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Disc #1 -- Safe House
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Making Safe House
Hand-To-Hand Action
Building The Rooftop Chase
Inside The CIA
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Español 5.1
Français 5.1
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American Gangster
Inside Man
Smokin' Aces
Assault On Precinct 13
Spy Game
Bourne Identity
Traffic
State of Plan
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- Chapters
Disc #1 -- Safe House
1. Chapter 1 [4:52]
2. Chapter 2 [8:52]
3. Chapter 3 [4:59]
4. Chapter 4 [5:13]
5. Chapter 5 [5:28]
6. Chapter 6 [7:52]
7. Chapter 7 [4:03]
8. Chapter 8 [3:18]
9. Chapter 9 [3:46]
10. Chapter 10 [8:19]
11. Chapter 11 [4:04]
12. Chapter 12 [6:08]
13. Chapter 13 [4:15]
14. Chapter 14 [5:07]
15. Chapter 15 [4:57]
16. Chapter 16 [4:50]
17. Chapter 17 [3:11]
18. Chapter 18 [6:09]
19. Chapter 19 [8:50]
20. Chapter 20 [5:18]
- Features
Making Safe House
Hand-to-Hand action
Building the Rooftop Chase
Inside the CIA
-
Directors
Daniel Espinosa
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Producers
Scott Stuber
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Composers (Music Score)
Ramin Djawadi
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Editors
Richard Pearson
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Screen Writers
David Guggenheim
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Others
Additional Editing - John Refoua
Art Director - Jonathan Hely-Hutchinson
Art Director - Shira Hockman
Art Director - Pablo Maestre
Assistant Costume Designer - Elaine Perlmann
Assistant Costume Designer - Michelle Karavoussanos
Assistant Editor - Adam Brailsford
Assistant Editor - Elizabeth Czyzewski
Assistant Editor - Ray Neapolitan
Casting - Sarah Halley Finn
Cinematographer - Oliver Wood
Composer (Music Score) - Ramin Djawadi
Costume Designer - Susan Matheson
Costumes Supervisor - Charlene Amateau
Executive Producer - Denzel Washington
Executive Producer - Adam Merims
Executive Producer - Scott Aversano
Executive Producer - Trevor Macy
Executive Producer - Marc D. Evans
Executive Producer - Alexa Faigen
Fights Choreographer - Olivier Schneider
First Assistant Director - John Wildermuth
First Assistant Editor - Sean Thompson
Hair Designer - Stefano Ceccarelli
Hair Styles - Larry Cherry
Hair Styles - Marie Hildebrandt
Key Hairstylist - Ayten Morgenstern
Key Make-up - Nadine Prigge
Leadman - Surisa Surisa
Leadman - Kate Van Der Merwe
Makeup - Carl Fullerton
Makeup - Raine Edwards
Makeup Designer - Vincenzo Mastrantonio
Music Editor - Peter Myles
Production Coordinator - Damiana Kamishin
Production Coordinator - Andrew Strachan
Production Designer - Brigitte Broch
Production Manager - Alan Shearer
Production Sound Mixer - Nico Louw
Production Supervisor - Gigi Causey
Properties Master - Andrew Orlando
Re-Recording Mixer - Chris Jenkins
Re-Recording Mixer - Frank A. Montaño
Script Supervisor - Morag Cameron
Second Assistant Director - Trey Batchelor
Second Unit Director - Alexander Witt
Second Unit Director Of Photography - Alexander Witt
Set Decorator - Andrew McCarthy
Set Decorator - Melinda Launspauch
Set Decorator - Tom Olive
Sound Effects Editor - Ezra Dweck
Sound Effects Editor - Michael J. Payne
Sound/Sound Designer - Christopher Assells
Sound/Sound Designer - Dino R. Dimuro
Sound/Sound Designer - Peter Staubli
Special Effects Coordinator - Clive Beard
Special Effects Supervisor - Cordell McQueen
Special Effects Supervisor - Sam Conway
Special Effects Supervisor - Terry Flowers
Stunts Coordinator - Grant Hulley
Stunts Coordinator - Greg Powell
Supervising Art Director - Nigel Churcher
Supervising Producer - Genevieve Hofmeyr
Supervising Sound Editor - Per Hallberg
Unit Production Manager - Adam Merims
Visual Effects - Image Engine
Visual Effects Coordinator - Crystal Choo
Visual Effects Coordinator - Louise Mycielski
Visual Effects Coordinator - Eva Abramycheva
Visual Effects Coordinator - Asal Nikkhah
Visual Effects Editor - Derrick Mitchell
Visual Effects Editor - Kevin Hickman
Visual Effects Editor - Adam Estey
