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  • On March 11, 2005, Brian Nichols, a man arrested for rape, escaped from the Fulton County courthouse in Atlanta, where he proceeded to kill four people and seek refuge in the home of a recovering crystal meth addict named Ashley Smith, where he held her hostage whilst he stayed clear of the law. During this time, Smith, who constantly feared for her life, with a young daughter living at her mother's home, used Rick Warren's book "The Purpose Driven Life" to help change Nichols's ways and become a man emancipated from the shackles of God's sin. Jerry Jameson's film "Captive" helps shed light on the events that took place whilst Smith was a prisoner in her own home, fearing for her life.

    "Captive" is likely to get lumped under the category of a faith-based film, somewhat rightfully so, but in the end, it's a character piece at its core. It's a film that really emphasizes human imperfections and how certain situations can lead us down a path of perpetual wrongdoing, or sin, if we're not careful. A key scene in the film comes when Brian (played by David Oyelowo, who shocked with his tremendous portrayal of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. earlier in the year in the film "Selma") is holding Ashley's (Kate Mara, who was in last month's "Fantastic Four") head down into a plate of crystal meth, forcing her to take a line after making him take one himself. She refuses, even with a gun to the back of her head, and just as she weeps, thinking she's living the last few moments of her life, Brian loosens the grip on her neck and leaves her unharmed.

    Ashley could've easily taken the meth; she would've probably felt the kind of high she long-desired and was trying to break free from this whole time. But something inside her told her to stop, to the point that she'd rather die from a bullet in her skull than from ingesting drugs to get her momentary fix. Brian is in the same position, in a situation not much more extreme than the one Ashley is currently in. He has a choice to either potentially carry on in his ostensibly endless pursuit of killing, carjacking, and destroying more lives than those he has killed, yet he parks at Ashley's house for a reason. She doesn't fight, she doesn't resist, but she simply adheres to his commands and hopes that some sort of positive outcome will come out of this situation.

    This is a film made largely by the strength of its central performances. David Oyelowo plunges himself into a violent, unrelenting sociopath with unflinching conviction; the only thing his mean face and persona is missing is a pitbull-esque growl and snarl and he'd be the perfect cinematic murderer. Oyelowo's performance is terrific, and makes me assert that, in the next ten years, he will win an Oscar for one of his performances, supporting or leading (most likely leading); mark my words and place your bets.

    Kate Mara shouldn't be ignored either, for she has an arguably more challenging role. Where Oyelowo's performance is largely predicated off of being menacing and violent, Mara's is one that's tender and vulnerable, heartbreakingly so. Put the two leading actors together and they create a strange, but viable chemistry for the film; one the film manages to sustain while it simultaneously forgoes its most important element - suspense. Despite the subject matter, this is a shockingly low-energy film, never rising to its ability to provide credible suspense nor capitalizing off of the inherent tension between its characters.

