Abandon (film)

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Abandon
Abandon Poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byStephen Gaghan
Written byStephen Gaghan
Based onAdams Fall
by Sean Desmond
Produced byGary Barber
Roger Birnbaum
Lynda Obst
Edward Zwick
StarringKatie Holmes
Benjamin Bratt
Charlie Hunnam
Zooey Deschanel
Gabrielle Union
Gabriel Mann
Melanie Lynskey
Will McCormack
Fred Ward
CinematographyMatthew Libatique
Edited byMark Warner
Music byClint Mansell
Production
company
Spyglass Entertainment
Distributed byParamount Pictures
(United States)
Buena Vista International
(International)
Release date
  • October 18, 2002 (2002-10-18)
Running time
99 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$25 million
Box office$12.3 million[1]

Abandon is a 2002 American psychological thriller drama film written and directed by Stephen Gaghan in his directorial debut. It stars Katie Holmes as a college student whose boyfriend (Charlie Hunnam) disappeared two years previously. Despite being set at an American university, much of the movie was filmed in Canada at McGill University's McConnell Hall. It is based on the book Adams Fall by Sean Desmond. The book was re-titled[2] Abandon for the movie tie-in paperback printing. The film co-stars Zooey Deschanel and Gabrielle Union, with Benjamin Bratt playing the detective investigating the boyfriend's disappearance. It received generally negative reviews.

Plot[]

Senior college student Katie Burke (Holmes) is struggling to deal with the stress of completing her thesis and succeeding in an upcoming rigorous interview process. To make matters even more complicated, Detective Wade Handler (Bratt), a recovering alcoholic, reopens the two-year-old police investigation into the disappearance of her boyfriend, Embry Larkin (Hunnam). An orphaned young man of considerable means, Embry had purchased two tickets to Athens, Greece before his disappearance; the tickets had never been used and Embry's financial assets had not been touched since his disappearance. With the official reopening of the Larkin case, however, Katie begins to see Embry lurking around campus, seemingly stalking her.

Reporting this back to Detective Handler, who dismisses her as he believes Embry to be dead, Katie is not convinced but nevertheless returns to school. Falling asleep in the college library while studying, upon waking she finds a number carved into the wood of the desk. Upon investigation, she discovers it references a library book: The Inferno. There she finds Embry staring back at her from the other side of the book stack.

Confiding these troubling events to her friends, most notably her roommate Samantha (Deschanel), Katie learns that during her relationship with Embry, he had acted extremely jealous and even violent toward another of Katie's admirers, Harrison (Mann), for whom Katie held only platonic feelings. Shortly thereafter, Harrison seemingly disappears from campus. Convinced that Embry is responsible, Katie confronts him at a local restaurant, only to be asked to meet him at his family's country house.

Once at the Larkin family's country house, however, a violent confrontation ensues between Katie and Embry. Fleeing from the house and finding comfort in Handler, Katie begins an affair with the detective which spurs her to complete her thesis. With Handler closing the investigation, citing that Embry Larkin was indeed alive, and resigning from his job as a detective, he and Katie plan on temporarily retreating to Handler's cabin in New Hampshire. Meanwhile, however, Handler learns from a forensic expert that a note which had supposedly only recently been written by Embry to Katie was, in fact, two years old.

Waiting for Handler on campus, Katie is once again attacked by Embry, who promises to find her wherever she goes before running off. Informing Handler of her encounter with Embry, Katie asks him if the two of them can just leave, but Handler insists on putting a stop to Embry's threats. Following Katie's direction to where Embry ran off, Handler and Katie venture into Embry's former dormitory, which is now abandoned due to the building's derelict structure. As they walk into one of the building's old tunnels, a former spot for Katie and Embry's trysts, Katie begins to interact with Embry, but Handler sees no one.

Through flashbacks, Katie and Embry have been in the same location two years prior, with Embry cruelly breaking up with her and calling off their planned trip to Greece. It is subsequently revealed that as a repercussion of her father's abandonment of her at a young age, Katie possesses severe psychotic tendencies surrounding abandonment. Distraught over Embry's disposal of her, Katie picks up a rock and strikes him from behind repeatedly, killing him.

Attempting to reason with Katie before telling her she cannot come with him to New Hampshire, Handler takes notice of something at the bottom of the water. Realizing that it is the skeleton of Embry Larkin, Handler is suddenly struck from behind and falls into the water, echoing Embry's murder two years prior. The epilogue reveals that the dormitory is to be demolished for the construction of a new structure on the site, thus cementing the permanent disappearance of Embry Larkin and Wade Handler.

Katie Burke has graduated, and finally gets the job she has always wanted. But co-worker Robert Hanson informs her that he has been promoted and that their relationship must end; a familiar look passes over Katie's face.

Cast[]

Release[]

Box office[]

The film opened at #7 at the U.S. box office, taking $5,064,077 in its first opening weekend.[3]

Critical reception[]

Reception was largely negative. Rotten Tomatoes judged the film to have a 16% "rotten" critical approval rating based on 113 reviews, with an average score of 4.28/10, summarizing critical opinion in saying that the plotline is "disjointed and muddled".[4] On Metacritic, the film's score is 36/100 based on 26 reviews, indicating generally unfavorable reception.[5] Variety magazine described it as "a tricked-up Fatal Attraction wannabe".[6]

See also[]

  • Adams Fall, a novel by author Sean Desmond, which served as a loose basis for the plot of Abandon

References[]

  1. ^ Box Office Mojo
  2. ^ Savelloni, Matthew. "FROM PRINT TO SCREEN" Archived November 12, 2005, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved June 12, 2006.
  3. ^ Abandon (2002). Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2010-11-17.
  4. ^ Abandon (2002). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2019-07-24.
  5. ^ Metacritic
  6. ^ McCarthy, Todd. "Abandon Review". Variety. October 18, 2002. Retrieved February 19, 2006.

External links[]

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