. "Untraceable" a crime computer thriller
that's set in Portland, Oregon it involves an investigative computer
unit of the FBI headed up by a single mother Jennifer Marsh(Diane
Lane). Interestlingly the unit comes across a website of a creep who
broadcasts live torture and killings of hostage victims in various
grisly ways live over the internet. The bloody catch is the more the
web surfer logs onto the sick website, the faster and quicker the
victims will die in the various forms of bleed outs, fried by hot
mirrors, or seasoned by sulfuric acid. The drama only gets more
interesting when the computer of Jennifer is hacked into by the sicko
setting up for a dramatic finish and showdown encounter. Lane gives a
fine performance as a serious investigative agent, and yet no matter
how grisly that many scenes are the theme of net crime and hacking
overpowers and gives a strong message of awareness even over the well
liked and popcorn moments of torture and nasty horror. Overall
"Untraceable" is not a bad flick nothing great, yet it's enjoyable and
does hold interest by making us aware of the web crime and hacking
identity problem.
9 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Enjoyable but flawed., 27 January 2008
Author:
John DeSando (jdesando@columbus.rr.com) from Columbus, Ohio
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
"You want the scent? Smell yourself." Hannibal Lecter
If you're longing for Lecter, get some good Chianti and watch Silence
of the Lambs for the umpteenth time. The serial killer in the enjoyable
Untraceable is not half as interesting as the cunning Hannibal, but
then again the real interest is cybercrime, the Internet's ability to
draw the world to a site, which if not regulated, can serve snuff as
easily as sex.
The menace of the Portland, Oregon, police and FBI is a cyber-psycho
who tortures his victims on the Web in real time, all of whom die more
quickly with each hit to the site. Although brutality is not as
explicit as in Saw or Se7en, the film effectively suggests our communal
relationship in cyberspace and ultimately our responsibility to
restrict the criminal potential, admittedly an extreme case here.
Diane Lane plays agent Jennifer Marsh, a sometimes cool, too many times
emotional cyber cop, whose initial scene shows her competent in her
job. Yet her antagonist proves almost invulnerable to her and the rest
of the force. Most of the film is a cat and mouse (electronic this
time) game during which the cops almost get him, but not quite.
The denouement is a disappointment after the first third's emphasis on
the electronic drama; it all devolves into some primitive
communication, standard intuition, visual observation, and plain old
luck. Marsh's continually emotional response is neither favorable to
the women's movement nor objective police work. Or maybe I've just been
preconditioned by TV's cool CSI-like investigators.
Director Gregory Hoblit's pacing is much better than his direction of
Ms. Lane; Anastos Michos's cinematography is spot on for a dreary,
menacing Portland. In the absence of Silence of the Lambs and the
presence of so much junk at this time of year, Untraceable has the only
trace of a "B" movie thriller for a while. And don't forget the fava
beans.
Watch it at Amazon
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81 out of 125 people found the following comment useful :-

Good enough to be worth your while, probably not to own., 25 January 2008
Author: RetepAdam
The movie had a few things going in its favor. For one, it used reasonable technology and background, so the story wasn't far-fetched. Secondly, and most importantly in my eyes, it did NOT go for shock value. It didn't try to use gore to elicit a reaction from the crowd. Not to say that some scenes weren't rough on the eyes, but it was far from a Saw or Hostel. Thirdly, it honestly kept me on the edge of my seat for a good portion of the movie. And lastly, the ending does not drag itself out. It ends at the logical point.
That having been said, this movie will not change your life. It's a little bit of a commentary on society, but moreso, it's just an entertaining movie to watch.
38 out of 55 people found the following comment useful :-

Strong Performances Compensate, 26 January 2008
Author: LAKERS34 from Los Angeles
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Diane Lane and a strong supporting cast make up for a "been there-done that" crime drama. The story contains a few original twists as well as a few serious implausibilities. Nevertheless, the direction, pace, and performances, especially Lane's and Bill Burke's, draw you in and by the abrupt conclusion, you are on the edge of your chair. Burke and Lane, as rival investigators, develop an interesting chemistry that builds through the film and is never compromised. Joseph Cross gives a creepy, effective performance as the deranged techno-killer. The fact that the story gives him such amazing capability to the point that you occasionally start rolling your eyes should in no way deter from his acting.
All in all, nicely packaged if somewhat contrived; The story hinges on the fact that this "wunderkind" killer can continually crack every computer in his way, stay one step ahead of the law, and continue to capture victims for his morbid shows without skipping a beat. All that IS hard to believe, yet "Untraceable" was still satisfying entertainment.
67 out of 114 people found the following comment useful :-

