By Nicholas White
Story
Adapted from a story by
Mystic River author Dennis Lehane,
Gone Baby Gone refers to the disappearance of children. It’s a grim story, though one of redemption, and is quite intricate. The story follows a pair of Boston private detectives, Patrick Kenzie (
Casey Affleck) and Angie Gennaro (
Michelle Monaghan), as they go looking for a local 4-year-old girl who has been abducted. Patrick and Angie are hired by the family to help the police find her—before it’s too late. There’s also brooding detective Remy (
Ed Harris) and inveterate police captain Doyle (
Morgan Freeman), who don’t take kindly to the P.I.s meddling. But it seems the girl’s drug-addicted mother Helene (
Amy Ryan) has inadvertently put her daughter in some serious danger. Numerous shady characters burrow up to lend guidance and a nasty environment, putting a face on Boston’s criminal underbelly. But Patrick is determined to find this little girl—and when a money-drop for the kidnapped tot goes awry, he won’t let it go. And that is his downfall.
Acting
Casey Affleck gives a truly memorable performance. His calm demeanor almost shocks at times when it seems his feathers should presumably be more ruffled. He speaks in even tones, without emotion, even as a hardened street detective with community roots.
Casey’s ease conveys naturalism but is possibly too light to carry the movie’s intrigue and heaviness. Mich
elle Monaghan delivers a pivotal, sobering turn as
Casey's partner and girlfriend, after playing sweet with
Ben Stiller in
The Heartbreak Kid. Her Angie is a co-equal who adds ideas and emotional balance.
Amy Ryan, a Tony-winning stage actress, is a fun mess as Helene, stuck in a nasty substance abuse pattern. Helene is so unlikeable, in fact, even the criminals think she doesn’t deserve her daughter.
Ed Harris adds another intense role to his resume as a flawed detective who we don’t completely trust, invoking the same rage he displayed in his shivering turn in
A History of Violence.
Morgan Freeman’s movie career built on dignified, wise roles is subverted here—and he plays it pitch perfect. And
John Ashton (
Beverly Hills Cop's Detective Taggert) does a nice turn as Remy’s hardened partner.
Direction
As a first-time director,
Ben Affleck does an admirable job. Much of
Gone Baby Gone’s charm comes from the director’s ties to his hometown. He captures a certain vibe from Boston’s seedy side, much like
The Departed did. The Dorchester neighborhood setting adds to the blue-collar grit, sometimes seeming oddly aloof and plastic. Moody scenes move quickly, almost too confidently. It flits around kinetically during some action sequences but then lapses into old-school dreariness, creating a weird music-video pace, including a
Silence of the Lambs-like psychedelic murder sequence. But it’s the script, co-written by
Ben, that really gets you.
Gone Baby Gone fixates on some underwhelming dialogue (mostly involving
Casey Affleck)--but then the film really packs a one-two punch at the end. It will leave you reeling.
Ben may have finally found his niche.