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The Brave One

 
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The Brave One

  • Director: Neil Jordan
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Thriller
  • Movie Type: Psychological Thriller
  • Themes: Vigilantes, Haunted By the Past, Out For Revenge
  • Main Cast: Jodie Foster, Terrence Howard, Nicky Katt, Naveen Andrews, Mary Steenburgen
  • Release Year: 2007
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 122 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Neil Jordan's The Brave One stars Jodie Foster as a happy woman whose life changes irrevocably after a brutal assault leaves her partner (Naveen Andrews) dead. The woman, feeling that the police investigation will be unable to catch the perpetrators, begins to live in constant fear. This outlook results in the woman eventually dispatching vigilante justice. Terrence Howard co-stars as the officer in charge of the investigation. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide

Review

An artfully crafted vigilante flick that benefits endlessly from a simmering lead performance by Jodie Foster, a memorable turn by supporting player Terrence Howard, and the intoxicating direction of veteran filmmaker Neil Jordan, The Brave One offers a fairly predictable yet thought-provoking meditation on the transformative power of revenge before a last-minute twist highlights how even the most righteous can succumb to their hunger for justice under the right circumstances. Robbed of her fiancé and rendered comatose by a murderous gang of street thugs, popular radio show host Erica Bain (Foster) eventually awakens to discover just how cruel fate can be. Erica is shattered to learn that her fiancé was killed in the vicious attack, and soon becomes wary of venturing outside alone. Returning to the apartment to begin the emotional recovery process, Erica is frightened by the fearful stranger that seems to have taken her over from within. It is at this point that Erica realizes that despite having never been afraid of anything in the past, she now fears the city she once called home and remains unable to venture out onto the streets without the reassurance that she will always remain in control of her fate. Jordan's technique of expressing his protagonist's churning malaise as she takes her first steps toward recovery is undeniably effective, and Foster offers a fascinating portrayal of a woman who never realized her own true nature until she began to grasp the profound true nature of fear itself. Likewise, Howard -- coming off yet another memorable performance in Richard Shepard's The Hunting Party -- proves once again that he is one of the most talented character actors in the film industry with his role as a frustrated police officer seeking justice against a powerful businessman who seems untouchable. The connection between Foster and Howard's characters is truly the heart of the film, and both actors are note perfect in their many scenes together (the scene in which they discuss the vigilante spree at a diner counter in particular shows both the actors and the director at the peak of their creative powers). What ultimately sets The Brave One apart from the vast majority of vigilante films is that while it never denies the viewer the cathartic release of seeing Foster go Mrs. 9mm on the worst scum that the city has to offer, it's the protagonist's compelling quest to connect with that mysterious inner stranger that will truly have viewers pondering their own stances on capital punishment and the consequences of taking the law into your own hands. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Cast

Ene Oloja - Josai; Luis Da Silva, Jr. - Lee; Blake Foster - Cash; Rafael Sardina - Reed; Jane Adams - Nicole; Gordon MacDonald - Murrow; Zoe Kravitz - Chloe; John Magaro - Ethan; Victor Colicchio - Cutler; Jermel Howard - Thug on Subway; Dennis White - Thug on Subway; Julia Garro - Shauna Nelson; Brian Delate - Detective Pitney; Lenny Venito - Mortell; Carmen Ejogo - Jackie; Dana Eskelson - Sketch Artist; Angel Sing - Gun Dealer; Yolande Bavan - David's Mother; Ivo Velon - James; Tina Sloan - Stationary Saleswoman; Jaime Tirelli - Pawn Shop Guy; Larry Fessenden - Sandy Combs; Nguyen Anh Hoa - Ida Combs; Brian Tarantina - Gun Store Clerk; Michael Anthony Williams - Subway Dad; Jesus Ruiz - Chief of Detectives; Hope Adams - Press Conference Reporter; Joseph Melendez - Press Conference Reporter; Ted Neustadt - Press Conference Reporter; Brett Berg - Ethan's Friend; Dr. Jeffery Manko - Emergency Room Doctor; Mick Cunningham - Precinct Cop; Lisa Joyce - CPA Worker; Tom Greer - Desk Cop; David Naizir - Guy Outside Subway Station; Robert Michael McClure - Sound Engineer; Tashya Valdevit - Erica's Nurse; Lai-Si Fernandez - Shauna's Friend; Moises Acevedo - Reed's Runner; Dennis Johnson - Reed's Runner; Jack Caruso - Subway Detective; Jim Taylor McNickle - Subway Detective; Rosanne C. Lucarelli - Subway Reporter; Leif Riddell - Subway Reporter; DeShaun Stallworth - Subway Reporter; Michael J. Burg - Elevator Man; Creighton James - Elevator Man; Clayton Dean Smith - Elevator Man; Barbara Gayle - Elevator Woman; Anna Margaret Hollyman - Elevator Woman; Lily Mercer - Elevator Woman; Musto Pelinkovicci - Russian Cab Driver; Dean Meminger - NY1 Reporter; Cheryl Wills - NY1 TV Anchor

