2001 film by Sean Penn
The Pledge
is a 2001 American
neo-noir
psychological
mystery
drama film
directed by
Sean Penn
and starring
Jack Nicholson
alongside an
ensemble supporting cast
of
Patricia Clarkson
,
Aaron Eckhart
,
Helen Mirren
,
Robin Wright Penn
,
Vanessa Redgrave
,
Sam Shepard
,
Mickey Rourke
,
Tom Noonan
,
Lois Smith
and
Benicio del Toro
. It was in competition at the
2001 Cannes Film Festival
.
The Pledge
is based on
Friedrich Durrenmatt
's 1958
novella
The Pledge: Requiem for the Detective Novel
. Durrenmatt wrote the novella to refine the theme he originally developed in the screenplay for the 1958 German film
It Happened in Broad Daylight
with
Heinz Ruhmann
.
Plot
[
edit
]
Aging
Reno, Nevada
, police detective Jerry Black attends a retirement party hosted by his department, at which Captain Pollack presents tickets to Jerry for a fishing trip in Mexico as a gift. The celebration is interrupted by the discovery of a murdered child, Ginny Larsen. Jerry decides to go with another detective, Stan Krolak, to the scene of the crime.
Jerry delivers the bad news to Ginny's parents, and the mother, Margaret Larsen, makes Jerry swear on a
cross
, made by their daughter, that he will find the killer. A suspect, Toby Jay Wadenah, a
Native American
man with an
intellectual disability
, is found the next day. Stan uses Toby's disorder to his advantage, convincing him that he killed Ginny. After having confessed to doing so, Toby steals a deputy's gun and commits suicide. An autopsy on Ginny proves that she had consumed chocolate before she died; wrappers found in Toby's truck solidify the likelihood that he killed the little girl, and the case is closed, despite Jerry’s suspicions.
Still adamant about his pledge to find the killer, Jerry chooses not to go to Mexico and misses his flight. Instead, he visits Ginny's grandmother, Annalise Hansen, who tells him of the many stories that she and Ginny used to read; one tells of an
angel
who descends from
Heaven
in order to fly a deceased child over all the places they loved in life, before delivering them to
God
. Jerry then visits one of Ginny's friends, Becky Fiske, who reveals that she had made friends with a man she called "The Giant" shortly before she was killed. Jerry finds a picture Ginny drew of "The Giant", but it does not resemble Toby, and features a black station wagon and not the red truck driven by Toby. He takes the drawing with him.
Jerry goes to Stan and asks him to reopen the case. Stan refuses but gets Jerry more information about similar cases in the area. Jerry's investigations reveal three local, unsolved cases that bear the same
M.O.
as seen with Ginny's, and which Toby could not have possibly committed because he was incarcerated at the time. Jerry presents his research and Ginny's drawing to Captain Pollack and Stan, who are doubtful.
While fishing, Jerry notices a gas station that is located near the center of the cases. After buying the station, Jerry moves into the house behind it and meets local waitress/bartender Lori, and her daughter, Chrissy. He takes an interest in Chrissy and becomes friends with the small family. One night, Lori shows up at Jerry's house, bruised and battered, and explains that her ex (who has a restraining order) attacked her. Jerry, out of concern for their safety, suggests that Lori and Chrissy move in with him temporarily; she agrees. Jerry slowly develops a fatherly relationship with Chrissy, and even begins a romance with Lori herself.
One day, local pastor Gary Jackson visits Chrissy outside the station. Jerry suspects that Jackson is Ginny's killer after he invites Chrissy to his church. Jerry rushes to the church after Jackson picks her up one day while he was fishing, but finds it was nothing more than a close call, and that Jackson is not the killer.
Meanwhile, Chrissy meets a man who drives a black car with a toy
porcupine
hanging on the rear mirror; porcupines were another aspect of Ginny's drawing that stood out to Jerry . That night, while reading her a bed-time story, Chrissy tells Jerry that she met a "wizard" who gave her porcupine candies and told her not to tell anyone about their interaction. (A later scene hints that the chocolates are laced with narcotics.) Chrissy tells Jerry she is supposed to meet the "wizard" again the next day at a nearby picnic area. Using Chrissy as bait, Jerry stages an sting operation with Stan's help to catch the killer. However, while on the way to the meeting, the "wizard" dies in a car accident; hours later, the SWAT team gives up and leaves Jerry alone. They inform Lori of what is happening. She confronts Jerry angrily about putting Chrissy in danger, and breaks up with him.
Sometime later, Jerry sits by himself on a bench in front of the ruined gas station. Despondent, destitute, and drunk, Jerry ends up all alone, mumbling to himself that the killer is still out there, unaware that he is actually dead.
