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Without a Trace

 
Movies:

Without a Trace

  • Director: Stanley Jaffe
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: True Crime, Psychological Drama
  • Themes: Kidnapping, Missing Persons
  • Main Cast: Kate Nelligan, Judd Hirsch, David Dukes, Stockard Channing, Jacqueline Brookes
  • Release Year: 1983
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 120 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

Young divorced mother Kate Nelligan refuses to go into a panic when her six-year-old son disappears. She manages to maintain an even emotional keel even when detective Judd Hirsch unearths several clues which point to sexual molestation. After several false leads, the truth is revealed. We won't divulge the ending, but we will note that we found it pretty hard to swallow-especially when compared to the actual case upon which Beth Gutcheson's novel and screenplay were based. Despite its cop-out denouement, Without a Trace deserves to take its place among such superior missing-children dramas as the made-for-TV Adam and Just Another Missing Kid. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

Stanley Jaffe's much underrated theatrical feature Without a Trace incorporates an unusual resolution that prompted many critics to pan it, upon its release back in late 1983. In discussing this film, there is absolutely no way to avoid revealing the ending here. Therefore, major plot spoilers will follow - and anyone who wants to keep the film's suspense or final revelation intact should avoid reading this essay.

Something of an unofficial companion piece to the equally superb made-for-TV movie Adam, Without a Trace opens on a crisis: a 6-year-old Manhattan boy named Alex Selky embarks on a two-block walk to school one morning and doesn't come home that afternoon. As his grief-wracked mother, Columbia University professor Susan Selky (Kate Nelligan) joins forces with a NYPD detective named Al Menetti (Judd Hirsch) and begins to exercise the various options in an attempt to locate her little boy, their attempts prove useless and fruitless. Eventually, after months and months with no success, a haunting call from an elderly woman leads Menetti to Connecticut, where Alex turns up, shell-shocked but very much alive, and held at bay in a decrepit house by a grotesque older man who has kidnapped the tyke and used him as a caretaker for his invalid middle-aged sister.

Without a Trace qualifies as a winner for many reasons, but first and foremost for its mature and intelligent method of approaching a seemingly insurmountable narrative problem that exists whenever the theme of a disappearance is present. For many of us, no event provides greater fascination than a missing person. We're well aware that countless people vanish into thin air each year, and that a large number are never recovered. Stopping here just for a second - and pushing aside the sad actual fates of many of these people - one's mind can be left to race through the intriguing array of possibilities as to the final whereabouts of each person. Within a fictional framework, though, this creates a central problem that is almost impossible to solve; set it up at the outset of a drama, and there is virtually no way to avoid letting the proverbial "monster out of the closet" by eventually presenting the audience with a resolution that (whether it breaks one's heart with calamity or elates one with the joy of a person recovered) is bound to disappoint on some level by simply providing a concrete answer. Avoid providing this answer, and the audience feels cheated. In other words: a no-win situation.

One could wax exhaustively on the various attempts that producers have made to work around this, from the weekly narrative renewal of the television series Without a Trace (no relation to the Jaffe film) to the cliff-hanging absurdities of Jonathan Mostow's thriller Breakdown (1997). Jaffe's picture opts for the most intelligent and profound route: like Michelangelo Antonioni's masterpiece L'Avventura and Lodge Kerrigan's wonderful Keane, this film begins to concentrate on something far deeper and more interesting than a simple disappearance. Trace evolves into a psychological drama on the various ways in which survivors manage to cope with trauma per se. The body of the picture wisely and maturely shifts its narrative focus away from the actual investigation (never once do we get bogged down in the minutiae of suspects and false leads) and instead explores the emotional landscape that Susan, as the chief survivor of this calamity, must traverse. Jaffe and his screenwriter, Beth Gutcheon, leave intact all of the doubts, uncertainties, recriminations against her semi-estranged husband and others, and seemingly tireless hope that the mother feels, and trust the audience enough to let us explore this territory along with the character as she aggressively searches for answers regarding her son's fate. In other words, the film as a whole strives for authenticity - and thus wins us over with its credibility, prompting more fluid and ready acceptance of the resolution by the time it arrives. The very best that can be said of this film is that - thanks in no small part to the first-rate performance of Nelligan - we ultimately become so enmeshed in the journey of Susan Selky as a character that the child's return, immensely satisfying though it may be, begins to seem almost incidental when the closing credits finally appear.