Credit

Robert Guerra - Art Director, Aaron Auch - Associate Producer, Frank Graziadei - Boom Operator, Tommy Louie - Boom Operator, Laura Rosenthal - Casting, Grant Wilfley Casting Incorporated - Casting, Benjamin Wallfisch - Conductor, David Gambino - Co-producer, Catherine Marie Thomas - Costume Designer, Richard Patrick - First Assistant Director, Neil Jordan - Director, Tony Lawson - Editor, Jodie Foster - Executive Producer, Herbert W. Gains - Executive Producer, Bruce Berman - Executive Producer, Dana Goldberg - Executive Producer, Frances Mathias - Hair Styles, Jerry Decarlo - Hair Styles, Robert T. Striem - Location Manager, Dario Marianelli - Composer (Music Score), Kyra Panchenko - Makeup, Neal Norton - Camera Operator, Kristi Zea - Production Designer, Philippe Rousselot - Cinematographer, Joel Silver - Producer, Susan Downey - Producer, Nick Wollage - Recording, Jason Stasium - Recording, Chris Jennings - Recording, Nick Banes - Recording, Nick Wollage - Sound Mixer, Jason Stasium - Sound Mixer, Chris Jennings - Sound Mixer, Nick Banes - Sound Mixer, Tom Nelson - Sound/Sound Designer, Philip Stockton - Sound/Sound Designer, John Cenatiempo - Stunts, Jeffrey Lee Gibson - Stunts, Chick Bernhardt - Stunts, Douglas Crosby - Stunts, Henry Kingi, Jr. - Stunts, David Lomax - Stunts, Blaise Corrigan - Stunts, Roy Farfel - Stunts, Jill Brown - Stunts, Bob Colletti - Stunts, Jill Stokesberry - Stunts, Michael Rufino - Stunts, Stephen Pope - Stunts, Chris Barnes - Stunts, Peter Epstein - Stunts, Dave Pope - Stunts, Wayne Cerullo - Stunts, Darren Cerullo - Stunts, Jeremy Fry - Stunts, Bobby Beckles - Stunts, Jared Burke - Stunts, Chrissy Weathersby - Stunts, Anthony Vincent - Stunts, Vince Cupone - Stunts, Steven T. Ritzi - Stunts Coordinator, Neil Carter - Technical Advisor, Kathleen Fellegara - Technical Advisor, Herbert W. Gains - Unit Production Manager, Ray Quinlan - Unit Production Manager, Bruce A. Taylor - Screen Story, Roderick Taylor - Screen Story, Neil Jordan - Screenwriter, Bruce A. Taylor - Screenwriter, Roderick Taylor - Screenwriter, Cynthia Mort - Screenwriter, Eric J. Robertson - Visual Effects Supervisor, Allan Zaleski - Sound Effects Editor, Animal Actors of Hollywood - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Steve McAuliff - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, David Owens - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Frances Fiore - Unit Publicist, Carlos Omar Guerra - First Assistant Camera, George Patsos - Key Grip, William Patsos - Key Grip, Michael Connell - Music Editor, Ann Gray - Post Production Coordinator, Noreen Donohoe - Post Production Coordinator, Paul A. Levin - Post Production Supervisor, Sara Flamm - Production Supervisor, Michael Saccio - Properties Master, Tom Fleischman - Re-Recording Mixer, Mary Cybulski - Script Supervisor, Michael Pitt - Second Assistant Director, Jeff Brink - Special Effects Coordinator, Neal Norton - Steadicam Operator, Abbot