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Arlington Road
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by Sony Pictures
Sales Rank: 16897
Price: $13.49

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Widowed when his fbi agent wife is killed by a right-wing group college professor michael faraday becomes obsessed with the culture of these groups especially when his new neighbors the all-american oliver and cheryl lang start acting suspiciously. With each twist the mystery deepens and the question looms. Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 04/22/2008 Starring: Jeff Bridges Tim Robbins Run time: 119 minutes Rating: R Director: Mark Pellington
Viewer Reviews Hollywood hasn't made a literate white-knuckled conspiracy thriller like director's Mark Pellington's "Arlington Road" in many moons. The genre ran out of steam in the late 1970s. The late Alan J. Pakula came closest to capturing the essence of the conspiracy thriller with two memorable efforts "The Parallax View" (1974) and "All The President's Men" (1976). Oliver Stone revived the genre briefly with "JFK," but this star-studded marathon as good as it was lacked the visceral qualities of either Alfred Hitchcock's work or Pakula's pictures. Nothing about "JFK" surprised audiences. Stone, a filmmaker more controversial than any controversy he aroused, concerned himself more with uncovering the truth than captivating moviegoers. Indeed, David Miller's "Executive Action" (1973), a penny-thrifty thriller about the Kennedy assassination, entertains more than "JFK" on a fraction of its modest budget. Richard Donner's "Conspiracy Theory" (1997) and George P. Cosmatos' "Shadow Conspiracy" (1996) vanished almost as quickly as they showed up. Playwright David Mamet recaptured the ambiance of the conspiracy thriller with "The Spanish Prisoner", but the studio packed it off to the video rental shelves without much thought. Happily, after some doubts about whether it would open itself, "Arlington Road" made it to the big-screen. If he were alive, Alfred Hitchcock would probably applaud Mark Pellington for picking up where he left off. "Arlington Road" appropriates many of Hitchcock's conventions. Michael Faraday (Jeff Bridges of "Thunderbolt and Lightfoot") resembles the quintessential Hitchcock hero. He is an average Joe with a white-collar job. He doesn't sleep with a gun under his pillow, and he doesn't careen around in a souped-up sports car with fancy gadgets. He wears a necktie instead of a pistol. Actually, he teaches American history, and he is a widowed, single-father raising his nine-year old son, Grant Faraday (Spencer Clark Treat). Further, Hitchcock staged scenes of nail-gnawing suspense in the least dangerous settings. Remember the sun-lit cornfield in "North by Northwest?" Or the shower in "Psycho?" Or the church in "Vertigo?" Similarly, the action in "Arlington Road" takes place in areas usually considered crime free. Wide open public meeting areas, shopping malls, well-lit university classrooms, and the idyllic seclusion of the suburbs, replete with backyard barbecues and dinner parties with wholesome neighbors. The people that made "Arlington Road" rely on this deceptive façade of tranquility to distract audiences long enough before they hit them with the year's best paranoid thriller. "Arlington Road" opens with chilling images of a juvenile, Brady Lang (Mason Gamble), shambling down the middle of a street in an upper-middle-class, Virginia suburb on a bright sunny day. He clutches the charred stump of his hands. Blood dribbles onto his sneakers. Driving home from George Washington University where he lectures about terrorism, Michael Faraday spot the injured youth and speeds him to the emergency room. Michael neither knows who Brady is nor where he lives. Later, at the hospital, Brady's grateful parents, Oliver (Tim Robbins of "Mystic River") and his wife Cheryl (Joan Cusack of "Grosse Pointe Blank"), arrive and thank him. Initially, Michael is surprised to learn that the Langs live across the street from him. Oliver explains that Brady hurt himself while apparently fooling around with fireworks, but he dismisses the accident as nothing more than "a failed rocketry experiment." Gradually, a closely knit relationship develops between Michael and the Langs. At the same time, Brady and Grant become fast friends. "Our house is your house," Cheryl says with irony: "We're here for you, we really are." At a dinner party, Faraday introduces the Langs to Brooke Wolfe (Hope Davis of "The Matador"), a former graduate student who is now his girlfriend and colleague. Cheryl compliments them; they make a cute couple. Oliver exhibits the work he does as a structural architect. Cheryl confines herself to the home as the happy housewife that never complains while she rears their two daughters and son. Apparently, the only difference between the Langs and TV's "Brady Bunch" is three children and a housekeeper. Meanwhile, "Reindeer Games" scenarist Ehren Kruger's award-winning script parcels out bits and pieces of exposition about Michael. Faraday's late wife (Laura Poe) worked for the FBI and died tragically in the line-of-duty when the Feds bungled a raid on the cabin of a suspected terrorist. "Leah died for her country," Whit Carver (Robert Gossett), Leah's old partner at the FBI, consoles Michael. "She didn't have to," Michael shakes his head in grief at her gravesite. Grant still suffers from the loss of his mom and bridles at the presence of Brooke, the new woman in Faraday's life. Michael himself has not totally recovered his Leah's death and pours his anxieties into his lectures about terrorism. As a history professor, Michael enjoys lecturing about domestic terrorism. He promotes conspiracy theories in the classroom and provides his students with hand-outs teeming with photos and news articles about anarchy. He refuses to believe that a single individual, no matter how resourceful, could carry out an act of terrorism on American soil without help. "The Mothman Prophecies" director Mark Pellington acquits himself admirably as a cinematic stylist of the highest order. After a whirlwind opening, Pellington lets the dust settle and carefully lets the tension build. Although Michael and the Langs grow closer as friends, our hero ferrets out incriminating evidence about the Langs that surprises and then disturbs him. He alienates his own son and Brooke thinks that he has lost his mind. As it turns out, Oliver isn't the man that he claims to be and Michael has the college year books to prove his point. Lenser Bobby Bukowski and Pellington surround Faraday with darkness and isolate him in their pictorial compositions. Even Wit Carver has doubts about Michael's sanity and warns him that he is heading toward oblivion. Pellington frames Faraday in increasingly tighter close-ups to suggest the mental claustrophobia that his crusade is causing him. Altogether, conspiracy theorists will want to watch "Arlington Road" over and over, especially in light of 9/11.
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Arlington Road
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