While traveling to Morocco to initiate a food program of his own to help poor kids, the idealist Dutch Martijn (Ryan Phillipe) is kidnapped by a group of terrorists and his guide Gavin (Colm Meaney) is executed in cold blood in front of him. Along the days, Martijn is tortured by a Muslin man (Laurence Fishburne) and Aicha (Gina Torres) and looses four fingers. In the end, the truth about his travel is finally disclosed.
In spite of being a very unpleasant theatrical film, "Five Fingers" is also a great little movie. The story recalled me Roman Polanski's "Death and the Maiden", and the last twist is amazing. However, the performances of Ryan Phillipe, Laurence Fishburne and Gina Torres and the precise direction of Laurence Malkin are fantastic, making this simple and tense storyline work and worth. My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "O Jogo da Morte" ("The Game of Death")
Five Fingers
2006
Action / Drama / Thriller
Plot summary
While traveling to Morocco to initiate a food program of his own to help poor kids, the Dutch Martijn is kidnapped by a group of terrorists and his guide Gavin is executed in cold blood in front of him. Along the days, Martijn is tortured by a Muslin man and Aicha and looses four fingers. In the end, the truth about his travel is finally disclosed.
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A Tale In the Land of Freedom
Five Fingers An Exercise in Futility **
While the acting is good,this film becomes a reversal of the good and bad syndrome.
While on a mission to create a food-bank in Morocco, Ryan Philippe is kidnapped, supposedly by terrorists led by an excellent Laurence Fishburned.
The film then becomes one totally shot in one room where a cat and mouse game are played by the two men who try to get as much information as possible from each other.
It's this back and forth confrontation that really becomes boring after a while. At times, there are flashbacks with Philippe back with his girlfriend in Europe.
The end will absolutely jolt you.
Stinkeroo.
It may be layered over with the cast of deep political significance, but underneath all that intrigue, the plot to poison McDonald's and kill hundreds of thousands of Americans enjoying a vacation, there is nothing much more than torture porn.
The performances are okay. Touriya Haoud, as the hero's Dutch girl friend, is a knockout. And Gina Torres, as Laurence Fishburne's doubtful but willing assistant, is sensual and suitably dubious of her own ends.
Fishburne and Torres are American agents posing as Moroccan terrorists investigating an international plot to poison hamburgers. No kidding. They must torture Ryan Phillipe, a Dutch terrorist, to get the names of others in his organization. That's the icing on the cake. The cake itself, the batter, the stratigraphy, the yellow color of Artificial Dye Number Five, is that in the course of their interrogation, Fishburne and Torres murder Phillipe's companion right off the bat.
Then, in an extended game of cat and mouse, they chop or saw off Phillipe's fingers one by one, while his horrifying screams fill the sound track. In between operations, Phillipe doesn't seem to have been much bothered between the improvised amputations, except that he's splattered with blood and has soiled his pants. But in the end, after his tormentors have actually convinced him that they approve of his plan, he gives away the information they want. He should have done it sooner, because it does him no good.
It's a pretty disgusting piece of crap. It panders to an audience that wants to see people tortured. There's been a lot of that around lately. Sometimes it's our side that does the torturing, as here, and in a television program called "24". As in, "We've got only 24 hours to get the terrorist to tell us where the dirty bomb is that will go off in the middle of New York City, and he won't cooperate, so torture is unavoidable, balanced against hundreds of thousands of innocent lives." I'm prepared to live with torture under those circumstances, provided that the interrogators call the Secretary of Defense on a hot line and get his endorsement so that accountability will be preserved. The reason I could live with torture under those circumstances is that I think we'd have to wait a thousand years before the moment arrived -- except in the movies and in political polemics.
I suppose torture porn is a natural point in the evolution of slasher movies. The fun lies not in the deaths themselves but in the anticipation of the pre-mortem pain. Rather like the sadistic goon Michael Madden in "Reservoir Dogs", fondling his razor, and describing to the captive policeman how he's going to make him suffer. Movies like "The Killing Gene", "Sawbones", and "Hard Candy" have the good taste to dispense with their lofty identities entirely and just give us good, old-fashioned American torture, right out in the open, keeping the viewer agape with tension as the time for the next physical assault grows nearer.
We're a funny people. American movies are scaling back on nudity and simulated sex. A few cable channels are beginning to excise unacceptable language again, as they did a generation ago. But torture porn blooms, not like a flower but like a freshly watered carnivorous cactus. And it's all very thought provoking too. The thought it provokes is: Why is it that so many of us enjoy seeing others scream in agony?