    "Captive" is, above anything else, a film of perfectly played performances, and the fact it underplays its faith themes for more investing elements like character chemistry shows it's intelligence. This is, above all, a human film, about human experiences and shortcomings, and despite the lacking of real suspense, especially with the film's ending, since the buildup largely falls flat, this is a stunningly mature faith-based film, lacking any real sermonizing or guilt in the face of portraying something that will hold up longer than the aforementioned qualities every would.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Great acting and a true story cannot compensate for a second-rate cinematic adaptation like director Jerry Jameson's "Captive," even with first-rate thesping from David Oyelowo, Kate Mara, Michael Kenneth Williams, and Mimi Rogers. Basically, this hostage drama is based on a true-life incident that occurred in Atlanta, Georgia, back in 2005. Rape suspect Brian Nichols broke out of his cell in the Fulton County Courthouse and shot a judge, a court reporter, a sheriff's deputy, and later a Federal agent in a bid for freedom. After stealing three cars, he wound up at the Duluth, Georgia, apartment for Ashley Smith. Not long afterward, Atlanta Police surrounded the house and convinced the killer to surrender. Ashley Smith documented her experience entitled "Captive: The Untold Story of an Atlanta Hostage Hero." What could have been a genuinely exciting thriller amounts to a dreary potboiler with Christian author Rick Warren's devotional book "The Purpose Driven Life" serving as product placement. According to the hostage that Nichols holed up with, she read Warren's text to him and the message of "Captive" is that the killer saw the light and gave up to the authorities. Many well-intentioned Christian movies aimed at regular churchgoers boast low-budgets and borderline talent. Unlike those standard issue faith films, "Captive" contains first-rate acting with "Selma" star David Oyelowo cast as the killer with no qualms and "Fantastic Four" actress Kate Mara as Ashley Smith. Sadly, despite its workman-like screenplay by "Not Easily Broke" scenarist Brian Bird, "Captive" generates only a modicum of suspense. The charisma that Oyelowo and Mara bring to their respective roles has no counterpart with anything else here, except "Days of Grace" lenser Luis David Sansans' wobbly cinematography that lends an edgy quality to this lackluster outing. Nothing about this PG-13 rated, 97-minute melodrama is remotely captivating. Indeed, during the end credits, we catch a glimpse of the real-life Brian Nichols and are treated to a "Oprah" interview with Smith about her close encounter with death. Most of these Christian movies rake in millions, but "Captive" has struggled despite its laudable cast and earned back little more than its $2-million budget. For the record, Oyelowo served as one of the producers. Comparably, "Captive" and "No Good Deed" share some similarities, except "No Good Deeds" coined far greater cash. Presumably, "Captive" didn't have enough Christian values to bring in the flock. Spectators that appreciate strong acting may enjoy it simply because "Raise the Titanic" director Jerry Jameson doesn't rub our collective noses into scripture.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    CAPTIVE is a rather boring low budget thriller that fails to offer up much in the way of thrills or depth, despite having a startling opening sequence depicting a violent jail break. It's essentially a two hander between Kate Mara and David Oyelowo, the latter of whom plays an escaped rapist who ends up in Mara's home and takes her hostage. All good so far, but then the film turns into a lengthy, rambling sermon that seems to have been designed to advertise The Purpose-Driven Life, one of those Christian self-help books. As such, it feels more than a little preachy, as well as dull.
  • I've often said that every movie has a point of view and, whether you agree with that perspective or not, every film should be judged on how well it presents its story. It's difficult, therefore, for audience members to take a movie seriously when it's obviously "reaching" in its efforts to back up its point of view, and then sends mixed messages along the way. The drama "Captive" (PG-13, 1:37) has problems that should be obvious to the average Movie Fan before he or she even enters the theater. First of all, the simple but vague title has been used previously by at least six other movies, with greatly varied plots. (How can you hope to distinguish your movie and its supposedly unique message by choosing an oft-used and fairly meaningless title?) Secondly, when basing a movie on a true story which assumes an unprovable connection between events, you've chosen a story which will be difficult to make into a compelling feature film. (More on that later.) Thirdly, when your movie obviously wants the audience to think one way about certain characters and incidents, but then shows the audience just the opposite, it's tough to get any clear message across. (Another point to be expanded upon later in this review.) This film is based on the book "Unlikely Angel" written by Ashley Smith about the seven hours that she was held captive by an escaped prisoner. Brian Nichols (David Oyelowo) grew up in a middle-class family, had a God-fearing mother and attended college. He played college football and held down a couple decent jobs, but something went wrong somewhere along the way. He's about to go on trial for rape when he brutally beats a female guard and steals her gun and police radio. While escaping from Atlanta's Fulton County Courthouse and later trying to avoid detection, Nichols kills four people. Looking for a place to lay low for a while, he comes upon Ashley Smith (Kate Mara) smoking a cigarette outside her suburban Atlanta apartment. At gunpoint, he forces her back inside her otherwise empty residence.

    Ashley Smith was a young woman who hadn't killed people, but had messed up her life in other ways. She was addicted to meth, a habit which had cost her her husband, who had been stabbed to death by a drug dealer, and her daughter, Paige (Elle Graham), who the courts had taken away from Smith and who was living with Smith's Aunt Kim (Mimi Rogers). Ashley obviously loves her daughter very much and is trying to get her life together so Paige can return to living with her, but she's having trouble staying on the straight and narrow. We see Ashley at a Celebrate Recovery meeting (an addiction rehabilitation program sponsored by evangelical Christian churches around the country), but it's mentioned that this was her first meeting in a while. One of the group's leaders tries to give Ashley a copy of Pastor Rick Warren's best-seller "A Purpose-Driven Life", but Ashley throws the book in the trash. (The woman retrieves the book and drops it off at the restaurant where Ashley works as a waitress.) Ashley continues doing meth and is high as she's unpacking her new apartment on the night that Nichols abducts her.

