Unbreakable
Unbreakable Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:M. Night Shyamalan
Studio:Walt Disney Video
Rating:3.5
Rated:PG-13
Date Added:2006-12-04
Last Seen:2013-04-09
Purchased On:2006-04-12
ASIN:B00003CXQA
UPC:0786936144772
Price:14.99
Genre:Thrillers
Location:0366
Duration:107
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:2.35:1
Sound:Dolby
Custom 1:Copied
M. Night Shyamalan  ...  (Director)
  ...  (Writer)
 
Firdous Bamji  ...  
Michaelia Carroll  ...  
Bostin Christopher  ...  
Spencer Treat Clark  ...  
Johanna Day  ...  
David Duffield (II)  ...  
James Handy  ...  
Samuel L. Jackson  ...  
Johnny Hiram Jamison  ...  
Chance Kelly  ...  
Michael Kelly  ...  
Elizabeth Lawrence  ...  
Sally Parrish  ...  
Laura Regan  ...  
Leslie Stefanson  ...  
Eamonn Walker  ...  
Bruce Willis  ...  
Charlayne Woodard  ...  
Robin Wright Penn  ...  
Summary: When Unbreakable was released, Bruce Willis confirmed that the film was the first in a proposed trilogy. Viewed in that context, this is a tantalizing and audaciously low-key thriller, with a plot that twists in several intriguing and unexpected directions. Standing alone, however, this somber, deliberately paced film requires patient leaps of faith--not altogether surprising, since this is writer-director M. Night Shyamalan's daring follow-up to The Sixth Sense. While just as assured as that earlier, phenomenal hit, Unbreakable is the work of a filmmaker whose skill exceeds his maturity, its confident style serving a story that borders on juvenile. However, Shyamalan's basic premise--that comic books are the primary conduit of modern mythology--is handled with substantial relevance.
Willis plays a Philadelphia security guard whose marriage is on the verge of failing when he becomes the sole, unscathed survivor of a devastating train wreck. When prompted by a mysterious, brittle-boned connoisseur of comic books (Samuel L. Jackson), he realizes that he's been free of illness and injury his entire life, lending credence to Jackson's theory that superheroes--and villains--exist in reality, and that Willis himself possesses extraordinary powers. Shyamalan presents these revelations with matter-of-fact gravity, and he draws performances (including those of Robin Wright Penn and Spencer Treat Clark, as Willis's wife and son) that are uniformly superb. The film's climactic revelation may strike some as ultimately silly and trivial, but if you're on Shyamalan's wavelength, the entire film will assume a greater degree of success and achievement. --Jeff Shannon