Many perceived the film's ending as its Achilles' Heel; critics took the motion picture to pieces for providing a resolution that they perceived as both happy and unrealistic. For these reasons, they argued that the wrap-up ruins everything that precedes it. That reaction seems, in retrospect, shallow, sophomoric and naive. In 1983 (the tail end of a dramatic escalation in violence against minors that witnessed many child homicides), the resolution of Without a Trace probably indeed seemed artificial and contrived, but now - in light of cases such as the Elizabeth Smart abduction and the media-permeated discussion of Stockholm Syndrome - the film's denouement attains a thread of social commentary that was hauntingly prescient back in the early '80s. It still may not be typical for abductees to turn up alive and held captive in kidnappers' homes, but these cases have clocked in as increasingly common in recent years - a realization that absolutely rescues the conclusion from allegations of contrivance. Interestingly, with these real-life cases in mind (recall - for instance - Smart's assertion that she will be scarred for life by her abduction), one can rethink the ending of Jaffe's film and realize that for many families such as the one at the center of this picture, the real tragedy only commences with a child's homecoming - an insight echoed by the film's depiction of Alex as emotionally fragile and traumatized when retrieved by the cops. Happy, indeed. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

Cast

Keith McDermott - Phillipe; Kathleen Widdoes - Ms. Hauser; Daniel Bryan Corkill - Alex Selky; Cheryl Giannini - Pat Menetti; David Simon - Eugene Menetti; William Duell - Polygraph Operator; Joan McMonagle - Vivienne Grant; Louise Stubbs - Malvina Robbins; Caroline Aaron - Makeup Woman; Don Amendolia - Police; Ellen Barber - Martina; Elaine Bromka - Production Assistant; L. Scott Caldwell - Janet Smith; Deborah Carlson - Naomi Blum; Jane Cecil - Mrs. Applegate; Frederick Coffin - Officer Coffin; Paul Collins - Reporter; Sam Coppola - Schoyer; Tony Devon - Police; Tom Dunn - WOR-TV News Announcer; Richmond Hoxie - Parent; Sara Lee Kessler - WOR-TV News Announcer; Thomas Kopache - Police; Dan Lauria - Baker; Marcella Lowery - Sgt. Rocco; William H. Macy - Reporter; Stephen Mendillo; Terry O'Quinn; Angela Pietropinto - Parent; Lee Sandman - Coffee Shop Owner; Bob Scarantino - Police; Martin Shakar - Police; Bill Smitrovich - Police; James Storm - Reporter; Alan Weeks - Reporter; Hattie Winston - Reporter; Gracie Harrison - Reporter; Lou Leccese - Police; Roxanne Gregory - Reporter; Sheila Coonan - Anna; Edmond Genest; Lynn Cohen - Woman with Dog; Charles Brown - Sachs; Kenneth Cory; Joseph M. Costa - Parent; Luke Sickle - Hank; Theodore Sorel - Dr. Mandlebaum; Freda Foh Shen - Reporter

Credit

Gregory Bolton - Art Director, Alice Shure - Associate Producer, Gloria Gresham - Costume Designer, Terry Donnelly - First Assistant Director, Stanley Jaffe - Director, Cynthia Scheider - Editor, Bill Conti - Composer (Music Score), Jack Nitzsche - Composer (Music Score), Paul Sylbert - Production Designer, John Bailey - Cinematographer, Stanley Jaffe - Producer, Alan Hicks - Set Designer, Beth Gutcheon - Screen Story, Beth Gutcheon - Screenwriter, Beth Gutcheon - Book Author

Similar Movies

Adam; The Good Mother; Into Thin Air; The Atlanta Child Murders; The Face on the Milk Carton; The Deep End of the Ocean; Alias Betty; I Know My First Name Is Steven
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Wikipedia: Without a Trace (film)
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Without a Trace
Directed by Stanley R. Jaffe
Produced by Stanley R. Jaffe
Written by Beth Gutcheon, based upon her novel Still Missing
Starring Kate Nelligan
Judd Hirsch
David Dukes
Stockard Channing
Keith McDermott
Music by Jack Nitzsche
Cinematography John Bailey
Editing by Cynthia Scheider
Distributed by Twentieth Century Fox
Release date(s) February 4, 1983 (United States)
July 5, 1986 (Japan)
Running time 120 min
Country United States
Language English

Without a Trace is a 1983 dramatic film. It is based on the Beth Gutcheon novel Still Missing, which is loosely-based on the real-life disappearance of Etan Patz. The film stars Kate Nelligan, Judd Hirsch, David Dukes and Stockard Channing.

