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Nick Hume (Kevin Bacon) is a mild-mannered executive with a perfect life until one gruesome night he witnesses something that changes him forever. His family falls victim to a vicious attack perpetrated by a gang as part of their initiation ritual and his son is brutally murdered. When Hume is failed by the judicial system he vows to track every person involved in the crime, and embarks on a vigilante mission which not only sets off a police investigation, but starts a cycle of violence that draws his whole family into the politics of the gang who perpetrated the crime. Hume eventually comes to the disturbing conclusion that no length is too great when protecting his family. (20th Century Fox)

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MrHlad 

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English Kevin Bacon is a stud and he's good with a shotgun. James Wan once again revels in dark camera filters, and the whole thing is nicely straightforward and devoid of all unnecessary bullshit about morality. A simple but perfectly effective film that offers exactly what is expected of it. ()

J*A*S*M 

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English I join the ranks of those who didn’t like the direction the story takes in the last half hour. If the film had finished three quarters in, my rating would be higher. But what happens after that is pretty awful. Kevin Bacon suddenly stops being believable and all his behaviour becomes contrived (and that also applies to other characters). A solid thriller like this deserved a better ending. I’ve nothing against Wan’s direction, I liked it, but I hope he picks a better script next time. 65% ()

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3DD!3 

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English A ruthless bloodbath, like it came out of the 80s. Comparisons with earlier Charles Bronson movies is certainly fitting. It’s good that Wan brought this pair back to life, because ruthless, atmospheric shootouts where the main protagonist loses everything and sets out on the road to revenge are woefully few and far between these days. And Kevin Bacon in the main role was superb. ()

agentmiky 

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English James Wan managed to combine two things in Death Sentence by excellently presenting a rather sad story to the audience while also returning to what he started with—intense sequences full of brutality and unabashed gore. Overall, I personally categorize Death Sentence among the darker films, whether it's the grim atmosphere or the plot itself (all of which is greatly enhanced by the camera filter, showing the entire depicted world in a somber light). Kevin Bacon doesn’t overact; I bought his final transformation without much trouble, as he really had nothing left to lose. The action scenes were genuinely gratifying; the film offers very few of them, but they have a stronger impact as a result (for example, the entire parking lot scene is effectively built up). The final confrontation, where Wan plays with shades of red, is visually striking, but it’s true that I envisioned a different ideal ending. I really liked it, but I can’t give it a perfect score; it needed a more polished script, as sometimes the characters acted quite irrationally. Otherwise, I have no complaints. I give it 80%. ()

Lima 

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English EdaS speaks to my soul, I would just add that even Arnold feeding a fawn with his daughter at the beginning of Commando was more believable than Bacon's emotional outpourings here. The action is pretty decent, Wan is good with the camera, but the rest is just bad. I don't think even Pepek Vyskoč could eat that. And back to Kevin Bacon, as brilliant as he was in The Woodsman, here I felt sorry for him. It was awful, Kevin. I miss Charles Bronson. ()

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