Ein angesehener Geschäftsmann wird von seinem mordlüsternem Alter Ego kontrolliert.Ein angesehener Geschäftsmann wird von seinem mordlüsternem Alter Ego kontrolliert.Ein angesehener Geschäftsmann wird von seinem mordlüsternem Alter Ego kontrolliert.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 2 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Sarah Leaves
- (as Traci Dinwiddie)
- Dance Couple
- (as Megan Brown)
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Earl Brooks (Oscar Winner Kevin Costner) is Portland's man of the year. He has it all, a beautiful wife, a wonderful company, an awesome home, and a daughter (Danielle Panabaker) in college. But Mr. Brooks also has a secret. A secret addiction. He loves killing, mostly because of the maniacal representation of his temptations and desires: Marshall (Oscar Winner William Hurt). After one last killing, Mr. Brooks is ready to quit, but is quickly blackmailed back into killing by the young photographer known simply as Mr. Smith (Dane Cook). Smith just wants to tag along for the ride to feel the rush of killing. But this murderous trio of Brooks/Marshall/Smith must be careful, as tough-as-nails detective Tracy Atwood (Demi Moore) is on their trail.
I know my description of the plot is thorough, but it doesn't spoil anything, as all this is introduced within 10 to 15 minutes of the opening. I give director Bruce Evans a lot of credit for moving the film along quickly, because most of it is the self-inflection conversations of Mr. Brooks and Marshall. The acting is very well done, and with a cast like this, you should expect it. Costner has been everyone's hero the past 2 decades, but Costner totally breaks the mold with a daring and riveting performance as the conflicted, murderous, yet loving Mr. Brooks. His performance really allows the audience to root for him, even though he's a vicious killer. Costner effectively displays internal conflicts between the good side of him, and the dark side. William Hurt is equally haunting as Marshall, the figment of Brooks' imagination. No stranger to villainous characters (there is no true villain, but Costner, Cook, and Hurt's characters are all bad men), Hurt will grab the audience's attention with his smooth and liquid delivery and cruel responses to Mr. Brooks's regrets. Demi Moore delivers in a role that is a type of character rarely seen in movies anymore. Moore gives us a very flawed, yet strong woman who is the only truly good and moral character in the entire movie. Her character has a lot going on in her life, and it is definitely conveyed in her impatience and quick temper, but we always know why she is how she is. Lastly, and the biggest surprise of the entire film, Dane Cook steals the show in one of the better performances of recent memory. Cook goes tit for tat with Costner in every scene they share, providing some pretty intense moments between the pair. Being the comedian he is, Cook will get a couple of laughs, but this role is completely serious. Cook looks like he had a lot of fun doing this, as he gives us a very layered Mr. Smith who is very disturbed, but at the same time, we know he's a fragile guy who is just a pawn in Mr. Brooks' master plan. Cook will blow you away with his range, and he does a great job displaying his character arc. Mr. Smith starts off as a sarcastic and overconfident guy who is looking to toy with a killer. By the end of the film, Smith changes radically into a completely different person. Way to go Dane.
Bruce Evans does a great job at the helm of the film, providing a fast paced psychological thriller helped out by clever dialog, and one of the most intelligent characters portrayed on film since Hannibal Lecter in Mr. Brooks. It's almost unreal how smart and clever Costner's character is. Another thing I liked was the symmetry between Costner and Hurt. The actors carry a lot of the same mannerisms into their characters, and with the help of Evans, it looks great. There are times where they will do the same movement at the exact same time. Mr. Brooks is a first rate thriller that any fan of the genre should enjoy. The plot has its twists and turns before the grand finale, which reminds the viewer that...Mr. Brooks always has a plan...
8/10 --spy
He killed total strangers at various intervals for years. And he always carefully planned each crime. But he gets no satisfaction from killing, he's simply driven to do it by his addiction. It's been two years since his last killing, and he's tried to keep the addiction at bay by going to AA. He merely tells the group "I'm an addict". You'd think that eventually the group at AA would press him for more details than that, but I digress.
