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Gone Poster

Gone

No one believes her. Nothing will stop her.
2012 | 94m | English

(47662 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Director: Heitor Dhalia
Writer: Allison Burnett
Staring:
Details

Jill Conway is trying to rebuild her life after surviving a terrifying kidnapping attempt. Though she is having a difficult time, she takes small steps toward normalcy by starting a new job and inviting her sister, Molly, to move in with her. Returning home from work one morning, Jill discovers that Molly has vanished, and she is certain that the same man who previously abducted her has returned for revenge.
Release Date: Feb 23, 2012
Director: Heitor Dhalia
Writer: Allison Burnett
Genres: Drama, Thriller
Keywords sibling relationship, waitress, kidnapping, police investigation, complicated
Production Companies Lakeshore Entertainment, Summit Entertainment, Sidney Kimmel Entertainment
Box Office Revenue: $18,100,189
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Amanda Seyfried Jill Conway
Daniel Sunjata Powers
Wes Bentley Peter Hood
Michael Paré Lt. Ray Bozeman
Jennifer Carpenter Sharon Ames
Sebastian Stan Billy
Emily Wickersham Molly Conway
Nick Searcy Mr. Miller
Socratis Otto Jim LaPointe
Joel David Moore Nick Massey
Katherine Moennig Erica Lonsdale
Sam Upton Officer McKay
Ted Rooney Henry Massey
Erin Carufel Officer Ash
Amy Argyle Tanya Muslin
Susan Hess Dr. Mira Andrews
Jeanine Jackson Mrs. Cermak
Hunter Parrish Try
Blaine Palmer Conrad Reynolds
Victor Morris Officer Dubois
Danny Wynands Officer Johnson
Wade Allen Officer Cummins
Jade Marx-Berti Officer Ruffolo
Bruce Lawson Detective Lawson
Jordan Fry Jock
Jeff Cole Customer
Tracy Pacana School Girl #1
Madison Wray School Girl #2
Casey O'Neill Jill's Opponent
Aaron Landon Busboy
Meredith Adelaide Jock's Girlfriend
Ray Buckley Jock's Friend
Danny Belrose Custodian
Grant Reschke Older Boy
Name Job
Wilma Garscadden-Gahret Script Supervisor
Michael Grady Director of Photography
Lindsay McKay Costume Design
George Bamber First Assistant Director
Sarah Contant Art Direction
Jason Ruffolo Third Assistant Director
Glenn Micallef Sound Mixer
JoJo Myers Proud Key Makeup Artist
Trish Almeida Hair Department Head
Chapin Simpson Key Costumer
Allison Burnett Writer
John Axelrad Editor
Charisse Cardenas Production Design
Ted Gidlow Unit Production Manager
Gregory J. Pawlik Jr. Second Assistant Director
Wade Allen Stunt Coordinator
Teresa Visinare Set Decoration
Saeed Adyani Still Photographer
Tyler Stephens Boom Operator
Michelle Vittone Makeup Department Head
Lis Bothwell Wardrobe Supervisor
Lis Kern Post Production Supervisor
Heitor Dhalia Director
David Buckley Original Music Composer
Deborah Aquila Casting
Tricia Wood Casting
Darrin Prescott Stunt Coordinator
Casey O'Neill Stunts
Bridgett Riley Stunt Double
Name Title
Gary Lucchesi Producer
Allison Burnett Co-Producer
Chris Salvaterra Producer
Dan Abrams Producer
Sidney Kimmel Producer
Tom Rosenberg Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 19 36 12
2024 5 22 37 13
2024 6 17 26 10
2024 7 22 37 11
2024 8 16 28 10
2024 9 12 20 8
2024 10 15 25 9
2024 11 15 29 10
2024 12 14 26 9
2025 1 16 27 10
2025 2 11 20 3
2025 3 5 21 1
2025 4 2 5 1
2025 5 2 5 1
2025 6 2 3 1
2025 7 1 3 1
2025 8 2 3 1
2025 9 3 5 1
2025 10 3 3 3

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Reviews

John Chard
5.0

Kidnap Thriller 101. Sarcastic Spoilers Within Review. Off the bat lets say it, Gone is not a very bad movie, it has the requisite mystery elements, Amanda Seyfried makes for an engaging lead as the once kidnapped girl who nobody seems to believe, the cinematography (Michael Grady) is high qua ... lity and there's some decent moments of chills along the way. Unfortunately the film just exists as a case of unadventurous screenplay writing. Gone is written by Allison Burnett, who writes it like some homework assignment set by a bored lecturer at a film studies class. Everything about it is rank and file what you have seen a million times before in this type of genre offering. A bunch of characters file in for cameos under the guise of red herrings, while our spunky heroine single handedly out-foxes the whole of the Portland police force, while naturally evading capture at every juncture. Everyone but Seyfried's character are just on the periphery of things, where the likes of Wes Bentley and Jennifer Carpenter stand around hoping for the script to give them something worthwhile to do. In fact Carpenter's character is a set up for a late plot development, only for it to be the last we see of her, which is just bizarre in hindsight. Then the "big" finale arrives and the serial killer/kidnapper arrives and gets afforded the same "none" time as everyone else. Nothing remotely original here, sadly. It serves decent enough as a time filler, but once the hopelessly weak finale plays its hand, you may come away asking yourself this question, why do films like this continually get green lit by studios when they have nothing more to offer other than putting another title on a budding actor's CV? 5/10

May 16, 2024
mooney240
6.0

**Overall : Could it have been better? Sure. Was it awful? No.** If you checked out the reviews for this movie elsewhere, you read that it is an absolute piece of garbage. And that just isn't true. It's a run-of-the-mill thriller with a very good performance by Amanda Seyfried as the main charact ... er that ends a little differently than expected. I enjoyed guessing who the killer was as the movie offered multiple red herrings to throw you off. Not one that I would say rush out to watch, but if you got a random need to watch a decent b-movie thriller, then maybe check this one out?

Sep 03, 2022