
A retiring police chief pledges to catch the killer of a young child.
![]() |
Patricia Clarkson | Margaret Larsen |
![]() |
Beau Daniels | Rudy |
![]() |
Benicio Del Toro | Toby Jay Wadenah |
![]() |
Dale Dickey | Strom |
![]() |
Wendy Donaldson | Resort Owner |
![]() |
Adrien Dorval | Sheriff |
![]() |
Aaron Eckhart | Stan Krolak |
![]() |
Shawn Henter | Bus Driver |
![]() |
Kathy Jensen | Store Clerk |
![]() |
Taryn Knowles | Ginny Larsen |
![]() |
Nels Lennarson | Hank |
![]() |
Costas Mandylor | Monash Deputy |
![]() |
J.J. McColl | Real Estate Agent |
![]() |
Gordon May | Criminologist #1 |
![]() |
Gardiner Millar | Deputy #3 |
![]() |
Helen Mirren | Doctor |
![]() |
Adam Nelson | Deputy #1 |
![]() |
Jack Nicholson | Jerry Black |
![]() |
Tom Noonan | Gary Jackson |
![]() |
Michael O'Keefe | Duane Larsen |
![]() |
Tony Parsons | TV Anchorman |
![]() |
Robin Wright Penn | Lori |
![]() |
Robert Popoff | Prisoner |
![]() |
Vanessa Redgrave | Annalise Hansen |
![]() |
Nicole Robert | Flea Market Sales Lady |
Director | Sean Penn |
![]() |
Writer | Friedrich Dürrenmatt, Jerzy Kromolowski, Mary Olson-Kromolowski | |
Producer | Don Carmody, Brian W. Cook, Michael Fitzgerald, Sean Penn, Elie Samaha, Andrew Stevens | |
Musician | Klaus Badelt, Hans Zimmer | |
Photography | Chris Menges |
Packaging | Snap Case |
---|---|
Nr Discs | 1 |
Screen Ratios | Theatrical Widescreen (2.35:1) |
Audio Tracks | Dolby Digital 5.1 [English] Dolby Digital 5.1 [French] |
Subtitles | English | English (Closed Captioned) | French |
Layers | Single side, Dual layer |
Edition Release Date | Jun 19, 2001 |
Regions | Region 1 |
Watched | |
---|---|
Quantity | 1 |
Index | 764 |
Added Date | Mar 10, 2012 13:58:32 |
Modified Date | Jun 12, 2022 00:33:28 |
Story Synopsis:
Based on the book by Friedrich Dürrenmatt, The Pledge stars Jack Nicholson as Jerry Black, a homicide detective on the day of his who becomes obsessed with solving the murder of a seven-year-old girl when he makes a promise to the girl’s grief-stricken mother (Clarkson). Stan Krolak (Eckhart), the detective actually assigned to the case-remember, Jerry’s retired now-accepts the confession he coerced from Toby Jay Wadenah (Del Toro) a local man of diminished capacity. Toby then kills himself, and the police close the case. But Jerry is not at all convinced that the killer has been eliminated. A compelling mystery with a fine cast. (Laurie Sevano)
DVD Picture:
The anamorphically enhanced 2.35:1 DVD exhibits a picture that is nicely detailed, with occasionally soft images. Fine details are at times revealing of fine clothing and facial details. Colors are well balanced, though at times appearing slightly desaturated, with slightly weak blacks. Otherwise, hues can be rich, with vibrant reds and deep greens. Fleshtones exhibit good balance. Very rarely does pixelization appear. At times the picture exhibits gorgeous, natural openness. Overall, this is a very satisfying picture. (Suzanne Hodges)
Soundtrack:
The sonic presentation is typically rather quiescent in nature, but also delivers a satisfying listening experience through the music. Fidelity is quite remarkable, and at reference level tonality seems neutral and well balanced. The dialogue is in general a notable production with natural-sounding voices, and a spatial presence that is just a bit compromised due to voices seeming a little forward-placed. Nonetheless, the sense of spaciousness is generally subtle throughout, but certainly remarkable in imparting the sense of being in an expansive, holosonic listening space. The music nicely fills the soundstage, occasionally with aggressive split surround envelopment, but even when gently present is certainly pleasing to experience as it wraps around the listener. The music also delivers impressively in the low-end at times with sub-25Hz extension, albeit originating from other than the .1 LFE channels. This is a nicely produced soundtrack that is certainly engrossing and an effective, vital component of the storytelling experience. (Perry Sun)