William Hurt is Brooks's alter ego. And it works because Hurt is not just playing the part of Brooks that wants to kill, like some maniac. Instead, this guy is also somebody who talks to Brooks, as much as you can talk to yourself. He sympathizes and gives Brooks a hug when he breaks down over a huge family dilemma he's facing at one point.
The problem is that, after two years, Brooks gives in to his addiction and kills again. But this time he makes a mistake. He doesn't notice that the curtains are open when he commits the double homicide in the victims' loft apartment. Complications ensue.
Demi Moore plays a dogged homicide detective who is after this serial killer, and at first I wondered why there were so many details of her life in her thread of the plot - her inherited wealth, the gold-digging husband who is trying to drain her dry in the divorce setllement, the prison escapee who wants her dead. But then the whole thing comes together at the end magnificently.
I'd say this rates right up there as one of my favorite Costner films. He is terrific as a guy who looks and acts so incredibly predictable and reliable in his daily life. Nobody would ever suspect. He even protests his daughter's announcement that she wants to terminate her unplanned pregnancy. Also kudos to Dane Cook as Mr. Smith, a role that proves that it may take brains to be a mechanical engineer, but that doesn't necessarily mean it requires common sense.
Kevin Costner having always been one of the most wooden actors in contemporary movies, I am very impressed that he hit the nail on the head with this very challenging and multi-layered character of Mr. Brooks, and in understanding him completely knew just how much of him to reserve for William Hurt's share, Hurt playing a figure nonexistent to anyone in the film other than Costner, representing the deepest, darkest thoughts of Mr. Brooks. The script and direction are very clear-cut and discern the dialogue between Costner and Hurt as the same character and not a split personality.
Demi Moore is affecting in her portrayal of a cop whose personal life calls upon the part of a personality that would urge with anger towards thoughts of murder and is able to suppress them. It's maybe my favorite of all the performances I've seen of hers. There is lots of subtext in what appears to be a token cop role.
The most interesting casting choice, aside from the impressive comebacks by two aging former box-office magnets, is of comedian Dane Cook as a blackmailing witness to one of Mr. Brooks's murders. His character is a creative blend of voyeuristic and eagerly putzy, and Cook pulls it off very becomingly.
As well as being a very gripping and unpredictable celebration of evil, I think a lot of extra credit is due to this film especially for holding its own at the box office during a summer of conglomerate box-office hogs like the second sequels to Pirates of the Caribbean, Shrek, Ocean's Eleven, and Spider-Man when it is actually very edgy and takes a lot of risks as a mainstream film.
I thought taht it was slick and clever, and quite witty, it's always good to see Kevin Costner in a different role , and I love William Hurt, (RIP), he is always so entertaining .
Demi Moore was also good as the tough stubborn cop , like a dog with a bone !
Good entertainment , don't take it too seriously !
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesEarl Brooks was written with Kevin Costner in mind to play him.
- PatzerIn the firefight at the hotel with Atwood, Meeks fires his Colt M1911, with its 7-round clip, 23 times without reloading.
- Zitate
[last lines]
Marshall: [voice-over] Why do you fight it so hard, Earl?
Mr. Earl Brooks: [whispering to himself] God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference. Living one day at a time and enjoying one moment at a time, accepting hardships as the pathway to peace. Taking, as He did, this sinful world as it is and not as I would have it, trusting that He will make all things right if I surrender to His will, that I may be reasonably happy in this life, and supremely happy with Him forever in the next. Amen.
- Crazy CreditsA thumbprint forms the backdrop for the end credits.
- SoundtracksTransgression
Composed by Burton C. Bell, Raymond Herrera, Christian Olde Wolbers
Performed by Fear Factory
Courtesy of Liquid 8
Top-Auswahl
Details
Box Office
- Budget
- 20.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 28.549.298 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 10.017.067 $
- 3. Juni 2007
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 48.443.734 $
- Laufzeit2 Stunden
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1