“Missing” Blu-Ray Review

Missing

Missing

 – for some strong violence, language, teen drinking, and thematic material.
Director: Nicholas D. Johnson, Will Merrick
Starring: Storm Reid, Nia Long, Ken Leung, Joaquim de Almeida, Amy Landecker, Tim Griffin
Running Time: 1 hour, 51 minutes
Theatrical Release Date: January 20, 2023
Blu-Ray Release Date: March 28, 2023 (Amazon.com)

Plot Summary

After her mother goes missing, a young woman tries to find her from home, using tools available to her online. (from IMDB)

Film Review

In 2018, indie film Searching, led by John Cho, released, utilizing the unique concept where all footage was shown through web cams and cellphone videos to paste together a completely different way to tell a story and watch a mystery unfold. It was a tense thriller about a teenage girl having mysteriously disappeared and a single father’s desperate attempt to find her, in spite of being unfamiliar with the ways of the internet. The computer/phone-only video storytelling method had a bit of a claustrophobic feel that made it just a little bit more real because it was utilizing cameras we all use in our everyday lives. Now, five years later, the team that brought us Searching return with Missing, another thriller cut from the same cloth and utilizing the same kind of storytelling method, but told on a grander scale.

Missing
Searching blew me away when I first saw it – especially as a parent myself – and Missing feels a lot like that film, with the intensity ramped up. This time around, the story is about a mother who goes missing, and the daughter who desperately tries to search for her. In the same way that Searching put a spotlight on internet technology and the dangers of things like social media, Missing goes even further. In a way, the movie plays out as kind of a PSA for being careful with the technology we take for granted on a day-to-day basis. (Let’s face it; what you can do with it is a bit scary.) The story is still rooted emotionally in family, and kind of serves as a reverse-Searching with a daughter who’s drifting away from her mother realizing how much she loves her when she goes missing. Searching was from the perspective of a parent, while Missing is very much from the perspective of a teenager (and this time, she’s super tech-savvy). We even see the central character, June, attending a teen party where she gets super drunk, and then see highlights from it captured with various cameras from people at the party. One really clever moment shows a quick collage of cell phone videos rapidly overlapping each other (like a stop motion movie) as the camera spins around June.

Missing
Missing, and its predecessor Searching, are definitely acquired tastes when it comes to how they’re shot and arranged, but Missing feels like a more complete experience than Searching did. Searching felt very limited by largely going through one man’s perspective, but in Missing, it’s more of a globe-trotting effort, with it stretching from L.A. to Colombia, for example. The story is also filled with surprising twists and turns that keep the viewer on their toes. Just when you think you may be ahead of the game with having it figured out, the story pulls the rug out from under you with a shocking revelation. In the end, it all comes together pretty well, but it’s definitely more unrealistic and unlikely than the events of Searching. Still, it sure does make for a really engaging thriller.

The content for Missing is a bit rougher than what we saw with Searching. There is some pretty intense violence shown, some of which could even be triggering for those who’ve been a victim of abuse. A scene towards the end sees a character stabbed in the neck with glass, which is pretty bloody. There’s also some blood splatter when another character is shot. There is some profanity, although not much and not often, with a few uses of the “S” word and several other colorful words, including some abbreviated text-talk that suggest profanity (like “WTF” and “FML”). There’s also a sequence involving underage drinking at a party where teens are visibly drunk. The idea of the party is somewhat glorified in its planning, but the end result certainly isn’t.

Missing
Missing is a worthy follow-up to 2018’s Searching, serving as a standalone sequel to that film. The acting is solid, the story nice and twisty, with a lot of tension to make this thriller effective. And even if the story may be a little convoluted, it makes for a great thriller, utilizing this unique storytelling method quite well.

– John DiBiase (reviewed: 3/30/23)

Blu-Ray Special Features

 

BLU-RAY™ AND DIGITAL

  • Deleted Scenes
  • Hunting for the MISSING Easter Eggs
  • Behind-The-Scenes Featurettes:
    • Storm Reid and the Challenge of MISSING
    • Misdirects, Online Crimes and the Social Media Mystery
    • The Screens that Rule Our Lives
  • Filmmaker Commentary

DVD

  • Behind-The-Scenes Featurettes:
    • Storm Reid and the Challenge of MISSING
    • Misdirects, Online Crimes and the Social Media Mystery
    • The Screens that Rule Our Lives
  • Filmmaker Commentary

Parental Guide: Content Summary

. Sex/Nudity: Several times we see a photo of a woman who has taken a sexy photo of herself in a bra; June finds that a man appears to be cheating on his girlfriend.
. Vulgarity/Language: 4 “S” words, 1 “J-sus Chr-st,” 1 “d*mn,” 4 “h*ll,” 12 “Oh my G-d,” 1 “Swear to G-d,” 1 incomplete “Oh G-d,” 1 “cr*p,” 1 written “Stfuuuuuuu,” 1 written “fml,” 1 written “WTF”
. Alcohol/Drugs: Teens buy alcohol for a party and send a pic of their haul to June; We see teens drinking at a party, holding red cups, on video; June drinks straight from a bottle and we see others drinking at a party; June throws up from drinking too much; We see photos of teens drinking at a party; We learn about a man doing drugs and being abusive.
. Blood/Gore: A man’s nose bleeds and he wipes it; We briefly see a dead person slumped in the corner of a dark room; We see footage of a man’s nose bleeding again; A person is shot and we see blood on their pants and clothes and splattered on a mirror behind them; A person is shot and falls over; A person stabs another person in the neck with a sharp shard of glass. We see some blood on their neck as they struggle; We see the glass sticking out of the back of a person’s neck as they then slump forward in a chair and die.
. Violence: We see the crime scene from the end of Searching re-enacted on a TV show called Unfiction; Some men come out of a van and grab a man and a woman and force them inside the van; We briefly see a dead person slumped in the corner of a dark room; A man is shot at and killed off screen; A man grabs a teenager as she screams and drags her out of a house; We learn about a man doing drugs and being abusive; A man angrily grabs at a camera; A man drags a girl out of a car and into a house; A man ties a teenager to a chair; A man holds a woman down and puts a gun to her head. She hits him with an object and runs away; A man shoots a lock to escape a locked door; A person is shot and falls over; A person stabs another person in the neck with a sharp shard of glass. We see some blood on their neck as they struggle; We see the glass sticking out of the back of a person’s neck as they then slump forward in a chair and die; We see glass breaking on a door as a S.W.A.T. team rushes into a house. The camera pans out to reveal it’s an episode of the Unfiction show.

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