    Over the next seven hours a strange bond develops between Nichols and Smith inside that apartment. She's initially as frightened as anyone in that situation would be, but she stays calm enough that Nichols doesn't perceive her as a threat. At first, he ties her up, but eventually he allows her to move about the apartment freely. He learns that she has drugs in the house and makes her share. Later, he forces her to help him ditch his truck. In spite of all this, as morning dawns, she makes him breakfast and the two of them talk. They commiserate over how they both feel misunderstood. When Nichols sees Smith idly thumbing through Warren's book, he asks her to read some of it to him. This happens several times during Smith's ordeal. At first, Nichols dismisses Warren's words as "a bunch of church crap", but, as the night wears on, he seems oddly calmed and even challenged by the short passages Smith reads aloud.

    I won't take issue with the possible role of a higher power in this story, but rather with the way it's portrayed. It'll be clear to most discerning Movie Fans that Warren's book had little, if anything, to do with the way this story is resolved. Smith could have accomplished the same thing by reading to Nichols from her diary. It was her attitude and her approach that calmed Nichols down. Also, are we to overlook Nichols' crimes because they're shown with no blood and aren't repeated later in Smith's apartment? This is a decent home invasion story, but any suggestion that we should sympathize with a man who was unrepentant after murdering four innocent people is offensive, and the idea that a non-Christian drug addict diffused a potentially deadly situation by reading a few sentences from a book that happens to mention God is just silly. There can be little doubt that this experience changed Smith's life (how could it not?), but surviving such an experience would've changed the life of anyone regardless of her beliefs.

    The main thing that makes "Captive" any better than an After School Special are solid performances by leads Oyelowo and Mara, as well as Rogers and Michael K. Williams (as the lead detective pursuing Nichols). Still, all these performances do is put a nice coat of gloss on a story that makes questionable assumptions, sends mixed messages and means little except to those directly involved. "C-"
  • I saw this film without knowing anything about Brian Nichols and his story and I enjoyed it. I then saw the low ratings and mixed reviews and i wondered why. I'd classify it as drama/thriller: the tension is present throughout the movie but the main feature is the development of the two leading characters. David Oyelowo's acting is solid but it's above all Kate Mara's performance that strikes the viewer with her portrait of a troubled woman trying to make sense of her life. The interaction between the two, ranging from violent to almost tender, is another leitmotif. I guess knowing the ending takes away a lot of the suspense making it predictable hence my summary line. All cast is up to the task and delivers nuanced work.
  • Just saw this - wow! David Oyelowo and Kate Mara deliver powerful and nuanced performances that stayed with me long after the movie had ended. We are taken inside a terrifying situation, based on a true story - a woman, Ashley Smith, a recovering meth addict, is taken hostage in her own home by Brian Nichols, who is on the run, having killed several people already. What will he do to her? Will she get away? But there is so much more to it. Somehow I found myself caring also about this killer. Weirdly, in this midst of this tense situation, they develop a human connection that drew me in. There are surprising odd details - she makes him pancakes, he helps by putting up a mirror. Two broken lives, a terrible situation, yet somehow this is a hopeful film. Absolutely compelling.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    It just wasnt there, acting was great , direction was on point, decent story.

    Nothing happened of note, guy gets away from a court by shooting the judge, gets into a house with a recvoring junkie. She has a daughter , they talk a little , he does some drugs, she goes to watch her daughter and strangely he lets her so she phones the police, the police get him, it was like a movie with all the movie taken out!

    Do not bother, honestly , poor film.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Meth addict Ashley is held hostage by escaped convict and murderer Brian Nichols. In order to try to avoid being killed, she reads to him from inspirational book The Purpose Drive Life.

    This film is a fairly straightforward linear narrative, recounting the facts of Nichols' murderous escape from the courthouse, leading to his kidnapping Ashley, whereby the latter two thirds of the film becomes essentially a two-hander between Kate Mara as Ashley and David Oyelowo as Brian.

