Watch Source Code 2011 Online Free Megavideo Breaking News
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Date: Mon, 11 Apr 2011 Time: 1:28 AM
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Like "Groundhog Day" before it, "Source Code's" primary treat is its many deja vu moments, as each time Colter is thrown back into the past, his attempts to avert the coming disaster must take different routes since he keeps failing, and failing means dying, and dying, even if you're not really dying, still kinda sucks. Through each pass, he comes to appreciate the cute stranger sitting across from him more and more. Michelle Monaghan is very good as the love interest, and there is actually some nice chemistry between her and Gyllenhaal. He doesn't get to hop around onscreen like in his parkour-filled days on "The Prince of Persia", but Gyllenhaal still turns in a fine performance as a believable action hero. Mind you, not that his Colter Stevens goes overly Rambo on anyone in the movie, but he is credible as a military man on a mission. Curiously, "Source Code" does a very odd thing and drops its Big Reveal by the halfway point. Usually this is the kind of movie where the payoff is saved for the very last few minutes of the movie, but Jones and Ben Ripley have something else saved for their Third Act, and surprisingly, it has nothing to do with revealing the deep, dark, and somewhat depressing secrets of the Source Code. Instead, the film marches deliberately toward a very human, non-techie finale that, in many ways, feels somewhat anti-climactic. It's as if Jones and Ripley know that audiences are expecting a rip-roaring thriller that takes its suspense right to the very end, and as a result are determined to do something different.
"If you had only one minute left to live," Colter Stevens (Jake Gyllenhaal) asks Christina (Michelle Monaghan) mere seconds before their train explodes from a bomb hidden on one of the cars, "what would you do?" It is a good question, and one that Stevens asks several times, for in Source Code he finds that he is reliving eight minutes of another person's life over and over again. Stevens, a captain who flew helicopter missions in Afghanistan, wakes to find himself on a commuter train. Only he shouldn't be on the train. And, when he looks in a bathroom mirror, he finds somebody else staring back at him. Confused? Stevens is, certainly, until the train explodes and he wakes up again, this time strapped into a capsule, where Captain Goodwin (Vera Farmiga) asks via video monitor if he has completed his mission. From its opening moments, it's obvious that writer Ben Ripley and director Duncan Jones enjoy this disorientation. Some viewers, especially those who don't read science fiction or have never seen an episode of The Twilight Zone or The Outer Limits, will not share that enjoyment, but many others will, and will enjoin fully Source Code's central conceit: a person can be sent into another person's body for the last eight minutes of his life. In this case, Captain Colter Stevens enters the body of a school teacher bound for Chicago to determine the identity of the train's bomber and prevent the bombing of a second target. And he must go back each time, eight minutes before the explosion, until he identifies the bomber. Think Richard Lupoff's "12:01 PM" crossed with the television series 24. How is this possible? Dr. Rutledge (Jeffrey Wright), inventor of the Source Code, attempts an explanation involving quantum physics and alternate realities which sound like sections of the works of Neils Bohr and Max Planck, as well as passages of Brian Greene's new book The Hidden Reality, subjected to William Burroughs's cut-up technique and submitted to the publishers of CliffsNotes.
which is the text of a computer program, may have had some meaning in the original script but appears to have gotten lost in subsequent drafts. Wright rushes through the explanation of how it all works with conviction and determination, though it might have less to do with his need to thwart the bomber than with the fact that he might not understand what he's saying.
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