One serial killer has become a headache for the FBI as this killer performs the murders in public, for a live Internet audience and yet remains untraceable. This serial killer uses ludicrous ways to kill the victims. One of the victims is stripped naked with his legs encased in concrete. He is surrounded by sun lamps, and a live-streaming image is posted on the website killwithme.com. The viewers are then informed that the number of hits the site gets will accelerate, or slow down, the heat to which the man is exposed. The more people log on, the faster he fries. The killer coerces the thrill-hungry public to participate in an act of public murder. Inevitably, the site is jammed with viewers and everyone who watches is a murderer. It’s a fiendish scheme that an FBI cyber-crime agent, Jennifer Marsh (Diane Lane), and her partner, Griffin Dowd (Colin Hanks), must unravel. A local cop Eric Box (Billy Burke) too joins them to assist them, but the cunning villain has made his website untraceable. Indeed, any attempt to crack it gives the killer the name and location of the investigators, who instantly find themselves on the killing list. While Marsh is trying her best to trace the killer, she is forced to do all she can when she comes to know that the next victim could be her mother Stella Marsh (Mary Beth Hurt) or daughter Annie Haskins (Perla Haney-Jardine). Now begins a deadly chase to trace and catch this serial killer, who was till now, untraceable.
A secret service agent, Jennifer Marsh, gets caught in a very personal and deadly cat-and-mouse game with a serial killer who knows that people (being what they are - both curious and drawn to the dark side of things) will log onto an "untraceable" website where he conducts violent and painful murders LIVE on the net. The more people who log on and enter the website, the quicker and more violently the victim dies. Written by McCormack
SYNOPSIS
Jennifer Marsh (Diane Lane) is a widowed single parent living in a suburban Portland home with her daughter Annie Haskins (Perla Haney-Jardine). By night, she works in the FBI's cyber-crime division with Griffin Dowd (Colin Hanks), fighting identity theft and similar crimes. One night, an anonymous tip leads them to a website called killwithme.com. The site features a streaming video of a kitten being tortured and killed.
After the kitten's death, killwithme's webmaster (Joseph Cross) 'graduates' to human victims and makes their deaths correlate directly with the number of hits the site receives. At a press conference, the public is urged to avoid killwithme but, as Marsh feared, this only increases the site's popularity. The videos are recorded in the killer's basement and his various victims include a helicopter pilot (who is bled to death by injections of anticoagulant), a newscaster (burnt by heat lamps) and Dowd (killed by slowly increasing the concentration of sulfuric acid solution in which he is submerged).
At first it seems the victims were randomly chosen, but this is not the case. The first two victims were chosen because they were part of filming or presenting the suicide of a junior college teacher. The teacher's unstable, techno-prodigy son, Owen Reilly, broke down and was admitted to a psychiatric hospital. When released, he decided to prove a point (that the public is insatiable for the suffering of others), as well as wreak vengeance on those he felt had exploited his father's tragedy. Dowd was killed because he came close to the truth of who the murderer was. Marsh, who figures this out, is soon targeted as well.
Captured by Reilly, Marsh escapes her death-by-mulcher by swinging out of the way while dangling from the ceiling. She ends up breaking free and gunning down the murderer just as the other police show up, Marsh kills Reilly on his own website. As the film ends, the website receives numerous requests for a video of Reilly's death.
*************************************************************************
Special Agent Jennifer Marsh (Diane Lane) is a widowed single parent living in a suburban Portland home with her daughter, Annie Haskins (Perla Haney-Jardine). By night, she works in the FBI's cybercrime division with Griffin Dowd (Colin Hanks), fighting identity theft and similar crimes. One night, an anonymous tip leads them to a website called KillWithMe.com. The site features a streaming video of a kitten being tortured and killed. The site cannot be shut down, as whoever created it, knew that someone would try to shut it down, and built into it a fail-safe: everytime the server is closed, a mirror server comes immediately up, in its place.