    And I felt the film fell down here. Mara is very good, and Oyelowo is as good as he can be with a part which is underwritten, undeveloped, or just plain impossible to identify with: you understand Ashley perfectly, but I couldn't comprehend Brain at all. Oyelowo gives him a look which is halfway between blank and puzzled when he's not being angry, and I could never get to grips with the person there. And the hostage situation starts off well, but I don't much like inspirational books so, while it may well have helped Ashley, it did little for me, and I found the latter part of the film quite dull as a result. A shame, because it started well. I felt that what started as a suspense thriller turned out to be an extended commercial for a book which I had no interest in.
  • jboothmillard3 March 2021
    Warning: Spoilers
    I found this fact-based film when it was broadcast on Film4, it wasn't rated well, but I liked the sound of it, and it had two good actors in it, so I went for it. Basically, set in 2005, Ashley Smith (Kate Mara) is a single mother struggling with drug addiction. She admits in therapy that taking methamphetamine has lost her custody with her daughter, Paige (Elle Graham), but she hopes for the chance to see her daughter as she moves to a new apartment. On March 11, Brian Nichols (David Oyelowo, also producing) escapes from the Fulton County courthouse in Atlanta, during his trial involving a rape case. In the process of his escape, he murders Judge Rowland Barnes (Richard Fullerton), presiding over his trial, as well as court reporter Julie Brandau. While escaping the courthouse, he also shoots Sergeant Hoyt Teasley (E. Roger Mitchell), and then later kills off-duty ICE Special Agent David G. Wilhelm (Rob Bouton) at his home. Nichols becomes the subject of a citywide manhunt, but he has stolen a police walkie-talkie and can monitor them. After stealing several cars and hurting more people, he stops at the home of his ex-girlfriend, and peers through the window to see his new-born baby son. Meanwhile, Ashley is at her new apartment unpacking boxes, and she gives into temptation, taking meth during the process. Nichols, desperate to find somewhere to hide, holds Ashley at gunpoint and enters her apartment. She becomes captive in her own home, as he ties her up in the bathroom while he has a drink, has a shower and she offers him some clothes. Ashley is petrified but tries to remain calm and they have some conversation. He asks her for drugs, and she supplies him with her meth, but she refuses to take it herself, even when ordered at gunpoint. Ashley asks to go the bathroom, and tries to escape through the window, but she is unable to open it. Nichols notices Ashley's book, The Purpose Driven Life by Rick Warren, and asks her to read it aloud. Meanwhile, Lieutenant John Chestnut (Michael Kenneth Williams) leads the search for Nichols. He attempts to contact the escaped criminal on the walkie-talkie, trying to convince him to turn himself in, mentioning his new-born son's name, Christopher. Watching television, Nichols sees reports that police are looking for the last vehicle he stole, and he wants Ashley to help him get away from the area. She drives in her car as he follows, and there is a point where she momentarily breaks down and stranger offers help. But she makes an excuse, as Nichols is watching, the stranger drives away and they return to the apartment. Ashley constantly mentions that she must meet her daughter the following day, or she may lose all contact with her. The next morning, Ashley makes pancakes and reads more of the book out loud. Ashley again mentions her urgency to leave the house and tells him that she is slowly making her way to the door, but he makes no effort to stop her. Ashley drives away, and on the journey calls the police to report what has happened. Following the brief conversation on the walkie-talkie, and Ashley's call, the police pinpoint Nichols' location to Ashley's apartment. The place is surrounded by Chestnut and the police, along with an armed SWAT team, and Ashley is there as well. Chestnut tries to make Nichols come out, with no effect, and Ashley takes the loud hailer to convince him to give himself up. Chestnut warns him that the forces will be coming in any moment, but Nicholas comes out waving a white flag (a handkerchief) and surrenders. In the end, as Nichols is apprehended, Aunt Kim (Mimi Rogers) is relieved to see Ashley safe and sound, and happily reunited with Paige. The epilogue explains that Brian Nichols is serving time in prison but hopes one day to meet his son, and that following her ordeal, Ashley never took drugs again, made a better life for herself and her daughter, and found new love and had more children. The end credits show the real Ashley Smith being interviewed by Oprah Winfrey about the events. Also starring Leonor Varela as Detective Carmen Sanchez, and Jessica Oyelowo (David's wife) as Meredith MacKenzie. It is fair to say that some of the script is a bit predictable, and the end credits are ruined by a gospel song, but Oyelowo as the man on the run and Mara as the troubled mother being held hostage both give great performances, and it is just about engaging enough, not a bad crime thriller based on a true story. Okay!
  • Captive is based on the true story of a junkie trying to get her daughter back who is taken hostage by a killer in her home.