Genser - Still Photographer, Philip Stockton - Supervising Sound Editor, Glenn Allen - Visual Effects Producer, Richard Friedlander - Visual Effects Producer, Gina Alfono - ADR Editor, Josephine Shokrian - Art Department Assistant, Eric Dean - Art Department Assistant, Edward Pisoni - Assistant Art Director, Darrell K. Keister - Assistant Art Director, Marion Kolsby - Assistant Art Director, Mickey Carlton - Assistant Costumer Designer, Darrin Smith - Assistant Chief Lighting Technician, Damon Gordon - Assistant Location Manager, Gwen Laura Schmitt - Assistant Production Coordinator, Gus Papadopoulos - Assistant Properties, Anthony Munafo - Assistant Properties, Candy Heiland - Assistant Properties, Chris Fielder - Assistant Sound Editor, Alexa Zimmerman - Assistant Sound Editor, Constantine G. Magalios - Best Boy Grip, Rocco Proscia - Best Boy Grip, Rori Bergman - Casting Assistant, Ali Farrell - Casting Associate, Jack English - Chief Lighting Technician, John Velez - Chief Lighting Technician, Joseph S. Alfieri - Construction Coordinator, Laura Downing - Costumes Supervisor, Sean Farrell - DGA Intern, Keith Bunting - Dolly Grip, John Scott Cook - First Assistant Editor, Marko A. Costanzo - Foley Artist, Steven Visscher - Foley Editor, Kam Chan - Foley Editor, Jamie R. Baker - Foley Editor, David Weinman - Leadman, Patty Lamagna - Personal Assistant, Rebecca Chernoff - Personal Assistant, Kevin Webb Wigfall - Personal Assistant, Sonny Ritscher - Production Accountant, Ed Nessen - Second Assistant Camera, Joseph Aspromonti - Second Second Assistant Director, Brian Mannain - Set Dresser, Wayne T. Brackett - Set Dresser, Eric Lewin - Set Dresser, J. Daniel Rodriguez - Set Dresser, Joby Deluca - Set Dresser, James Bear Davies - Set Dresser, Denis Zack - Set Dresser, Kalina Ivanov - Storyboard Artist, Steve Hammond - Transportation Captain, Peter Clores - Transportation Captain, Brainstorm Digital - Visual Effects, Lydia Marks - Set Decorator, Yvan Lucas - Color Timing, David Dreishpoon - Craft Service/Catering, Gourmet to U - Craft Service/Catering, Peter Marshark - Craft Service/Catering, George A. Lara - Foley Mixer, Al Cerullo - Pilot, Max Butler - Production Secretary, Charlie Simunek - Special Effects Foreman, Ruth Hernandez - Supervising ADR Editor, Daniel Salk - Video Assist, Rico Alston - Video Assist, Brainstorm Digital - Title Design, Claire Kirk - Art Department Coordinator, Ian Blume - Assistant Editor, David Rogers - Assistant Editor, Rick Derby - Assistant Editor, Jamie Turpin - Assistant Editor, Suzy Mazzarese Allison - Department Head Hair, Kelly Gleason - Department Head Makeup, Christine Sheridan - Assistant to the Director, Sarah Smith - Assistant to the Director, Sim Bajaj - Producer's Assistant, Sarah Meyer - Producer's Assistant, Lara Khajetoorians - Producer's Assistant, Nathaniel Posey - Producer's Assistant, Jacqueline Koppell - Producer's Assistant, Christina Bryant - Producer's Assistant

