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Edge of Darkness

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United Kingdom, United States · 2010
Rated R · 1h 57m
Director Martin Campbell
Starring Mel Gibson, Ray Winstone, Shawn Roberts, Bojana Novaković
Genre Crime, Drama, Mystery, Thriller

As a homicide detective, Thomas Craven has seen the bleakest side of humanity. But nothing can prepare him for the toughest investigation of his life: the search for his daughter Emma's killer. Now, he is on a mission to uncover the secrets surrounding her murder, including corporate corruption, government collusion, and Emma's own mysterious life.

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What are critics saying?

70

Village Voice by

Onscreen much of the time, thicker and more creased than you remember, Gibson can make this rather unshapely movie seem taut.

70

Arizona Republic by Bill Goodykoontz

Both the film and television project were directed by Martin Campbell. He creates a nice level of tension throughout, and there are a couple of legitimate shocks (including one jaw-dropper).

60

Variety by Brian Lowry

Campbell's topnotch production team yields predictably polished results, but the director's decision to revisit the late Troy Kennedy Martin's teleplay, finally, feels lacking.

50

ReelViews by James Berardinelli

Considering the talent involved and the strength of the source material, there's no way Edge of Darkness should have been this disappointing. Part of the problem is a direct result of condensation - there's no way to cram six hours of the dense mini-series upon which the movie is based into about 110 minutes without paying a penalty.

60

Time Out by Keith Uhlich

There’s no room for such soul-searching uncertainty with Gibson. After a few rapidly ticked-off minutes of gloom, the mission is clear: Get the sons of bitches, and make ’em pay.

40

Austin Chronicle by Marc Savlov

Edge of Darkness has the look and feel of a Brit film shot in America – it's all dark, boxy rooms with powerful white men in impeccable black suits discussing how to tidy up the minor mishaps of their game over brandy and cigars.

60

Boxoffice Magazine by Pete Hammond

They’ve shed all of the Brit-centric political aspects and updated it to make a riveting, pulse-pounding suspense thriller that really does keep you on ‘edge.’

50

Orlando Sentinel by Roger Moore

An odd duck of a thriller. Quiet, talkative, with the occasional explosion of violence, it has ghosts and characters philosophizing, quoting F. Scott Fitzgerald or blurting insensitive non-sequiturs.

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