Source Code is a different take on the “save the world against terrorists” genre film and at its heart it raises a solid moral question regarding the value of life. Starring Jake Gyllenhaal as US Captain Colter Stevens, as he races against time on a mission to save Chicago from an imminent terrorist attack. The film begins as Stevens wakes up on a train in somebody elses body and minutes later the train blows up. He then wakes up a second time to learn that he is working on a mission for the US Army using a new weapon known as source code. The weapon allows him to infiltrate the last eight minute memory of the victim who died on the bombed train earlier that day. Stevens works with fellow soldier Colleen Goodwin played wonderfully by Vera Farmiga to unravel the mystery of the person behind the attack. Love interest Christina portrayed by the beautiful Michelle Monaghan, as one of the victims that Stevens has to save, brings some smiles to the film.
The story as it is written in this blog might seem confusing but it makes a lot of sense on screen. The story unfolds well and perhaps goes in a direction that you would not originally anticipate. The cinematography is beautiful and the effects while maybe not top notch, do the intended job.
The highlight is Jake Gyllenhaal, proving once again that he can play a diverse array of characters in a range of different genre films. An intriguing thriller with credible in depth drama, with a very unique and cool concept – go live and relive Source Code!
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