Similar Movies

Death Wish; Lipstick; .45; A History of Violence; In the Bedroom; Blue Steel; Ms. 45; Leo
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Wikipedia: The Brave One (2007 film)
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The Brave One

Promotional film poster
Directed by Neil Jordan
Produced by Susan Downey
Joel Silver
Written by Roderick Taylor
Bruce A. Taylor
Cynthia Mort
Starring Jodie Foster
Terrence Howard
Naveen Andrews
Mary Steenburgen
Jane Adams
Nicky Katt
Zoe Kravitz
Dana Eskelson
Music by Dario Marianelli
Sarah McLachlan
Cinematography Philippe Rousselot
Editing by Tony Lawson
Studio Village Roadshow Pictures
Silver Pictures
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) September 14, 2007
Running time 122 mins
Country United States
Australia
Language English
Gross revenue $69,787,663 [1]

The Brave One is a crime-drama/psychological thriller film released in 2007, directed by Neil Jordan, produced by Joel Silver, and starring Jodie Foster. It was released in the United States on September 14, 2007. The film earned Foster a Golden Globe nomination for leading actress in a drama.

Contents

Plot summary

As radio show host Erica Bain (Jodie Foster) and her fiancé David (Naveen Andrews) are walking their dog at Stranger's Gate in New York's Central Park, they are attacked by three violent criminals. David dies from his injuries, but Erica survives. Unhappy with the police response and unable to deal with the psychological trauma caused by the assault, she attempts to purchase a gun. Unwilling to wait the month required to obtain a notice of approval, she acquires a Kahr K9 illegally, and is drawn into a world of vigilantism, killing random criminals and attempting to track down the thugs who killed David.

She strikes up a friendship with Detective Mercer (Terrence Howard), who is investigating the vigilante crimes and initially unaware of her role in the deaths, though over the course of the film he comes to suspect her as the killer. At the climax of the film, she finds and confronts the thugs responsible for the murder of David. She kills two, finding and releasing her dog in the process and struggles with the third. Mercer arrives on the scene and has the thug go prone. Erica then retrieves her weapon and attempts to execute the thug. Mercer convinces Erica to lower the gun, but hands her his own in order for her to use a legal weapon to kill the last thug.

She does and Mercer then instructs her to shoot him in the shoulder so he can make up a story that the thugs were the ones who went on the vigilante killing spree, until he tracked them down, the gunshot being a result of the confrontation. He places Erica's gun in the last thug's dead hand and Erica leaves the scene, eventually being rejoined by her dog.

Cast

Critical reception

The film received mixed reviews from critics. As of September 2008 on the review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes, 43 percent of critics gave the film positive reviews, based on 175 reviews.[2] On Metacritic, the film had an average score of 56 out of 100, based on 33 reviews.[3] Yahoo! movie ratings give it a "B-" from critics (14 reviews).

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 3 1/2 stars (out of 4); saying Foster and Howard "are perfectly modulated in the kinds of scenes difficult for actors to play, where they both know more than they're saying, and they both know it." Ebert adds that comparing this film with other revenge movies like Death Wish, "now here is Jodie Foster, with a skilled co-star and director, to give us a movie that deals, really deals, with the issues involved."

Bill Gibron of PopMatters gave the film a 9 out of 10 and called it one of the best films of the year and said the film is a "startling achievement" for Foster and Howard, saying Foster deserves another Oscar for her performance. Gibron wrote, "Calling it an estrogen-laced Taxi Driver or a female fashioned Death Wish misses the point." Gibron said "on its surface, it's a standard revenge flick...but it’s also much more than that. It’s an excuse for empowerment in a post 9/11, Red State / Blue State, Yellow Alert existence."[4] Detroit Free Press critic Terry Lawson said the film "is as bold a movie as we are likely to see this year, a movie that has more in common with 1970s provocations like Straw Dogs and Taxi Driver than the simplicities of Death Wish or its recent progeny, Death Sentence." Lawson said the film "dares to deal with the darkest human impulses in serious ways and would rather leave us disturbed than relieved or self-satisfied." Lawson said the film is "masterfully photographed" by Philippe Rousellot and described Foster's performance as "shattering", "wrenching", and "fierce", and said the film would have seemed preposterous if not for her "theatrical, deeply personal and compellingly physical" performance.[5]

