watch The Chamber
watch The Chamber
The surprising movie,The Chamber, featuring Chris O’Donnell is terrifically pleasing, with a supporting cast of massive stars, go Gene Hackman , will distinctly be worth while to go out and look. confounding & stupendous with the pace never slowing it doubtlessly keeps your attention, while not over exaggerating the plot.
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Chris O’Donnell has never dissatisfied. The character in The Chamber is not a far stretch from previous roles, yet it seems Chris O’Donnell has never been more awesome then with this portrayal.
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The astounding cast in this movie is dazzling: Chris O’Donnell, Gene Hackman, Faye Dunaway, Robert Prosky, Raymond J. Barry
Surely an award winning endeavor with characters that you can obviously relate to, the movie is pivotal to convey the least. I will not forget to mention that Gene Hackman is stupendous also! You will want to observe Chris O’Donnell in The Chamber today!
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A top cast consisting of veteran aces Gene Hackman and Faye Dunaway can’t rescu this way-too-long, dreadfully earnest version of John Grisham’s equally gimpy novel. There are several problems in this story of an intertwined Southern family who must disentangle themselves from the past and the dark shadow of a 1967 bombing. That terrorist attack led to the deaths of two Jewish children and was pinned on the black-sheep patriarch of the family, a racist, card-carrying Klansman named Sam Cayhall (Hackman), who is now serving time on death row for the hate crime. Years later, the savior grandson cometh. Young-buck lawyer Adam Hall–played with righteous determination and limited range by Chris O’Donnell–pulls out all the stops to save his client from the Mississippi gas chamber. As is usual in Grisham country, the poor lawyer becomes embroiled in a plan more diabolical, corrupt, and layered than he could guss and the truth spirals out of control, endangering lives, and opening old wounds. The Chamber attempts to twist and turn through its plodding story, but there is no gray area in which to force the viewer to weigh his or her conscience against the skewed facts. Everything that occurs in The Chamber is black or white, good or bad, and there is no crisis of conflict to make us qustion the morality and stance of the two sides in play. The bad guys are awful, the politicians are bought off, the cops are either corrupt or apathetic, and only one puny guy is left to bring down a house of cards that’s been standing solidly for decades. O’Donnell is quickly put to shame by Hackman, who even manages to suffer through a sadistically long, melodramatic stroll down death row with his dignity intact. –Paula Nechak
The Chamber
