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Control

 
Movies:

Control

  • Director: Tim Hunter
  • Genre: Thriller
  • Movie Type: Crime Thriller, Psychological Thriller
  • Themes: Haunted By the Past, Starting Over, Death Row
  • Main Cast: Ray Liotta, Willem Dafoe, Michelle Rodriguez
  • Release Year: 2004
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 98 minutes

Plot

It's been a long and hard life for death-row inmate Lee Ray Oliver (Ray Liotta), and by the time he is strapped to the gurney to be executed by lethal injection, his death sentence seems more like sweet release than ultimate punishment for a lifetime of crime. Awakening stunned and confused after being pronounced deceased by the prison doctor, Lee Ray is given a second chance at life on the one condition that he take part in a secret experimental treatment designed by revolutionary scientist Dr. Miles Copeland (Willem Dafoe) to cure him of his criminal instinct once and for all. He is granted a new name and new hope when the treatment works - permanently - but soon the past returns to haunt him in the form of several old enemies, and then shady government officials crop up to terminate Copeland's program. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Cast

Michelle Rodriguez

Credit

Tim Hunter - Director

Similar Movies

A Clockwork Orange; Natural Born Killers; Man Bites Dog; Animal Room; Minority Report
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Wikipedia: Control (2004 film)
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Control
Directed by Tim Hunter
Written by Todd Slavkin
Darren Swimmer
Starring Ray Liotta
Willem Dafoe
Michelle Rodriguez
Release date(s) 7 December 2004
Language English

Control is a 2004 direct-to-video movie. It was produced by an American production company, but was filmed in Bulgaria.

Contents

Teaser

A convict gets a second chance at life if he agrees to undergo behavior modification.

Synopsis

Oliver is a death row inmate who is given a lethal injection before a room of witnesses. He awakes in the morgue to find that he had only been administered saline and anaesthetic. A neuropharmacologist, Dr. Copeland, tells him that he has a choice: either agree to be a human subject for an experimental drug trial with potentially serious or fatal side effects, or he will receive a truly lethal injection.

Oliver opts for the drug trial, where he is administered a "calming" medicine on a daily basis and tested extensively to see if his sociopathic tendencies decrease. Twice, Oliver fakes being relaxed to lull the guards and scientists into a false sense of ease, whereupon he attempts an escape.

Over time, the medicine and psychological counseling do appear to lower his sociopathology, as measured physiologically and emotionally, and Oliver undergoes "phase two" of the procedure, where he is reintroduced into society, with a false identity and a changed appearance (tattoos and scars removed, dress and hairstyle change).

Oliver is under constant surveillance, but manages to escape supervision to attempt to befriend and assist a helpless bystander who was victimized during one of Oliver's past crimes. Oliver feels deep remorse now for shooting the man, which left him mentally handicapped. Though the man no longer recognizes Oliver, he cheerfully accepts the friendly offerings. However his brother, who is the man's caretaker, recognizes Oliver and seeks revenge. Simultaneously, Oliver is also being sought by the Russian mafia, who seek revenge upon Oliver for killing the nephew of a mafia boss.

Though Oliver makes progress in establishing a new life, getting a job, keeping his anger and violence in check, and developing a relationship with a female co-worker (Teresa), his past comes to haunt him, and he is captured by the victim's brother, who kills one of Oliver's pharmaceutical supervisors while kidnapping Oliver. This ultimately leads to a hit squad being sent out to put Oliver down. The doctor believes that Oliver was making progress and did not kill the man, so secretly tries to help him, entangling himself in the situation. They eventually learn that Oliver's progress was not due to the medicine after all, as he was in a control group which received a placebo, but instead was due to the counseling and Oliver's willingness to change. They try to flee the state, but are caught by the hit squad, which kills Oliver. Then the cops arrive and stop the squad from killing Dr. Copeland.

The film ends with Dr. Copeland as a counselor in a youth center.

Cast




Awards

Nominated for a Golden Reel Award.[1]

Critical reception

Since the film was released directly to video, it was not extensively reviewed in the media. Those who did publish reviews were generally impressed by the leads' acting, and by the premise that people who have done extremely bad things in the past can move toward redemption. One viewer wrote:

"Thanks to the intensity of Ray Liotta, Control is a violent crime movie that grabs you by the throat in the opening credits and doesn't let go until the end . . "[2]

One viewer suggested the story was inspired by the novel Blood of Heaven, a 1996 book from American writer Bill Myers.


Notes

  1. ^ "Control". imdb.com. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0374584/awards. Retrieved 2006-09-05. 
  2. ^ http://www.monstersandcritics.com/dvd/reviews/article_4502.php/DVD_Review_Control

External links


 
 

 

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