LA Weekly film critic Scott Foundas wondered, "are we really witnessing something courageous (as the title suggests) or merely an arted-up exploitation flick—Death Wish with allusions to D. H. Lawrence and Emily Dickinson—meant to cash in on audience feelings of fear and impotence in a violent society?" Foundas said "the premise smacks of high-concept contrivance", and "taken literally, almost everything that follows...so seriously strains credibility (even by the standards of the genre) as to enter the realm of the absurd. Taken on the level of a menacing urban fairy tale [like Mona Lisa or In the Cut]—it exudes a strange fascination." Scott Foundas wrote, "Arguably, Death Wish's Paul Kersey showed more inner conflict over the taking of another human life." and said The Brave One isn't the first female-vigilante movie, referring to Ms. 45. Foundas said the film "hangs in suspended animation between the grindhouse and the art house" but that the film "is more ambitious and alive—more worth writing, talking and thinking about—than anything that has tumbled off the Hollywood assembly line in a good long while."[6] Justin Chang of Variety said "Foster’s pistol-packing turn as an avenging dark angel nearly sustains director Neil Jordan’s grim vigilante drama through a string of implausibilities and occasionally trite psychological framing devices, with deft support from Terrence Howard." Chang said that Foster's performance "takes on extra-textual dimensions" thanks to her previous performances as a rape victim in The Accused, a battered child prostitute in Taxi Driver, and an FBI agent in The Silence of the Lambs. Chang said the script relies on "tidy coincidences" and plot devices that seem "awfully convenient", but that "Foster delivers a performance of astonishing physical and psychological credibility." Chang said Neil Jordan "attempts to tap into post-9/11 anxieties and comment on the very American idea of righteous payback." Justin Chang also wrote that the film's dark and grungy ambience is just right thanks to Philippe Rousselot.[7]

Criticism

Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times said the film is more foolhardy than brave and called it an "unwise attempt" to attract fans of Jodie Foster's performances as well as "the yahoos who scream when evil blood is spilt." Turan said a comparison to Ms. 45 is more apt than Death Wish, and said "because neither Foster nor director Neil Jordan wants anyone to think they've made anything as lurid and disreputable as Ms. 45: The Sequel, great pains have been taken to dress up The Brave One's similar material in socially acceptable clothing." Turan noted that Foster objected to the film's title but director Neil Jordan and producer Joel Silver insisted on keeping it. Turan said that Terrence Howard makes Detective Mercer "a more involving character than he would otherwise be", but that the scenes between Foster and Howard can't redeem the film. Turan said the film contains "a series of wicked coincidences" and said "Trapped in a no man's land between seriousness and pulp trash, it plays like a combination of Death Wish and The Hours." Turan said "instead of the best of both worlds, the filmmakers have managed to deliver the worst."[8] Carla Meyer of The Sacramento Bee gave the film two stars and said the film "celebrates its avenging angel as it pretends to examine her" and that "Foster's great acting can't disguise [the] exploitive nature" of the film. Meyer said "It certainly puts up a convincing front, with its moody, elegant visuals and commentary on the nature of revenge" and that the film's "biggest draw" is Foster's performance, but said that the film "sends a Foster fan into conflict. Elation at seeing a phenomenal talent really get a chance to act turns to disappointment when the film (which she also executive-produced) exposes itself as exploitation." Meyer wrote, "by the film's end, it's clear the ruminations on violence and the human heart serve only to wrap a plain ol' vigilante film in a package of thoughtfulness."[9]

The Baltimore Sun critic Michael Sragow gave the film a "C" and said the film is "an illegitimate heir" to Taxi Driver, and called it "fundamentally insane." Sragow noted that there have been "bloody female revenge fables" before and said The Brave One is a "maddeningly simple yet pretentious payback fantasy." Sragow wrote that the film is "a feminist exploitation film posing as a character study." Sragrow said the script is "poorly developed" and said that "even Howard can't pull off cliched action turns", but said "Nicky Katt steals scenes" as a wisecracking sidekick. Sragow wrote, "This film may be a crossover hit of sorts. Upscale audiences who wouldn't be caught dead at a Death Wish flick but adore Foster and Howard can get their cheap thrills and think they're seeing something classy and brand new."[10] Brian Webster of Apollo Guide rated the film 65 out of 100 and said the film "might have been honest, perceptive, and troubling. Instead, it becomes aimless revenge porn." Webster said it is a shame Neil Jordan was not involved in writing the screenplay. Webster wrote "what we get is another Walking Tall rip-off, with bogus relationships and a morally repugnant theme" and "we get Rambo woman on the prowl" instead of a "fascinating film about fear, revenge, and guilt." Webster said the film "disintegrates in its second half" and said the ending was stupid and contrived.[11]