After the kitten's death, KillWithMe.com's webmaster (Joseph Cross) "graduates" to human victims and makes their deaths correlate directly with the number of hits the site receives. At a press conference, the public is urged to avoid KillWithMe.com, but as Marsh feared, this only increases the site's popularity. The videos are recorded in the killer's basement and his various victims include a helicopter pilot (bled to death by injections of anticoagulant), a newscaster (burnt to death by heat lamps while cemented, up to his mid-thigh, into the floor of the basement); and Griffin Dowd (killed by slowly increasing the concentration of sulfuric acid solution in which he is submerged up to his neck).
At first it seems the victims were randomly chosen, but this is not the case. The first two victims were chosen because they were part of filming or presenting the suicide of a junior college teacher. The teacher's unstable, techno-prodigy son, Owen Reilly, broke down and was admitted to a psychiatric hospital. When released, he decided to prove a point (that the public is insatiable for the suffering of others), as well as wreak vengeance on those he felt had exploited his father's tragedy. Dowd was killed because he came close to the truth of who the murderer was. Marsh, who figures this out, is soon targeted as well.
Captured by Reilly, Marsh escapes her death by rotary tiller by swinging out of the way while dangling from the ceiling. She ends up breaking free and pinning down the murderer, and just as the other police officers show up, Marsh fatally shoots Owen on his own website. As the film ends, Marsh displays her badge symbolically and the scene closes with a shot of the dwindling chatter in the website's chat room, featuring the telling statement "a genius died today", as well as showing a couple of "chatters" that are glad the killer is dead and a final comment, asking whether the video could be downloaded. That was a way nice end to the story. But the reason why FBI Detective Marsh was involved was not thoroughly understood.
![]() |
Diane Lane | Jennifer Marsh |
![]() |
Billy Burke | Detective Eric Box |
![]() |
Colin Hanks | Griffin Dowd |
![]() |
Joseph Cross | Owen Reilly |
![]() |
Mary Beth Hurt | Stella Marsh |
![]() |
Peter Gray Lewis | Richard Brooks |
![]() |
Tyrone Giordano | Tim Wilks |
![]() |
Perla Haney-Jardine | Annie Haskins |
![]() |
Tim De Zarn | Herbert Miller |
![]() |
Christopher Cousins | David Williams |
![]() |
Jesse Tyler Ferguson | Arthur James Elmer |
![]() |
Trina Adams | Female Cop #3 |
![]() |
Brynn Baron | Mrs. Miller |
![]() |
John Breen | Richard Weymouth |
![]() |
Dan Callahan | Trey Restom |
![]() |
Erin Carufel | Melanie |
![]() |
Ryan Deal | Cop #1 |
![]() |
Marilyn Deutsch | National Newscaster #1 |
![]() |
Gray Eubank | Ray |
![]() |
Pete Ferryman | Daytime Newscaster #1 |
![]() |
David Freitas | Five O'Clock Newscaster #1 |
![]() |
West A. Helfrich | Cop #2 |
![]() |
Zack Hoffman | Chief of Police Michael Bagley |
![]() |
Sarah Brillhart | Daughter of Mrs. Miller |
![]() |
Diana Brillhart | Daughter of Mrs. Miller |
Director | Gregory Hoblit |
![]() |
Writer | Robert Fyvolent, Mark Brinker, Allison Burnett | |
Producer | Andy Cohen, Hawk Koch, Gary Lucchesi, James McQuaide, Steven Pearl, Sarah Platt, Eric Reid, Tom Rosenberg, Harley Tannenbaum, Richard S. Wright | |
Musician | Christopher Young | |
Photography | Anastas N. Michos |
Owner | Kerry & Dawn |
---|---|
Location | Movies-02 |
Storage Device | TD 20 |
Purchased | May 20, 2011 |
Quantity | 1 |
Seen | May 21, 2019 |
Added Date | May 17, 2015 05:42:18 |
Modified Date | Apr 17, 2024 00:46:57 |
Screen Ratios | Theatrical Widescreen (2.40:1) |
---|---|
Audio Tracks | Dolby Digital 5.1 [English] Dolby Digital 5.1 [French] Dolby Digital 5.1 [Portuguese] Dolby Digital 5.1 [Spanish] |
Subtitles | English | French | Portuguese | Spanish |
Distributor | Sony Pictures |
Layers | Single side, Dual layer |
Edition Release Date | May 13, 2008 |