This movie has the same feel as house of Fog and Sand, and one of those movies you either love or hate with not much middle ground. Roger Ebert puts it this way: "[Mystic] River leads moviegoers on a suspense-filled, sometimes painful adventure marked by great performances." Sean Penn and Tim Robbins are very good. For Judy and I, movies should entertain and leave us feeling good. I know for some that will not sit well, but that's our measure. So we acknowledge the great acting and the solid screen play, but like House of Fog and Sand, this movie just has a dark feel. It seems Penn's trademark to make movies like this. Perhaps that's why I don't care for him as an actor. It's a very good movie that we won't recommend.
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Storyline From Yahoo: When they were kids growing up together in a rough section of Boston, Jimmy Markum, Dave Boyle and Sean Devine spent their days playing stickball on the street, the way most boys did in their blue-collar neighborhood of East Buckingham. Nothing much out of the ordinary ever happened, until a moment's decision drastically altered the course of each of their lives forever. Twenty-five years later, the three find themselves thrust back together by another tragic event--the murder of Jimmy's 19-year-old daughter. Now a cop, Sean is assigned to the case and he and his partner are charged with unraveling the seemingly senseless crime. In the wake of the sudden and terrible loss of his child, Jimmy's mind becomes consumed with revenge--and his own plans to find the killer. Caught up in the maelstrom is Dave, now a lost and broken man fighting to keep his demons at bay. As the investigation creeps closer to home, his wife Celeste becomes consumed by suspicion and fear, while Jimmy's wife, Annabeth, draws her family tighter together in order to weather the storm.
Ratings: Critics B Users B+
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