Cast
[
edit
]
Production
[
edit
]
The film was shot mainly on location in the
British Columbia
interior. While the opening scenes were filmed in
Reno, Nevada
, the rest of the film was shot in
Keremeos
,
Princeton
,
Hedley
,
Merritt
and
Lytton
, all in British Columbia. Tom Noonan recounts that, when
Battlefield Earth
flopped, the film's backers "were so freaked out... that they got on Sean [Penn] about finishing on time and finishing under budget, which wasn't really possible, because they were shooting in the mountains, and there were four or five scenes that I still had to shoot, which they never shot, which explain who I am in that film. Because I'm not the guy who killed the kids. I'm not the bad guy in the film."
[4]
He has repeated this assertion: "There's another guy who's in a Mercedes that gets burned at the end. And people tell me I look like the guy in the Mercedes but that's not me. I'm the nice guy in that movie. At least in the script I am."
[5]
Home video
[
edit
]
The film was released on DVD and VHS on June 19, 2001.
[6]
Reception
[
edit
]
Box office
[
edit
]
The Pledge
did not perform well at the box office
. The film opened in 1,275 theaters and grossed $5,765,347, with an average of $4,521 per theater and ranking #11 at the box office. The film ultimately earned $19,733,089 domestically and $9,686,202 internationally for a total of $29,419,291, below its $35 million production budget.
[7]
[8]
[9]
[10]
Critical response
[
edit
]
The Pledge
received mainly positive reviews from critics. The film has a score of 78% on
Rotten Tomatoes
based on 124 reviews, with an average rating of 6.88/10. The critical consensus states: "Though its subject matter is grim and may make viewers queasy,
The Pledge
features an excellent, subtle performance by Jack Nicholson."
[11]
The film also has a score of 71 out of 100 on
Metacritic
based on 33 critics.
[12]
Audiences polled by
CinemaScore
graded the film "D" on a scale of A+ to F.
[13]
James Berardinelli
gave
The Pledge
three out of five, calling it "clever in the way that it gradually reveals things, but never gives us too much information at one time".
[14]
Roger Ebert
gave the film three and a half stars out of four,
[15]
and in 2012 upgraded it to four stars and added it to his "Great Movies" list, writing, "The last third of the movie is where most police stories go on autopilot, with obligatory chases, stalkings and confrontations. That's when
The Pledge
grows most compelling. Penn and Nicholson take risks with the material and elevate the movie to another, unanticipated, haunting level."
[16]
Accolades
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"
THE PLEDGE
(15)"
.
Warner Bros.
British Board of Film Classification
. July 26, 2001
. Retrieved
October 13,
2013
.
- ^
https://bombreport.com/yearly-breakdowns/2001-2/the-pledge/
- ^
The Pledge
at
Box Office Mojo
Retrieved October 13, 2013
- ^
"Tom Noonan"
. November 20, 2009.
- ^
"Tom Noonan Interview"
.
stumpedmagazine.com
. Archived from
the original
on March 14, 2012
. Retrieved
January 12,
2022
.
- ^
"Warner's 'Proof of Life,' 'The Pledge' Bring Suspense to VHS/DVD June 19"
.
hive4media.com
. April 20, 2001. Archived from
the original
on June 19, 2001
. Retrieved
September 8,
2019
.
- ^
(2001-05-15).
US directors laud Cannes audiences
.
BBC News
. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
- ^
(2001-01-25).
Legal spat forces Penn film out of Berlin
.
Guardian.co.uk
. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
- ^
The Pledge
at
Box Office Mojo
- ^
Box office / business for 'The Pledge' (2001)
.
IMDb
. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
- ^
The Pledge Movie Reviews, Pictures
.
Rotten Tomatoes
. Retrieved 2018-03-22.
- ^
"The Pledge Reviews"
. Metacritic
. Retrieved
November 18,
2016
.
- ^
"Cinemascore :: Movie Title Search"
.
www.cinemascore.com
. Archived from
the original
on December 20, 2018
. Retrieved
January 12,
2022
.
- ^
Berardinelli, James.
Review: The Pledge
.
ReelViews.net
. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
- ^
Ebert, Roger
(January 18, 2001).
"The Pledge"
.
Chicago Sun-Times
. Chicago, Illinois:
Sun-Times Media Group
. Retrieved
November 5,
2020
.
- ^
Ebert, Roger (June 18, 2012).
"There are such devils"
.
Chicago Sun-Times
. Chicago, Illinois:
Chicago Sun-Times
. Retrieved
November 5,
2020
.
- ^
"Festival de Cannes: The Pledge"
.
Festival-Cannes.com
. Retrieved
October 18,
2009
.
External links
[
edit
]