    It's a moderately entertaining story which is helped greatly by good performances by the leads Kate Mara and David Oyelowo. The story does fall flat in places and there is a surprising lack of tension garnered from the situation. However the actors do there best with the material and this just about elevates the film above average in my opinion. Saying that there are enough good scenes to keep you watching.

    It's nothing to get excited about but it's a decent enough thriller to pass the time especially if you have never heard of the story.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is the true story of "courage" of drug addict Ashley Smith (Kate Mara) whose home was invaded by Brian Nichols (David Oyelowo) a rather polite cop killer who had escaped from Fulton Co. jail. Ashley reads to him a couple of lines from "A Purpose Driven Life" and he allows her to leave and then gives himself up to the cops. That is pretty much it. Ashley had ample opportunity to escape at numerous other occasions and chose not to do so, as many people speculated the two people had known each other, i.e. drug dealings previously. In this version of the story they are complete strangers. The film gets preachy during the epilogue, but wasn't too bad during the film. Unfortunately this was basically a two man play with boring characters and dialogue.

    The film is liked by those who enjoy faith based films.

    Guide: No swearing, sex, or nudity.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    My wife and I recently saw a pre-release screening of Captive at The Sheen Center in New York City, along with 130 recovering drug addicts. What a powerful message of hope for them!

    It's a very powerful film about how Ashley Smith, played by Kate Mara (Fantastic Four), was held captive by Brian Nichols, played by David Oyelowo (Martin Luther King, Jr. in Selma), in her own home for seven hours. Brian put a woman in a coma and then shot and killed four people as he made his escape from an Atlanta area courthouse and carjacked one vehicle after the next. He took refuge in Ashley's home, where she read from The Purpose Driven Life, the second most translated book next to The Bible, to Brian, and he (SPOILER ALERT for any who weren't aware of this front page incident over ten years ago) turned himself in to authorities.

    The film has the crucible of Ashley's home at the center of its tightly wound plot. Michael K. Williams (RoboCop) plays Detective John Chestnut, who is leading the pursuit.

    Ashley's book is titled Unlikely Angel because she was a methamphetamines addict at the time she was taken hostage in her own home. After the screening we saw, Ashley was a part of a panel interviewed by Gayle King of CBS Good Morning. Gayle asked Ashley about a moment in the film when Brian asks Ashley for drugs. She brings out the methamphetamines she almost flushed earlier. Brian tells her to take the drugs along with him. Ashley told the audience at the screening that in that moment she knew she had been more of a captive to drugs than she was to Brian that night. She refuses the drugs as he's taking them, but later, when he thinks they were laced, he tries again to force her to take them. Still she refuses. Ashley told us that her Aunt Kim had prayed for the Lord to take Ashley Home if she were not able to stop taking the drugs. Ashley thought that if she capitulated to taking the drugs when Brian held the gun to her head, she would literally die. Caught between death at Brian's hand and death at the drugs' hand, she chose obedience to God, risking her life with the man who'd killed four people that morning. Brian hijacked five vehicles within fifteen minutes, and one woman reported that he told her, "Don't you see this blood on my hands? I'm a dead man." Ashley also knew he had nothing to lose, but still she chose not to take those drugs. Ashley told us that after that moment she began to see Brian through the eyes of Jesus. Later in the interview Gayle King asked Ashley what compelled her to make pancakes for Brian. She took us back to that moment of refusing to take the drugs and how it sparked her ability to see him through the eyes of Jesus and treat him as a real human being.

    Ashley was joined in the talk-back by...

    Read my full review at www.RichDrama.com/Captive
  • workshop-4113430 September 2015
    I remember see this on the news as it unfolded. It was a shocking and an incredible story. I think many will find it controversial. This film was very good and it was fascinating to see how she got through to the killer.

    Ashley, the main character and hostage, was able to reach a core of decency (I was surprised he even had it) inside a man who had cold-heartedly murdered 4 other people. At the same time, Ashley was able to not give up hope and grow spiritually and strengthen her resolve to trust God. I can't imagine how she felt going this through this with her child.
  • I guess I would not had even put this on if I knew it was one of these faith based films.

    Captive stars Kate Mara as Ashley Smith, a single mother who has lost custody of her daughter, is late for work and life in turmoil because she is addicted to crystal meth. At rehab she has been given a book by the American evangelical preacher Rick Warren's The Purpose Driven Life.

