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  1. www.imdb.com › title › tt0340163Hostage (2005) - IMDb

    Mar 11, 2005 · Hostage: Directed by Florent-Emilio Siri. With Bruce Willis, Kevin Pollak, Jimmy Bennett, Michelle Horn. When a family is held hostage, former hostage negotiator Jeff Talley arrives at the scene.

    • (113K)
    • Action, Crime, Drama
    • Florent-Emilio Siri
    • 2005-03-11
  2. Hostage is a 2005 American action thriller film directed by Florent-Emilio Siri. The film was based on the 2001 novel of the same name by Robert Crais, and was adapted for the screen by Doug Richardson. The film stars Bruce Willis, who co-produced the film, as the police chief who takes place as the negotiator when the family of a wealthy ...

    • $75 million
  3. Jeff Talley : Fucking rich people. Wil Bechler : Classic foster product. Three years old, Marshall Krupcheck witnesses daddy kill mommy then sees daddy kill himself. You can guess the rest. Wil Bechler : Look at this. He was only seventeen at the time. Wil Bechler : Clerk... He's trying to say something.

  4. Aug 2, 2016 · As the hostage situation inside continues to escalate, Chief Talley (Bruce Willis) hands over the controls to a more than capable backup squad. In this scene...

    • 3 min
    • 1.2M
    • Miramax
  5. Synopsis. Jeff Talley (Bruce Willis), a former Los Angeles SWAT police negotiator, has moved to Bristo Camino, a small quiet town away from the big city. He now serves as the chief of police with a small force in a town that has very little crime. After ten years as a hostage negotiator, Jeff was just burned out and needed a quieter life ...

  6. www.rottentomatoes.com › m › 1141099-hostageHostage | Rotten Tomatoes

    Mar 11, 2005 · After one of his hostage negotiations goes awry, LAPD officer Jeff Talley (Bruce Willis) quits the force and relocates his family to the suburbs. As the sheriff in a sleepy town, Jeff thinks he ...

    • (156)
    • Action, Mystery & Thriller
    • R
  7. Mar 10, 2005 · The opening titles of "Hostage" are shot in saturated blacks and reds with a raw graphic feel, and the movie's color photography tilts toward dark high-contrast. That matches the mood, which is hard-boiled and gloomy. Bruce Willis, who feels like a resident of action thrillers, not a visitor, dials down here into a man of fierce focus and private motives; for the second half of the movie, no ...

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