Untraceable Review
By Chris Barsanti
And awful it is. In a desperate bid to glom on to the Internet's evergreen supposed hipness, the script (a lifeless accumulation of the expected by a trio of writers who really should know better) puts us inside an FBI cyber-crime unit where flint-eyed but tender-hearted agent Jennifer Marsh (Diane Lane) tracks down the worst of the online worst. Stirring from her bank of computer monitors only to get coffee or crack wise with fellow agent Griffin Dowd (Colin Hanks), Marsh is your prototypical wounded female cop with a young daughter and fretful mother at home, and a dead husband in her memory. (If her character had been male they'd have given her a bad temper and a drinking problem, but at least the sarcastic partner bit is gender neutral.) She gets put on the kind of case that (literally) only exists in the movies. Some psycho sets up a website called "Kill With Me" whose hook is that the more people view it, the quicker the subject on camera dies by some fiendish means. The first time out, it's a kitten; after that a person, and then another, and then another...
In due time, we are given a thick folder of backstory on the killer behind the site and why exactly they are killing these people in such byzantine ways -- the way these Rube Goldberg serial killers slave away in their basements on these contraptions, you'd think nobody had ever told them about handguns -- but one thing is never really made clear: what did the kitten ever do? If the kitten is about the only living creature on screen who makes one feel an ounce of empathy, that fact shouldn't cause undue concern. The problem (one of many) is that everyone gathered here for another painfully mediocre Race Against Time exercise in supposed dramatic tension feels about as real as those life-sized cardboard cutout ads propped up in video stores. For the most part it's not their fault, particularly Hanks and Lane, who appear as though they'd be perfectly willing to do some acting here if anybody bothered to ask.
But given the generic TV-quality direction by Gregory Hoblit -- once a perfectly fine genre auteur, now straight on the road to hacksville after last year's Fracture and now this -- no acting seems to be required. And with a script whose deepest consideration, after establishing a story in which millions of online gawkers' curiosity explicitly implicates them in murder (a perfectly juicy jumping-off point to score a few blows against modern society in general, the voyeuristic sadism of the Internet in particular, just to name a few topics) is "When did the world go so freaking insane?," you can imagine why nobody seemed to think it was worth the effort.
Untraceable isn't unwatchable. It's a well-worn piece of formula produced with just enough professionalism to make it clear that those who made it should have known better, and yet just didn't believe it was necessary to try any harder.
Even the FBI has casual Friday.

Facts and Figures
Year: 2008
Run time: 101 mins
In Theaters: Friday 25th January 2008
Box Office USA: $28.7M
Box Office Worldwide: $32.5M
Budget: $35M
Distributed by: Sony/Screen Gems
Production compaines: Screen Gems, Lakeshore Entertainment, Cohen/Pearl Productions
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 1.5 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 16%
Fresh: 24 Rotten: 124
IMDB: 6.2 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Gregory Hoblit
Producer: Tom Rosenberg, Gary Lucchesi, Howard "Hawk" Koch, Jr., Steven Pearl, Andy Cohen
Screenwriter: Robert Fyvolent, Mark R. Brinker, Allison Burnett
Starring: Diane Lane as Agent Jennifer Marsh, Billy Burke as Eric Box, Colin Hanks as Griffin Dowd, Joseph Cross as Owen Reilly, Mary Beth Hurt as Stella Marsh, Peter Lewis as Richard Brooks, Perla Haney-Jardine as Annie Haskins
Also starring: Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Tom Rosenberg, Gary Lucchesi, Steven Pearl, Allison Burnett