    David Oyelowo's plays Brian Nichols, a man accused of rape who breaks free of custody at court by shooting a Judge and three court officials. He goes on the run and hides out at Smith's apartment for 26 hours while the police search for him. At the apartment he takes drugs and Smith reads passages from Warren's book which has the effect of him to turn himself in.

    That believe it or not is the plot. For a moment I thought, he is pleading his innocence for the rape, somehow he will find the correct culprit like The Fugitive, apart from the issue he killed all those people in the courthouse.

    This is a cack handed and tedious two hander as Smith and Nichols talk about finding a spiritual connection. It certainly is no thriller and at the end when the real Smith appears in a clip of the Oprah Winfrey show the real message of the film becomes clear but was there really a need for such propaganda?
  • The movie is a must see. Very well put together. The scenes are intense and suspenseful. The movie kept me wondering what would be the outcome. Based on a true story it had moments that I wondered, how can any good come out of the tragedy in these persons lives, and then as the movie continued the inspiration came forward as a glimmer of humanity that gives light to redemption and hope. The lead actors were phenomenal. I recommend parents take their teenage children (13 and up) to see this movie and open up the discussion of the healing power of redemption in any circumstance. Loved it! Loved it! Loved it! Don't let a review from someone who has not seen it deceive you. This movie holds its own all the way to the end. It alienates no one and speaks to everyone.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Raise your hand if you thought this movie was going to be about a man getting saved by Jesus after a woman talked to him about it while he held her hostage?

    Well... that is not what this movie is about. This movie is about a mentally unstable man spending 7 hours or so with a strange woman he selected at random in a parking lot to chill with because he was lonely or something. The movie's main resolution is that she overcomes her meth problem, she turns in the alleged "monster", and she goes on to Oprah to share her horrific story and meet Rick Warren.

    Granted, the real story is problem a thousand times better than the movie version. But the movie version sucks. You will not feel satisfied. You will not see God working through these people (well sort of but not in a way that moves you to tears).

    Go read the purpose drive life and pretend this movie never happened.
  • subxerogravity26 September 2015
    Great performances by David Oyelowo and Kate Mara. The two created good chemistry on the screen.

    David Oyelow is a fine actor. I was really drawn in at watching him play Nicols. It was very intriguing watching him showcase the many levels of the character his is performing

    And Kate Mara did a fantastic job as a supporting actor. I like how she handle the material. Seemed more interesting in going for the realism of the situation without being over dramatic.

    But my personal favorite performance in captive goes to Micheal k Williams, however. It's not the first time he played a man on the right side of the law, but Omar from the Wire gave his most believable performance as the head cop Jon Chestnut hunting down Brian Nichols.

    It was a compelling story about a woman who literately seemed scared straight into cleaning herself up from an addiction while being captured by Brian Nicols for 7 hours.

    It's all about watching two good actors connect with each other on the big screen and it makes for a wonderful experience
  • KineticSeoul10 January 2016
    Warning: Spoilers
    This movie really lacked the suspense, the thrill and the tension that it needed. It was just such a boring and formulaic movie to sit through despite it being based on a true story. There was almost nothing about this movie that was inspiring or uplifting because the execution was poorly done. Everything just seemed so pretentious and forced to the point it got aggravating to sit through. Especially during the clips at the end before the credits started to roll. So the plot is about a woman who is a drug addict that also has a child of her own gets held captive by a escaped convict. A movie like this should have some heart to it but nothing about this movie moved me. This is a boring and dull film to sit through because despite it being based on a true story, it just didn't seem real (if that makes any sense). Just pass on this one.

    4/10
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I decided to watch this movie on a whim simply because of the good acting talent that was in the film. I came out enjoying the movie more than I thought I would which can actually be attributed to the excellent acting of David Oyelowo and Kate Mara. This movie basically rides on the interactions between these two but they carry the film quite well. I'm always hesitant to watch movies which have such strong religious themes. I'm not anti-religious whatsoever but more often than not religious films just aren't very good. I'm happy to say that this movie has religious themes but proves that it can be done well. The movie is directed fairly well by Jerry Jameson and is actually quite suspenseful and cathartic at times. It's not perfect but it's a decent film and it's worth a watch. Let's talk about the story.