Visual Effects Executive Producer - Steve Garrad
Visual Effects Producer - Geoff Anderson
Visual Effects Supervisor - Jeremy Hattingh
Visual Effects Supervisor - Simon Hughes
You would be forgiven for thinking that the
Denzel Washington spy thriller
Safe House was directed by
Tony Scott, seeing as how the two men have worked together five times already, and the grainy, hyper-edited action sequences recall
Man on Fire. In fact, it's directed by
Daniel Espinosa, who brings a
Scott-like feel to the story of an ambitious, low-level CIA field officer named Matt Weston (
Ryan Reynolds) who ends up guarding Tobin Frost (
Washington), a wily former agent wanted by multiple countries for selling state secrets.
As the movie opens, Weston is a young agent who has seen no action in over a year while stationed in a South African CIA safe house, and he is chomping at the bit to show his bosses what he can do. Luckily, the chance to do exactly that materializes when Frost, an infamous rogue agent in possession of a computer file that would embarrass governments around the world, is brought to the safe house for questioning. After a decade off of the grid, the onetime agent has turned himself in to an American consulate in order to avoid being killed by those who would like to get their hands on this sensitive information. When mercenaries break into the safe house and start shooting everyone in sight, Weston makes the decision to escape with Frost, since losing this high-profile traitor would kill his career. Also, it's the proper protocol to follow, and Weston is nothing if not a good guy.
Weston and Frost are being constantly chased during the first half of the movie, and
Espinosa manages to make the whiplash editing style work for the first two major action sequences. There's an extended car chase that gives the audience a really good sense of what Weston is experiencing, even though we can't get a handle on the big picture. We don't have a great sense of where the cars are in relation to each other, but when the action moves inside Weston's vehicle, we understand what our hero is trying to accomplish from moment-to-moment as he's driving and fighting with Frost simultaneously.
The breathless opening 45 minutes are a solid example of effective modern action filmmaking, but when the picture slows down for Frost to get a fake passport from an old friend (
Ruben Blades) while also sharing a philosophical moment with him, the movie never gets back on its feet. That scene is followed by a chase through a heavily populated South African neighborhood, and here the montage overwhelms any ability to understand exactly what's going on; we just wait for it to end so that we can find out what happened -- and the same holds true for the violent set pieces that close the film.
Washington is in his easygoing-rogue mode here, and it's one of his most appealing personas. He's done variations on this character so many times, but he's one of those rare actors who can be menacing and charismatic in equal measure, so it hasn't grown stale. He's able to sell the idea that Frost is a master at psychology, able to manipulate those around him, and as always,
Washington savors getting to emphasize the character's dark side. As for
Reynolds, he's better when he has something to do than when he has to emote -- he's more believable in an extended fistfight than he is breaking up with his girlfriend, but that might have as much to do with the writing as with him. The supporting cast, including
Brendan Gleeson and
Vera Farmiga as higher-ups back at CIA headquarters keeping tabs on Weston, do what they can with secondary roles that haven't been fleshed out much beyond their usefulness to the plot.
It's easy to lump
Safe House in with any number of pedestrian
Denzel Washington action films from the last few years, but the fact that it's a notch above them for its first half ends up hurting the movie in the long run because it fails to follow through on that promise -- it settles for being merely OK.
Safe House is, sadly for
Washington, annoyingly safe. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi