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  October 6, 2008



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Untraceable Movie Poster
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Untraceable Movie Poster
Diane Lane
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Untraceable Movie Poster
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Untraceable

Untraceable
Large Photo
  • Starring: Diane Lane, Zachary Hoffman, Joseph Cross, Billy Burke, Colin Hanks
  • Director: Gregory Hoblit
  • MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
  • Studio: Sony Pictures
  • Running Time: 101 minutes
  • Format: AC-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: 1535
  • Average Customer Rating: 3.0 stars
  • UPC: 043396191341
  • List price: $28.95
  • Save 34%
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    Price Range: $18.99 - $25.99


    Compare Prices on Untraceable DVD
    6 Merchants


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    Merchant
      Base   S & H   Price  
     Buy.com

      $18.99
    + $1.55 = $20.54 Buy Untraceable DVD at Buy.com
     Amazon

      $18.99
    + $2.98 = $21.97 Buy Untraceable DVD at Amazon
     Overstock.com

      $22.57
    + $1.40 = $23.97 Buy Untraceable DVD at Overstock.com
     Barnes & Noble

      $26.09
    + Free = $26.09 Buy Untraceable DVD at Barnes & Noble
     CDUniverse

      $23.59
    + $2.99 = $26.58 Buy Untraceable DVD at CDUniverse
     J & R

      $25.99
    + $2.95 = $28.94 Buy Untraceable DVD at J & R


    Untraceable DVD description


    Description
    Product Description:
      Within the FBI there exists a division dedicated to investigating and prosecuting criminals on the internet. Welcome to the front lines of the war on cybercrime where special Agent Jennifer Marsh (Diane Lane) and Griffin Dowd (Colin Hanks) have seen it all?until now. A tech-savvy internet predator is displaying his graphic murders on his own website and the fate of each of his tormented captives is left in the hands of the public: the more hits his site gets the faster his victims die. When this game of cat and mouse becomes personal Marsh and her team must race against the clock to track down this technical mastermind who is virtually untraceable.System Requirements:Running Time: 101 minutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: ACTION/ADVENTURE/PSYCHOLOGICAL THRILLER Rating: R UPC: 043396191341 Manufacturer No: 19134

    From Amazon.com:
      Untraceable fuses Saw with The Net in a perverse yet moralistic story about a psychopath who broadcasts acts of torture over the internet--all to better reveal the twisted underbelly of the American public, who hasten the victims' deaths simply by looking at the website. FBI agent Jennifer Marsh (Diane Lane, her mature-sexy mojo tamped down but still simmering in the corners of her eyes and the nape of her neck) launches a cyberhunt for the killer, only to find herself and her team caught up in his murderous scheme. It's hard to make tapping on a keyboard and staring at a computer screen exciting, but Untraceable does its best by making Marsh and her cybercrimebusting partner (Colin Hanks, King Kong) rattle off cascades of jaunty techno-jargon and do impressive bits of long-distance surveillance. The movie aims for the audience that flocked to see Ashley Judd in thrillers like Kiss the Girls and Double Jeopardy, but it's hard to say if fans of Lane's romantic fare like Under the Tuscan Sun or Must Like Dogs will enjoy the queasy violence. Nonetheless, the cast--including Mary Beth Hurt (The World According to Garp) as Marsh's mother--does a solid job and the movie clips along at an aggressive pace, maintaining tension throughout. --Bret Fetzer

    Stills from Untraceable (click for larger image)







    Beyond Untraceable

    On Blu-ray

    UMD for PSP

    Soundtrack CD





    Untraceable DVD reviews


    Reviews

    So Disturbing - 2 stars
    Untraceable DVD Review
    It seemed like an interesting concept for a movie but it was very disturbing. So intensely disturbing in fact that I had difficulties falling asleep after watching the movie!

    Surprisingly, not half bad. - 3 stars
    Untraceable DVD Review
    I threw out my back this weekend so I was laying around in front of my TV looking for something to watch. Well I came across this movie on On Demand and decided to give it a try with my hopes held low. The acting is pretty mediocre, with some solid although sometimes questionable dialogue. The plot is a good one based in modern fears and actally has a good if not worrying message. The plot is really the high point of this movie and was the biggest surprise for me. It has some interesting torture moments for those of you who like movies like Saw and Hostel, but it focuses more on plot and less on action. The story moves at a pretty steady rate with some strange hiccups, but overall its pretty solid. Really not a bad movie, and sadly enough blows away most current horror movies. I''d say its worth a look if you're looking for something different.
    Unwatchable - 1 stars
    Untraceable DVD Review
    I love Diane Lane in Hollywoodland and Unfaithful but not in this! What I didn't like about Untraceable was it copied elements of Saw and Seven. It's like, don't screw with good movies, than it cheapens them and you get sick of watching the very movies they tried to copy. I also didn't like how they chose to use a kitten for the seriel killers first victim. What??!! Why couldn't they use a hooker or a bum, why an innocent kitten? This movie repulses me.
    Movie: 3/5 Picture Quality: 3.75~4.75/5 Sound Quality: 4.5/5 Extras: 2.5/5 - 3 stars
    Untraceable DVD Review
    Title: Untraceable
    Version: U.S.A / REGION A, B, C
    Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1
    MPEG-4 AVC BD-50
    Running time: 1:41:00
    Movie size: 29,56 GB
    Disc size: 34,50 GB
    Total bit rate: 39.04 Mbps
    Average video bit rate: 25.33 Mbps
    Number of chapters: 16

    Audio

    * Dolby TrueHD 16-bit/48kHz 5.1 Surround
    * French (Canadian) Dolby TrueHD 5.1 Surround
    * Spanish (Latin American) Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround
    * Portuguese (Brazil) Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround

    Subtitles/Captions

    * English SDH
    * English Subtitles
    * French (Parisian) Subtitles
    * Spanish (Latin American) Subtitles
    * Portuguese (Brazilian) Subtitles

    #Audio Commentary
    #Featurette: "Tracking Untraceable" (SD, 16 minutes)
    #Featurette: "The Personnel Files" (SD, 15 minutes)
    #Featurette: "The Blueprint of Murder" (SD, 14 minutes)
    #Featurette: "The Anatomy of Murder" (SD, 6 minutes)
    #Theatrical Trailers
    #Beyond the Cyber Bureau (HD) - Bonus View

    Unblameable - 3 stars
    Untraceable DVD Review
    In a firing squad, the victim is blindfolded and faces a line of sometimes a dozen men with guns. The men take aim and fire at the same time. A practice grew of informing the executioners that one of them had been given a blank cartridge. This prevented the possibility that the men would aim away by diffusing the subsequent guilt. Even the notion of a firing squad itself is meant to help assuage the weight of responsibility. After all, who's to say which man's bullet actually did the killing?

    Populations that grow as fast as America's begin to lose that basic human value. Like any other resource, the more of us there are, the less we are worth. And the easier it is to act like the act of observing death and pain isn't the exact same as causing it. UNTRACEABLE takes the creepy, anonymous lecherousness of the internet, and both admonishes and capitalizes off of it.

    Because there's a new website, you see, and if you go to it, you can watch something die. In fact, the more people who visit the website, the faster the death occurs. Don't worry. Sometimes it takes millions of visitors to kill the victim, and you're just one visitor. Just take a peek. And don't worry! The website is completely (refer to the movie title)!

    It's possible the movie is arguing that things like Youtube have destroyed our last vestiges of shame. At best, it's pointing out that it's a back-handed blessing (but hey, even the depopulation caused by the Black Plague led to more competitve wages and, arguably, the Renaissance. Perhaps Youtube is just the ugly gate to a new and better world. Ha ha. I'm sorry. I'm off track.) In any case, although it might spur some interesting discussions, the movie only sustains interest when it exploits the very thing it's complaining about. Much like the dispassionate news reporters who "tsk" at tragedy and turn practiced sympathy on the viewers at home, UNTRACEABLE is mostly just distant and disingenuous.

    The torture bits, of course, those have spunk and verve, to use a few poorly chosen adjectives, but the story itself doesn't have the same staying power as the topic matter. Even the presence of the lovely Diane Lane (I still can't believe she was in Judge Dredd) doesn't add much spirit to this by-the-numbers techno thriller. Watch it, if you must, for the sticky questions it might prompt, but don't expect to be engrossed anymore than you would by a grisly highway accident.

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