    Brian Nichols (David Oyelowo) is a convicted criminal who is about to go in front of the judge for a heinous crime that he committed against his former girlfriend. Nichols manages to seriously injure the guard that was watching him and then proceeds to murder the judge in charge of his case along with a stenographer and a police officer before leaving in a stolen vehicle. While this is going on. Ashley Smith (Kate Mara) is a recovering meth addict that is trying to get her life back on track so that she can regain custody of her young daughter. A woman in her support group gives her a book called The Purpose Driven Life. She doesn't give much credence to this at first but she ends up keeping the book. That night, Nichols breaks into Ashley's home and takes her hostage while he tries to figure out what he's going to do next. The night ahead of them changes both of their lives as they realize that their paths may be different but they both lead to a dead end.

    This movie is all about Mara and Oyelowo. Oyelowo plays his part very well and I found myself hating but eventually feeling sorry for him. It's still easier to hate him though because of the innocent people he murders throughout the story. Don't get me wrong, I know he's a troubled man but as soon as I see innocent people dying I tend to turn against the murderer. Oyelowo still does a fantastic job of giving us a very ambivalent character that performs evil acts but is not completely bad. He obviously loves his young son and the catharsis he reaches just from listening to a book being read to him is actually heartwarming. It's even more effective since we know that the story is based off of actual events.

    Mara almost always does a great job and this movie is no exception. Smith is a flawed character that can be easily dismissed as a deadbeat mom who would rather spend time doing drugs than getting her life back on track but there's so much more to her. When we find out just how much she has given up because of her obsessive drug use it's hard not to feel a little sorry for her. Like Nichols, she's done terrible things but she's not completely bad. Now, to be fair, her sins are no where near the level of Nichols but we can tell that she's not a perfect person either.

    The movie has great acting and a heartwarming story but it's certainly not perfect. Nichols is portrayed excellently by Oyelowo but even his wonderful acting ability can't make me feel too sorry for this guy. He's already serving time for one horrible crime and right off the bat we see him committing horrible crimes one after another. It's based off of a true story so it's nice that it's being kept realistic but the film should have probably let us see a bit more of what the friends and families of the slain had to go through just to keep things in perspective. However, this is really a redemption story so I understand why they didn't but it's certainly not easy to make a character likable after that kind of thing.

    Overall, the Captive is a very good movie with an interesting look at two flawed but ultimately misunderstood human beings. The messages get a little crossed when we remember the absolutely horrible things that Nichols does but the main idea I took away from the film is that everyone can decide to do the right thing, even the worst of us. It's certainly one of the better faith based films that we've gotten in a while.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    On reading the synopsis I wasn't sure how they were going to pull off a movie about a captive converting a convict. Based on a true story it seems they pulled it off by mostly skimming it and delivering a fairly straight criminal/hostage movie.

    To me it is sad that this is a true story because once it was done it went to Oprah and the facts, and I didn't see the black male convict being interviewed and celebrated. In fact the purpose driven life he gained was to in fact not see his son until he becomes 18 and chooses to do so. If it were a fiction I would have liked to see the captive fighting to make sure that man saw his son, or at least shown that the mother of his son then made contact and facilitated communication and a relationship between father and son.

    Without this information the story is a sad one, which would be fine, but it is framed as good for everyone despite the obvious. He even gives her her phone, a clear sign of relenting himself to the authorities, yet he doesn't give himself up. Was this confused storytelling or did he intend to give up but got scared again? We don't know because it's not even hinted at.

    I love the idea of this movie but what it delivers is trash mixed with troubling truths.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I generally loathe so-called "inspirational" true stories, and at first was ready to give up on this generic two-lives-in-collision movie. I'm glad I stuck with it because David Oyewolo really delivers the goods , as opposed to the rest of the cast, who seems to be phoning it in prior to cashing their paychecks. I never got a sense of Kate Mara as a character, even though she is one of the main protagonists. Oyewolo, however, is a revelation, bringing to life a range of emotions from desperation and despair, tenderness, remorse, and ultimately realization of the impact of his actions. There is a particularly nuanced scene as he is speaking to his baby son which is extremely powerful without being over-the-top. Oyewolo is definitely one actor to watch!
  • "Every time I do it I think : "This is the last time. I can control this." And I do it again and again and again. I just can't... I just can't stop. I like it too much."

