Plots(1)

New York, 1974. Fifty-year-old Chris (Clive Owen) has just been released from prison on good behaviour, several years after he was involved in a gangland murder. Waiting for him reluctantly outside the prison gates is his younger brother, Frank (Billy Crudup), a cop with a bright future. Hoping that Chris has changed, Frank is willing to give his brother a chance; he shares his home, finds him a job, and helps him reconnect with his children and his ex-wife (Marion Cotillard). But Chris’ past quickly begins to catch up with him, and his descent back into a life of crime becomes inevitable. For Frank, it’s the last in a long line of betrayals, and he banishes him from his life. But it’s already too late; the brothers’ destiny will be bounded, forever. Blood ties are the ones that bind. (Lionsgate Home Entertainment)

(more)

Videos (11)

Trailer 1

Reviews (4)

kaylin 

all reviews of this user

English A little too stretched out criminal drama, where it's not so much about the crime as it is about the relationships between the characters. Clive Owen has taken the bad boy path and he's doing well, I adore Marion Cotillard, but even she can't save it. Mila Kunis is just here for the looks. For such a running time, this is a bit unbearable, but at least the ending manages to intrigue the viewer a little. ()

Malarkey 

all reviews of this user

English Sometimes, good actors meet up in a very, very mediocre movie. It’s not a rule, but that’s what makes the shock bigger. Who would have thought that a film featuring the amazing Mila Kunis and Marion Cottillard can be so horribly boring that it makes painting the fence look like pure ecstasy? ()

Ads

D.Moore 

all reviews of this user

English The opening scene already won me over with its uncompromising roughness and swing. And when the brilliant Clive Owen appeared, who has perhaps never acted better (you can't tell from the photos, you have to see his perfect transformation into a silent criminal), the decision was made. Blood Ties is a great film with a slow-moving but certainly not boring or uninteresting story, great actors and a great atmosphere. ()

Kaka 

all reviews of this user

English We have content like this a hundred times, but the form! The dirty and bleak feeling of a sweaty gym corner is palpable at times, as in Million Dollar Baby, but it regularly changes into beautiful panoramas and excellent, period-coordinated exteriors/interiors, as in American Gangster, with the expression means being somewhere in between. Sufficiently tangible, raw, austere, and down-to-earth, while not too grainy, shaky, or distracting in any way. In terms of acting, it is very strong not only because of the names in the cast. Emotionally layered just right. ()

Gallery (58)