Same old song, and dance. Not talking about the movie., 4 February 2008
Author: Mudbug711 from United States
Well, I can say one thing about this movie is that is was very original. Most of the pessimistic losers out there who are fans of 'Gorror' movies will cry, and complain that it was a rip-off of the Saw series. Yeah, yeah... whatever. In reality... THIS could ACTUALLY happen. And the saddest part, is that people would log onto the site to watch THAT happen.
This movie was a little slow... It is not an action movie, does not have any nudity, no car chases, no monsters, no sex, no love triangle, no street fighting.. so the average movie-goer will find it lame, slow, and boring. I like slower movies, lets you think as you watch. Diane Lane was good, but not super. She has had better, no... much better roles. Joseph Cross plays a really creepy bad guy, with sick twisted emotions.
The movie was not great, but is surely was not a bad film. I believe if you are a real fan of Murder mystery, police detective films, with some thriller thrown in, you would, or may like this flick. With ONLY 1 Hr. and 40 Mins. if someone complains about length, they need to get checked for A.D.D. or they need to stick to teen-age comedies like Strange Wilderness, or Meet the Spartans.
Check this movie out with an open mind, don't let the pessimists cloud your idea of this film. It is an innovative film, with a good cast, and the shots of Portland, Oregon are not bad at all. I will actually give this film a 6 1/2 out of 10.
88 out of 160 people found the following comment useful :-

Rental at best, 24 January 2008
Author: huiyt from Canada
Movie was slow moving in general, the plot was simplistic and is a smash between the Saw series and a CSI episode, but potentially less entertaining than either of the two. There was gore and disturbing content which in my opinion may have been inappropriate for the story. It could have been just as powerful without the disturbing pseudo-snuff film scenes as a police film and the suspense could be maximized, or the director should have made the call to make it more like a Saw movie, maintain the disturbing content and bring that fan base in. The target in my opinion was broad, drew in viewers who will be disappointed. Overall, if the movie moved a little quicker, or was potentially less graphic it might have earned a 6. To sum it all up, it was 20 minutes longer than it should have been and was misguided. Potentially worth a rental but even questionable in that case.
40 out of 66 people found the following comment useful :-

Diane Lane get's it done again, 31 January 2008
Author: texrangers31 from United States
As I have stated before, I love scary movies even though I get frightened by everything. Untraceable caught my eye the first time I saw a trailer for it. The plot is very fast paced, and you will find yourself playing detective while watching. The best part of this movie is that it doesn't go for cheap scares, such as something jumping out or ominous music at key points in the film. If you can handle a little bit of gore, you should be fine. The ending won't blow you away, but you shouldn't be disappointed either. This is a solid film that isn't too scary, but it's no Muppet movie. Colin Hanks is solid as usual. The killer didn't quite meet my expectations on the creepy scale, but he is serviceable.
28 out of 44 people found the following comment useful :-

Untraceable (2008) ***, 10 February 2008
Author: JoeKarlosi from U.S.A.
Entertaining thriller about a crazed young computer geek who becomes the deranged moderator of his own "Kill With Me" live internet feed where he displays new victims being slowly tortured to death. The more hits he gets at his site, the faster the people featured on his webcam die.
This is disturbing in making us realize what depths we've sunk to in our society, and what morbid curiosities can do. I especially liked that the 40-something Diane Lane is the star as the police woman who tries to apprehend the killer, instead of relying on the usual Jessica Alba or Sarah Michelle Gellar "honeys" of late.
22 out of 34 people found the following comment useful :-

