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Gone Baby Gone
Miramax Films

Gone Baby Gone reviews
Critic Score
Metascore: 72 Metascore out of 100
User Score  
7.5 out of 10
based on 33 reviews
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How did we calculate this?
based on 80 votes
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MPAA RATING: R for violence, drug content and pervasive language

Starring Casey Affleck, Morgan Freeman, Cathie Callanan, John Ashton, Madeline O'Brien, Michelle Monaghan, and Ed Harris

Gone Baby Gone follows the explosive case of just one missing little girl. But inside this investigation lie secrets and a labyrinthine maze of class and corruption, evil and innocence...all leading up to one man's extraordinary choice in a world where right and wrong have become blurred. (Miramax)


GENRE(S): Crime  |  Drama  |  Mystery  
WRITTEN BY: Dennis Lehane (novel)
Aaron Stockard
Ben Affleck
 
DIRECTED BY: Ben Affleck  
RELEASE DATE: DVD: February 12, 2008 
Theatrical: October 19, 2007 
RUNNING TIME: 114 minutes, Color 
ORIGIN: USA 

What The Critics Said

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...

91
The Onion (A.V. Club) Scott Tobias
Though its procedural goes a little soft in the middle, Gone Baby Gone quietly accumulates in power, leading to one of the more subtly devastating final shots in recent memory.
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88
ReelViews James Berardinelli
Gone Baby Gone is powerful stuff - a movie that derives its plot twists from moral conundrums rather than from narrative sleight of hand.
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88
USA Today Claudia Puig
There is a compelling ethical question raised skillfully that will haunt viewers. The poignant conclusion probably will incite debate.
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88
Rolling Stone Peter Travers
Gone Baby Gone is full of dark secrets, and how they unravel will keep you glued.
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88
Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
The result is a superior police procedural, and something more -- a study in devious human nature.
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88
Boston Globe Ty Burr
The joke's on us, it turns out; as a director, Affleck has come through with a sharp, morally ambiguous piece of pulp crackerjack.
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88
Charlotte Observer Lawrence Toppman
Gone Baby Gone would be an accomplishment with anyone at the helm; from a first-timer, it's a revelation.
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83
Portland Oregonian Shawn Levy
It's a fine debut, far more grounded, plausible and engrossing than most Hollywood thrillers.
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83
Baltimore Sun Michael Sragow
In the strongest scenes, Ben Affleck gets his lead actors to extract the bitter juice from Lehane's wood-alcohol prose. The movie has its horrifying Gothic twists and turns, but it's never better than when it takes these two into places where the underclass goes to forget or be forgotten or get lost.
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80
Chicago Reader J.R. Jones
Ben Affleck directed and cowrote the script; his biggest gamble was casting his irksome little brother as a pistol-whipping tough guy, but the picture is so superbly executed in every other respect that Casey seems more quirky than miscast.
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80
The New York Times Manohla Dargis
One of the graces of Gone Baby Gone is its sensitivity to real struggle, to the lived-in spaces and worn-out consciences that can come when despair turns into nihilism.
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80
The Hollywood Reporter Stephen Farber
It's a tribute to this thoughtful, deeply poignant, splendidly executed film that we replay the conclusion in our minds long after the lights come on.
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80
Village Voice Jim Ridley
In his strikingly downbeat directorial debut, Affleck has created something of a blue-moon rarity: an American movie of genuine moral complexity.
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75
TV Guide Maitland McDonagh
Fans of Lehane's Kenzie-Gennaro books will lament the fact that starting with the fourth book means losing the couple's extensive backstory, but the essence of their fragile, damaged bond comes through even if you don't know what shaped it.
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75
New York Post Lou Lumenick
For all of Affleck's skill, he can't entirely put over a credulity-straining ending that probably worked better on the printed page. At the same time, the deeply disturbing windup of "Gone Baby Gone" is a real talker. And that's not something you can say about many movies these days.
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75
San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle
A story so good that maybe anybody could have turned out something decent.
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75
Miami Herald Connie Ogle
The only real casualty of Lehane's novel is Angie, here reduced to a supporting player who bears no resemblance to the original character, who is every bit as smart and tough and interesting as her boyfriend. It's a regrettable loss in a film that otherwise indicates its first-time director knows what he's doing.
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75
Philadelphia Inquirer Steven Rea
Casey's big brother has made a tough, taut mystery.
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75
New York Daily News Jack Mathews
The film's standout performance belongs to Ed Harris, who plays a Boston detective with decades of experience and an equal amount of built-up resentment toward people who would harm children.
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70
Film Threat Pete Vonder Haar
Doesn’t always hit all the right notes...But in the end, Affleck displays a surprisingly sure hand, and Gone Baby Gone largely delivers.
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70
Los Angeles Times Kenneth Turan
By and large a notable piece of work, a strong directing debut by actor Ben Affleck that highlights attention-getting performances...But, as adapted from the novel by Dennis Lehane, this brooding, somber film is also ragged around the edges and not without problematic aspects.
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70
Washington Post Stephen Hunter
The movie is taut, fast, achingly authentic and terribly melancholy.
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70
Variety Lisa Nesselson
Moral ambiguity is the real star of Ben Affleck's helming debut, Gone Baby Gone, an involving Boston-set tale of mixed motives, selflessness and perfidy in the wake of a 4-year-old girl's disappearance.
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70
New York Magazine David Edelstein
Casey Affleck has never had a pedestal like the one his brother provides him, and he earns it. His Patrick is pale and raspy, with a slight grogginess that gives him an astounding vulnerability--and makes his bursts of temper shocking.
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67
Entertainment Weekly Lisa Schwarzbaum
Affleck the director shows excellent instincts, not least of which is letting his younger brother, Casey, hold the center as a young guy not as smaht as he thinks he is.
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67
Austin Chronicle Marjorie Baumgarten
As a leading man, Casey Affleck has a nebbishy quality and a mumbly speaking voice that I personally find disruptive to a movie's flow.
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67
Seattle Post-Intelligencer William Arnold
The story is patently implausible and unnecessarily confusing, and it works to a moral dilemma for its hero -- and a trick ending for the audience -- that resolves the action with so little satisfaction that you wish they hadn't bothered.
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63
Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips
The film is reasonably effective all the same, though Affleck has yet to learn how to conduct each scene like a musical score, paying attention to matters of tempo and dynamics.
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63
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Rick Groen
Very few movies end so much better than they begin. For that reason, and only that reason, this is an exceptional picture.
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63
Premiere Glenn Kenny
It's been well-publicized that Affleck, going for as authentic a feel as possible, cast many genuine South Bostoners in both extra and speaking roles, and, while that's salutary, in some scenes his strategy backfires, yielding caricatures that are merely more vivid than the ones turned out by Central Casting Hollywood productions.
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60
The New Yorker David Denby
Ben Affleck probably respects Lehane the genre writer (there are five books with Patrick Kenzie as the hero) more than he should. He also has some way to go before he becomes a good director of action.
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60
Salon.com Stephanie Zacharek
Ben Affleck is smart about setting the scene -- he's even better at it than Clint Eastwood was in another Lehane adaptation, "Mystic River." But he's less adept at defining individual personalities, at making us care about the characters who deserve our sympathy -- or, maybe more important, the ones who don't.
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50
Wall Street Journal Joe Morgenstern
Storytelling problems surface toward the overwrought climax, but the worst problem is the unrelenting grimness. It's hard to like a movie that leaves you with no hope.
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What Our Users Said

