IDENTITY, directed by James Mangold, is a thriller set at an isolated motel in rural Nevada during an unrelenting rainstorm. With all roads washed out and all forms of communication dead, a group of people become stranded at the motel along with the shifty manager (John Hawkes). Among the stranded are Ed (John Cusack), a former cop turned limo driver; Caroline (Rebecca De Mornay), a self-absorbed actress; Paris (Amanda Peet), a prostitute attempting to escape her profession; Rhodes (Ray Liotta), a cop transporting a prisoner (Jake Busey); Lou (William Lee Scott) and Ginny (Clea DuVall), bickering newlyweds; and George (John McGinley) and Alice (Leila Kenzle), a married couple travelling with their young son. Soon the waterlogged lodgers start dying in mysterious--and brutal--ways, and the increasingly dwindling number of survivors must discover the killer to prevent their own demises.
Riveting from the opening sequence, Mangold's suspenseful murder mystery wastes no time in turning on the tension. Realizing that truly scary cinema comes from the unknown and the unexpected, Mangold and screenwriter Michael Cooney keep the audience--and the film's characters--in the dark and continually create situations that go from bad to worse for the luckless travelers. Cusack anchors the film as the resigned but noble former policeman, while Peet reveals a depth previously unseen in her other movies. Actors such as Liotta, McGinley, Hawkes, and De Mornay round out the fine ensemble cast. As with many thrillers, IDENTITY has a big twist, but because of the filmmakers' excellent slight of hand, it's unlikely viewers will predict the bizarre outcome.
Theatrical Release: APRIL 25, 2003
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Special Edition
Full Frame - 1.33
Widescreen - 2.39
Audio:
Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
Dolby Digital 5.1 - French
Additional Release Material:
Deleted Scenes with Director's Commentary
Audio Commentary: James Mangold - Director
Featurette: STARZ Special: ON THE SET OF 'IDENTITY'
Storyboard Comparisons
Trailers: Theatrical
Interactive Features:
Scene Selection
Interactive Menus
Branched Version of Film with Alternative Ending and Additional Scene
Text/Photo Galleries:
Filmographies
Executive Producer
Stuart M. Besser: Executive Producer, THE SWEETEST THING (2002)
Director of Photography
Phedon Papamichael: Designer/Director Of Photography/Director
Review 1:
"...Mr. Mangold handles the revelations and reversals of Michael Cooney's script with nerve-racking aplomb. There are horror-film conventions -- eerie sounds, slow camera movements, half-open doors and carefully arranged shadows -- that retain their effectiveness..."
Source: New York Times
p.E1 04/25/2003
Review 2:
"...Sleek and clever....IDENTITY is fine escapist fare with a saving sense of humor..."
Source: Los Angeles Times
p.C22 04/25/2003
Review 3:
"...Delighting in his own considerable cleverness and cineast's knowledge of movie history, Mangold shuffles the elements like a three-card-monte pro..."
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.48-9 05/02/2003
Review 4:
"...A snappily executed little thriller..."
Source: Variety
p.22-7 04/21/2003
Review 5:
"...Stylish....A clever twist on the old strangers-stranded-in-scary motel plot..."
Source: Total Film
p.130 12/01/2003
Review 6:
"...John Cusack is convincing....With moments of mind-bending creepiness..."
Source: USA Today
p.11E 04/25/2003
Review 7:
"...With a third act that causes us to rethink everything that has gone before. Ingenious, how simple and yet how devious the solution is..."
Source: Chicago Sun-Times
p.37 04/25/2003
Review 8:
4 stars out of 5 -- "Mangold's noir thriller plays like Agatha Christie meets Alfred Hitchcock....A thriller that satisfies the grey matter, IDENTITY deserves to be seen."
Source: Ultimate DVD
p.85 05/01/2007