Carrie Rickey of the Philadelphia Inquirer gave the film two out of four stars and called the film "an exploitation flick with top-flight talent and arty pretensions." Rickey said the film "resurrects a genre popular in the 1970s - the vigilante cycle of Dirty Harry, Death Wish and Taxi Driver - when America was embroiled in an unpopular war." Rickey said "It's tempting to read the movie as a commentary on 9/11 and Iraq, a New Yorker who seeks revenge on those who destroyed her city. This is the intent of the film that suggests that as 9/11 has forever changed America, it has altered Erica (whose name is a shorter version of America). But that would be to accept that this lurid when-women-kill film is high-minded." Rickey said Foster's performance is the film's main appeal, calling it a "physical and psychological tour de force", but that it doesn't have the "transgressive rush" of roles played by Sigourney Weaver in Alien or Linda Hamilton in the Terminator films. Rickey wrote that both Terrence Howard and Nicky Katt give "exceptional performances" and that Katt is "wryly funny." Rickey said the film "isn't sure what it thinks. Is Erica shell-shocked? An avenging angel?" and wrote "because it wants the applause both of the chatting classes and the blood crowd, The Brave One doesn't take a firm position about vigilantism."[12]

Award nominations

The film received one Golden Globe nomination when the nominees for the 65th Golden Globe Awards were announced by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. Foster was nominated for Best Performance By An Actress In A Motion Picture - Drama.[13]

Box office performance

In its opening weekend in the United States and Canada, the film was #1 at the box office, grossing US$13,471,488 in 2,755 theaters.[14] As of December 29, 2007, the film has grossed $69,675,545 worldwide—$36,793,804 in the United States and Canada and $32,881,741 in other territories.[15].

DVD Release

This film was released on DVD, Blu-Ray, and Hi-Def on February 5, 2008.

References

  1. ^ "The Brave One (2007)". Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=braveone.htm. Retrieved 2007-12-29. 
  2. ^ "The Brave One - Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/brave_one/. Retrieved 2007-09-18. 
  3. ^ "Brave One, The (2007): Reviews". Metacritic. http://www.metacritic.com/film/titles/braveone. Retrieved 2007-09-14. 
  4. ^ Bill Gibron. "The Brave One (2007)". PopMatters. http://www.popmatters.com/pm/blogs/shortends_post/48407/the-brave-one-2007/. Retrieved 2007-09-18. 
  5. ^ Terry Lawson (2007-09-14). "BRAVELY PROVOCATIVE: Jodie Foster's wrenching performance raises bold questions about violence, fear and revenge". Detroit Free Press. http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070914/ENT01/709140319/1036. Retrieved 2007-09-18. 
  6. ^ Scott Foundas (2007-09-12). "The Brave One: Femme Fatal". LA Weekly. http://www.laweekly.com/film+tv/film/the-brave-one-femme-fatal/17214/. Retrieved 2007-09-18. 
  7. ^ Justin Chang (2007-09-03). "The Brave One Review - Variety.com". Variety. http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117934511.html?categoryid=31&cs=1. Retrieved 2007-09-18. 
  8. ^ Kenneth Turan (2007-09-14). "'The Brave One'". Los Angeles Times. http://www.calendarlive.com/movies/reviews/cl-et-braveone14sep14,0,7274679.story. Retrieved 2007-09-17. 
  9. ^ Carla Meyer (2007-09-14). "Movie review: Jodie, Jodie, Jodie". The Sacramento Bee. http://www.sacbee.com/624/story/375910.html. Retrieved 2007-09-17. 
  10. ^ Michael Sragow (2007-09-14). "'Brave' but bitter". The Baltimore Sun. http://www.baltimoresun.com/entertainment/movies/bal-to.brave14sep14,0,3558835.story. Retrieved 2007-09-17. 
  11. ^ Brian Webster. "Brave One, The". Apollo Guide. http://www.apolloguide.com/mov_fullrev.asp?CID=5478. Retrieved 2007-09-17. 
  12. ^ Carrie Rickey (2007-09-14). "Armed - and fabulously acted". Philadelphia Inquirer. http://www.philly.com/inquirer/columnists/carrie_rickey/20070914_Armed_-_and_fabulously_acted.html. Retrieved 2007-09-17. 
  13. ^ "HOLLYWOOD FOREIGN PRESS ASSOCIATION 2008 GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2007". goldenglobes.org. 2007-12-13. http://www.goldenglobes.org/news/id/81. Retrieved 2007-12-13. 
  14. ^ "The Brave One (2007) - Weekend Box Office". Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?page=weekend&id=braveone.htm. Retrieved 2007-09-17. 
  15. ^ "The Brave One (2007)". Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=braveone.htm. Retrieved 2007-12-29. 

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