    The transformation Brian Nichols (David Oyelowo) undergoes, is irrefutable miraculous. He's a convicted criminal who manages to violently escape out of a courthouse, where he was waiting for his conviction after allegedly raping his girlfriend. During this escape he murders a number of people in cold blood, including the judge. This is the beginning of a major manhunt, initiated by the police departments in Atlanta. Until he bumps into Ashley Smith (Kate Mara), a young woman who is trying to kick the habit of using Crystal Meth, and takes her hostage in her own apartment. And thus the miracle happens. The reading of the bestseller "The Purpose Driven Life" by Rick Warren brings Brian to repentance. Hallelujah.

    I don't want to detract from what actual happened and how the offender Brian, by hearing positive messages and a religious inspired guidance, managed to get his act together so his humane and kind side could take over again. And this despite the fact that his life is a complete mess and there isn't a bright future awaiting him. From my own experience I know that resorting to the basic elements of a balanced life is lifesaving. And it doesn't matter this is accomplished by listening to a learned person or a soul mate. Or by reading appropriate literature. 5 Years ago I found myself with my back against the wall. By adjusting my philosophy of life, rearranging my priorities and fighting daily against what would be my downfall, my life has changed radically. Yes it"s something wonderful and miraculous, but no need to make a film about it.

    That's my feeling about this film. The message in this film contains a wonderful thing and is unique. The fact that it's possible for an individual to give meaning to his life. That applies to both Brian and Ashley. Ashley sees how her life slowly derails. Her husband murdered because of her drug addiction. And her daughter taken away from her because of her disability to be a caring mother. And Brian seeing another opportunity to meet his newborn son sometime in the future. That this happened again by the hands of the Almighty God, of course will please the religious community in our society. Therefor this film is ideal as an educational film for an ecumenical community or a religious tinted television channel.

    The only thing I found inappropriate, was the ending showing Ashley Smith in person during an Oprah talk show where she tells her story and promotes the book that saved her live and at the same time that of the abductor. The moment the author of the acclaimed book walks into the studio, I was overtaken by a sickening feeling. The entire film was suddenly reduced to nothing more than a tele-shopping program. I'm sure there are people whose life drastically changed after reading this book. But I can imagine there are thousands of people who experienced a drastic change of life thanks to another inspiring book. Lets hope they won't turn every such experience into a movie ....

    More reviews here : http://bit.ly/1KIdQMT
  • Warning: Spoilers
    "Captive" is successful in avoiding the potential of a trite Lifetime film or an evangelical tract. It takes a familiar film theme of a woman held hostage by a brutal killer and humanizes the characters with remarkable depth.

    The film is based on the true story of Ashley Smith, who was held captive by a Brian Nichols, who had just critically wounded a police officer and murdered a judge, court reporter, and two other bystanders in cold blood. As explained in the excellent behind-the-scenes segment in the DVD, the screenwriter, director, and actors worked hard to evoke the "miracle" of the release of Smith as a hostage and the decision of Nichols to surrender to the authorities in Atlanta.

    The film downplays the moments when Smith reads aloud from a self-help/religious book to Nichols. Rather, the focus is on the moments of self-revelation of both characters--Nichols as a killer and Smith as a drug addict. The bonding of the two characters in the apartment is the most memorable part of the film.

    Two outstanding performances are delivered by Kate Mara and David Oyelowo as Smith and Nichols. The acting is so good that one inevitably wants to see other films of these exemplary actors. In the DVD bonus segment, the most articulate of all of the film artists is Oyelowo, who describes the film as "two people finding light in the darkest places." The cast is rounded out with excellent work from Mimi Rogers as Smith's aunt and Michael K. Williams at the Atlanta police chief.

    Ashley Smith served as a consultant on the film. But it is clear that Mara and Oyelowo were truly dedicated to plummeting the depths of the characters, who discover redemption in two starkly different paths of their lives.
  • It started all nice and I really thought it was going to be action and pursuits all the time but it quickly came down to a point I was just watching the movie with not much interest. When they finally started to speak about God and all that kind of crap it lost my attention completely and I just hoped the movie would end faster. Not that the actors were bad or so. They all did their job like they should but the story is just not good enough to be memorable even if it is based on a true story. I just wished it was not based on a true story and that they would have left the God thing out of the movie and maybe then it would have been something better and different. Now the end was just not good enough, certainly not when you saw the first steps of the criminal in the beginning. Good to watch once and then forget about it.
  • It started good but soon turned into full-blown religious propaganda, complete with ridiculous jesus-hysteria from professional Christian Oprah Winfrey.

    Acting was decent but unfortunately it was ruined by silly superstition. Too bad.
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