Vote Now!The average user rating for this movie is 7.5 (out of 10) based on 80 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

Chris gave it a10:
People who reacted negatively to Gone Baby Gone are probably missing the point. It's not about plot twists, or predictability, or the fact that the story is dark. It's about the fact that this compelling film deftly leads viewers to the moral dilemma at the end and evokes an emotional response. So many "important" films end without creating any sort of discussion, let alone debate. Whatever structural flaws the movie has, there is no debate over the fact that the ending will be one of the most talked about of the year.

Johnny2cents gave it an8:
I'm giving it an 8 only because it was so damn rough and uncomfortable to watch at times. I can't remember the last time I heard a woman annunciate the C word in a movie with such conviction. I'm no prude and I've seen hundreds of caustic movies before, but I guess unlike the Pulp Fiction's of the movie world which are pure in your face nihilistic entertainment, the subject matter in Gone is about as dreadfully real as one can possibly imagine and one that every parent on earth shivers at the thought of. The direction was nothing new but B. Affleck did a great job with what he has learned in the past, whether studying other directors or learned what not to do while on the other side of the camera. And how Amy Ryan didn’t get an Oscar nomination is beyond me, I’ve never despised a character in a movie as much as I did her. She was brilliant and a pure piece of low life s--t. A couple of other scenes left me a little concerned about Dennis Lehane’s portrayal of Boston. Like his other novel Mystic River there really aren’t any simpatico characters, in fact I don’t think there are any, is Boston really that ugly or is he just repetitive? The ending without a doubt leaves you scratching your head, wondering, what would I have done?? In the end I concluded that he did the right wrong thing. I know that my review sounds a little on the schizophrenic side but that is because although I loved this movie I still don’t know if I liked it.

m sc gave it a0:
Wow what a HORRIBLE MOVIE!!! Monotone dialogue, cliche story. Embarrassing for both Affleck's!

chris c gave it a3:
This movie is not very good. at all.

Chad S. gave it a7:
Patrick(Casey Affleck) and Angie(Michelle Monaghan) are a handsome couple. Whatever room they're in, the baby-faced detectives turn heads. Smarter, thinner, and more well-rounded than the rest, better days are ahead for Patrick and Angie if they get lost. But he's happy here. He thought she was happy, too. Circumstances change, however, like in Sam Raimi's "A Simple Plan", and their love is put to the test. When Patrick decides to follows the letter of the law in "Gone Baby Gone", Angie realizes that she and her high-school sweeheart have grown apart. Casey needs to endorse his neighborhood, so he does "the right thing". He needs to defend his life, her life, and their life together. But Angie only wants what's best for Amanda. F*** ego! That's a man issue. Patrick may have the authority to prevent a little girl from escaping working-class Boston, but not a grown woman, who probably has grown tired of being a Jane Austen character. Next time, she'll go for a rich man.

Angelica H. gave it a10:
Ben Afflect should stay where he truly belongs: behind the camera. Great story, characters are multi-faceted. All you want from a movie.

Lee B. gave it a9:
The finest directorial debut that I can remember. I can't wait to see what Ben Affleck does in the future. Superb cast!

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