Town, The
Warner Bros. (2010)
Crime, Romance, Thriller
In Collection
#13173
0*
Seen ItYes
IMDB   7.6
2 hr 3 mins USA / English
DVD  Region 1   R
Blake Lively Krista
Ben Affleck Doug MacRay
Jeremy Renner Jem
Rebecca Hall Claire
Jon Hamm Adam Frawley
Chris Cooper Stephen MacRay
Brian Scannell Henry
Ed O'Keefe Morton
Gary Galone Internal Affairs Officer
Michael Yebba Beacon G.I. Joe Driver
Nicholas Cairis FBI Agent
Jeremiah Kissel Claire's Lawyer
Rich Skinner Corrections Officer
Jeff Martineau Car Driver
Eric Ryan Boston Police Officer
Director
Ben Affleck
Producer Graham King
Basil Iwanyk
Writer Sheldon Turner
Ben Affleck
Aaron Stockard
Cinematography Robert Elswit
Musician Harry Gregson-Williams
David Buckley


Ben Affleck worked triple-time on The Town, in which he directs, stars, and co-adapts Chuck Hogan's Prince of Thieves. Affleck's Doug MacRay comes from a line of Boston bank robbers. With his father (Chris Cooper) behind bars, he spent most of his childhood in Charlestown with loyal hothead Jem (The Hurt Locker's Jeremy Renner). Doug had a chance to go legit as a pro hockey player, but he threw it away on drugs and bad behavior. After the armed robbery that opens the film, Jem becomes convinced that bank manager Claire (Vicki Cristina Barcelona's Rebecca Hall) saw something, so Doug, who wore a disguise at the time, sets out to make sure she doesn't tell FBI agent Frawley (Mad Men's Jon Hamm) anything incriminating (Titus Welliver plays Frawley's partner). Doug starts by asking Claire out, and finds she's more shaken than stirred--and that he likes her better than Jem's oxy-addicted sister, Krista (Gossip Girl's Blake Lively), his sometime girlfriend. Unfortunately, neither Jem nor vicious enforcer Fergie (Pete Postlethwaite) will cut him loose until he orchestrates two more scores--the last to take place at Fenway Park. If The Town offers fewer surprises than Affleck's directorial debut, Gone Baby Gone, he raises the stakes with well-planned heists, nerve-jangling car chases, and deadly shootouts. Though Affleck looks too clean-cut to portray a thug, he gives a nicely understated performance, while Hall proves an inspired choice as a woman who could make a bad guy turn good--or die trying.
Edition Details
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