Plot

Susan Selky (Nelligan) is a well-known English professor at Columbia University. She lives in a Brooklyn brownstone with her six-year-old son Alex (Danny Corkill). One March morning, Susan sees Alex off to school, which is only two blocks away. Alex turns to wave to his mother, then disappears around the corner...

Susan returns home after a day of teaching, and becomes increasingly alarmed when Alex is late coming home. She calls her friend and neighbor Jocelyn Norris (Channing), whose daughter is a classmate of Alex's, and finds out that Alex never got to school. The NYPD is immediately called and officers descend on the townhouse, led by Lieutenant Al Menetti (Hirsch). Susan is questioned closely on all aspects of her life and her son's, and police zero in on Susan's estranged husband Graham (Dukes), a professor at NYU who hasn't been seen for hours. When Graham finally turns up, he produces an alibi, ruling him out as a suspect.

Susan's case generates a lot of attention from the New York media, with citizens helping in the search by distributing posters. Susan is also initially criticized for allowing her son to walk to school by himself, but a polygraph test clears her as a suspect. Numerous leads are checked out, including several reports that Alex may have been seen in the back seat of a blue 1965 Cadillac. A psychic is also called in, but each lead fizzles.

The investigation drags on, and Graham is at odds with Menetti after budget cuts force Menetti to dismantle the command center in Susan's apartment and run the case from the precinct. Menetti's attention is soon diverted to other cases, but the Selky case is always a priority. At one point, Graham takes matters into his own hands after he gets a ransom call. He heads to a location the caller directs him to, but is cornered and beaten, prompting a hospital stay.

A break in the case finally happens on the Fourth of July, when Susan's housecleaner, Philippe (Keith McDermott), is arrested as a suspect. A pair of Alex's bloody underpants was found in his apartment, where the gay Philippe was picked up with a male prostitute. Susan visits Philippe in jail, and he tells her that the bloody underpants came about when he used them to stop bleeding after he cut himself washing dishes in Susan's house. Convinced Philippe is innocent, Susan tries to persuade Minetti to drop the charges, but he refuses, citing physical evidence he won't discuss.

The renewed media coverage generated by Philippe's arrest dies down, and Susan is facing increased pressure to drop the matter and accept that Alex could be dead. Susan's feelings come to a boiling point when a magazine cancels an article she wrote about Alex (because a gay man was arrested) and even her friend Jocelyn tells her it's time to give up.

Susan tries to resume her normal routine, although she never loses faith that her son is alive. One day, she receives a phone call from a woman in Bridgeport, Connecticut named Malvina Robbins (Louise Stubbs), who says Alex is alive and living with neighbors. Menetti tells Susan that he has also heard from Robbins, but Bridgeport police told him the woman's just a crank, or in Menetti's words, "a lonely old booby". The investigation is closed, he says, and Philippe goes on trial within weeks. Later, Menetti has a change of heart and decides to check things out himself. With his son in tow, Menetti drives up to Bridgeport to see Robbins, and discovers that next to her house is parked an older blue Cadillac, which had been a big part of the investigation. Now convinced he's found Alex, he contacts Bridgeport police, who rescue Alex and arrest the elderly couple he was being held with.

Menetti drives Alex back to New York with a huge police escort, and the New York media is tipped off that he's been found, converging on Susan's Brooklyn house. Susan returns from grocery shopping in time to see Alex stepping out of Menetti's car. In front of delighted bystanders and reporters, mother and child are reunited.

Reviews/Production

The film was released in North America on February 4, 1983, and received generally favorable reviews, especially for the performances of Kate Nelligan and Judd Hirsch.

The movie's screenplay was written by novelist and screenwriter Beth Gutcheon, who kept the film relatively faithful to her novel Still Missing. The novel was loosely based on the actual case of Etan Patz, a six-year-old boy from New York City who disappeared while on his way to school alone in 1979, prompting wide media coverage and an intense manhunt. Patz has never been found, and was declared legally dead in 2001.

The one glaring difference between the book and the film is that the book was set in Boston, while the film was set and filmed in New York. The film was originally supposed to be titled Still Missing, but was changed by the studio to avoid confusion with the 1982 film Missing.

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