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The Next Three Days

The Next Three Days

  • Status: Released
  • 18-11-2010
  • Runtime: 133 min
  • Score: 7.08
  • Vote count: 2971

A married couple's life is turned upside down when the wife is accused of murdering her boss. Her husband John would spend the next few years trying to get her released, but there's no evidence that negates the evidence against her. When the strain of being separated from her husband and son gets to her, John decides to find a way to break her out.

Russell Crowe

John Brennan

Elizabeth Banks

Lara

Brian Dennehy

George Brennan

RZA

Mouss

Moran Atias

Erit

Olivia Wilde

Nicole

Jason Beghe

Detective Quinn

Nazanin Boniadi

Elaine

Tyrone Giordano

Mike

Ty Simpkins

Luke

Liam Neeson

Damon

Jonathan Tucker

David

Lennie James

Lieutenant Nabulsi

Michael Buie

Mick Brennan

Helen Carey

Grace Brennan

Remy Nozik

Jenna

Aisha Hinds

Detective Collero

Leslie Merrill

Elizabeth Gesas

Daniel Stern

Meyer Fisk

Rachel Deacon

Duty Nurse

Derek Cecil

Dr. Becsey

Kaitlyn Wylde

Julie

Kevin Corrigan

Alex

Jeff Hochendoner

Alex's Thug Buddy

Lauren Haggis

Lyla

James Ransone

Harv

Denise Dal Vera

Eugenie

Glenn Taranto

Hospital Security Guard

Veronica Brown

Female Guard 1

Lisa Ann Goldsmith

Female Guard 2

Alissa Haggis

Junkie

Allan Steele

Sergeant Harris

Zachary Sondrini

Photoshop Kid

Etta Cox

Notary

Barry Bradford

Jail Guard (Entry Hall)

Rick Warner

County Jail Captain

Quantia Mali

Phone Operator

Trudie Styler

Dr. Byrdie Lifson

Fabio Polanco

Phone Repairman

David Flick

Male Nurse

Sean Huze

Prison Guard

Tamara Gorski

Hospital Nurse

Patrick Brennan

Hospital Guard

Brenna McDonough

Brenda

Patrick McDade

Airport Security Chief

James Francis Kelly III

Lab Van Driver

Jackson Nunn

Prison Visitor (uncredited)

Melissa Jackson

Airline Clerk

TheCakerBaker

If Paul Haggis is going to keep on making movies, would somebody do us all a favor and sign him up for a basic screenwriting class? I mean, please, this film could be a lesson all on its own on how not to write a decent screenplay. Its all in here: one-dimensional characters, supremely poor pacing, multiple threads that go absolutely nowhere and completely implausible action sequences. And, you know, it's just a B-thriller. It's not like I haven't seen these mistakes time and time again. What really bothers me is just how highly it thinks of itself. It not only thinks it's interesting (which it isn't whatsoever), but it thinks it's smart, edgy, and it probably even thinks it's clever. I mean, there are so many characters who function for exactly one plot point and are then left behind in the dust. For example, this one chick who's name I forget (did they ever even say her name?) is introduced fairly early on in the film, and looks even like Russell Crowe's love interest. We see the very, very beginnings of a meaningful relationship forming and then it turns out that she was only a device to fill in a little potential plot hole (trying not to spoil the movie.) The same with Russell Crowe's parents, there are a handful of scattered scenes with them showing little glimpses of a meaningful relationship, and then the same exact friggin' thing is done, they're used as a simple (and illogical) plot mechanism. It's almost like one of Paul Haggis's friends was reading the script and said "hey, Paul, this is completely ridiculous, how could they possibly manage to _________" and Haggis wrote in these characters as devices to satisfy the issue, realized they were one-dimensional, and wrote in a pseudo-intelligent relationship (which doesn't in reality make them any better.) And this is how the first 2/3 of the movie moves so dreadfully slowly. I mean, I'm absolutely confident that with a decent editor, the first hour and fifteen minutes could be whittled down to maybe half an hour. They could have especially left out the symbols that don't actually symbolize anything. Which seems silly to say, but the jar of quarters that keeps recurring in the movie not only has no plot significance, but has zero metaphorical significance. They barely explained what they were doing in their house. They were quite literally only in the film to make it look a little deeper. Not to make it more meaningful, but to make it look more meaningful. To make it "smart," and "edgy," and "clever." I don't usually have a problem with making it through a movie but I had to push to make it through this ludicrous, self-righteous mess.

JPV852

Seen this movie a handful of times over the years, and still holds up so well. A solid thriller with fine performances by Russell Crowe and Elizabeth Banks, and features a great supporting cast in small parts (seems about 5 min. each), including Liam Neeson, Daniel Stern (wish he'd do more straight dramas), Brian Dennehy (RIP) and Olivia Wilde. Some nice suspense-filled moments throughout (the bump key scene still gets me). However, the final scene with detective "seeing" how the crime went down seemed like something the studio wanted to give a clear conclusion, and felt so unnecessary. **4.0/5**