Not as bad as I feared, 14 February 2008
Author: Ric-7 from New Orleans LA
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I was not bored and did not want to walk out in the middle of the film, but I guess this is faint praise. I thought the murders were a bit more gruesome than they needed to be, but perhaps that was necessary because the plot was the weakest thing in this film.
The story moves along fairly quickly--there is no time to get bogged down in a subplot. The quick pace does not allow time for thinking about whether the various plot developments actually make sense, and whether there are just too many coincidences for the plot to be credible.
And the film just sort of ends. The villain does not make surprise encores at the end, nor do the survivors get together for a post-mortem. TG.
The performances were excellent. Diane Lane had the right blend of toughness and vulnerability. Billy Burke did the most he could with an rather underwritten character. Mary Beth Hurt was fine (and wasted) in what was just a bit part.
This film will disappear from theatrical release soon (if not already), and then enter the home video/DVD market. It's not that horrible--just don't expect The Silence of The Lambs.
24 out of 39 people found the following comment useful :-
Another Below-Average Typical Thriller, 15 May 2008
Author: Munyurangabo from Fraggle Rock
While it has some effective cinematography and nice-to-look-at high-tech, 'Untraceable' is nothing but a typical snuff thriller. The characters are all clichéd, unintelligent and, with the exception of Hanks's Griffin and Diane's Jennifer they lack dimension. The plot is predictable and uninteresting. The story suffers from too many plot holes. The ending is funny (though the director's intention was clearly something other than drawing laughter from the viewer). It's very funny how the director portrays all American internet surfers to be thirsty for a glimpse of torturous death. Among the plus points, Diane Lane performs well (but her character is the typical crime-fighting single mom/widow which one has seen in n number of movies. Colin Hanks gives a natural performance but one wonders why an actor of his calibre chose to play a less significant role in a below-average thriller. The same question applies to Ms. Lane. Billy Burke is abysmally wooden and his dialogue delivery is laughable especially when he swears. The swearing, while adding to another movie stereotype where the coppers swear a lot, feels too forced. Joseph Cross horribly plays the typical teen psycho. There's really nothing else to say. 'Untraceable' has nothing to offer. The only thriller concerning snuff movies that is of high quality is Amenabar's 'Tesis' and 'Untraceable' is nowhere near that.
28 out of 48 people found the following comment useful :-

The new computer crime of hostage taking and gruesome torture it's internet terror., 1 February 2008
Author: Danny Blankenship from Petersburg, Virginia
With the internet and cyberspace so common in everyone's life today, plus with the reported upswing of crimes like identity theft and pornography on the net in it's own way "Untraceable" is very relevant and common with today's times. "Untraceable" a crime computer thriller that's set in Portland, Oregon it involves an investigative computer unit of the FBI headed up by a single mother Jennifer Marsh(Diane Lane). Interestlingly the unit comes across a website of a creep who broadcasts live torture and killings of hostage victims in various grisly ways live over the internet. The bloody catch is the more the web surfer logs onto the sick website, the faster and quicker the victims will die in the various forms of bleed outs, fried by hot mirrors, or seasoned by sulfuric acid. The drama only gets more interesting when the computer of Jennifer is hacked into by the sicko setting up for a dramatic finish and showdown encounter. Lane gives a fine performance as a serious investigative agent, and yet no matter how grisly that many scenes are the theme of net crime and hacking overpowers and gives a strong message of awareness even over the well liked and popcorn moments of torture and nasty horror. Overall "Untraceable" is not a bad flick nothing great, yet it's enjoyable and does hold interest by making us aware of the web crime and hacking identity problem.
9 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-
Enjoyable but flawed., 27 January 2008
Author: John DeSando (jdesando@columbus.rr.com) from Columbus, Ohio
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
"You want the scent? Smell yourself." Hannibal Lecter
If you're longing for Lecter, get some good Chianti and watch Silence of the Lambs for the umpteenth time. The serial killer in the enjoyable Untraceable is not half as interesting as the cunning Hannibal, but then again the real interest is cybercrime, the Internet's ability to draw the world to a site, which if not regulated, can serve snuff as easily as sex.
The menace of the Portland, Oregon, police and FBI is a cyber-psycho who tortures his victims on the Web in real time, all of whom die more quickly with each hit to the site. Although brutality is not as explicit as in Saw or Se7en, the film effectively suggests our communal relationship in cyberspace and ultimately our responsibility to restrict the criminal potential, admittedly an extreme case here.
Diane Lane plays agent Jennifer Marsh, a sometimes cool, too many times emotional cyber cop, whose initial scene shows her competent in her job. Yet her antagonist proves almost invulnerable to her and the rest of the force. Most of the film is a cat and mouse (electronic this time) game during which the cops almost get him, but not quite.
The denouement is a disappointment after the first third's emphasis on the electronic drama; it all devolves into some primitive communication, standard intuition, visual observation, and plain old luck. Marsh's continually emotional response is neither favorable to the women's movement nor objective police work. Or maybe I've just been preconditioned by TV's cool CSI-like investigators.
Director Gregory Hoblit's pacing is much better than his direction of Ms. Lane; Anastos Michos's cinematography is spot on for a dreary, menacing Portland. In the absence of Silence of the Lambs and the presence of so much junk at this time of year, Untraceable has the only trace of a "B" movie thriller for a while. And don't forget the fava beans.
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