Adrian Lyne's JACOB'S LADDER moves in time and space between Vietnam and New York with hallucinatory force. Something bad happened on the Mekong Delta, on October 6, 1971, and it is still affecting war veteran Jacob (Tim Robbins) in Brooklyn as he attempts to live a normal life with coworker and girlfriend Jezzie (Elizabeth Peņa). Louis (Danny Aiello), an understanding chiropractor, tries to help him cope with his nightmarish visions--some of which occur at night, while others intrude into his daily life. When Jacob gets a call from Paul (Pruitt Taylor Vince), who was with him in Vietnam, it seems that Jacob is not alone in his visions. The film offers impressive and compelling performances by Peņa, Aiello (no ordinary chiropractor), and Ving Rhames and Eriq La Salle (the latter of ER) as Jacob's comrades from Vietnam. Macaulay Culkin appears uncredited as Jacob's young son, Gabe. Director Lyne also guides an unerring interpretation of Bruce Joel Rubin's screenplay in Robbins's powerfully restless, searingly searching performance as Jacob; brilliant editing additionally rounds out this engrossing, disturbing film. JACOB'S LADDER is a jolting experience that is not easily forgotten.
DVD Features
Keep Case - Sensormatic Widescreen Reverse Spiral Dual Layer Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1 - English Subtitles - English - Closed Captioned Subtitles - English, Spanish - Optional Additional Release Material: Trailers - Theatrical Trailer Interactive Features: Interactive Menus Scene Selection Text/Photo Galleries: Behind the Scenes - Production Notes Biographies - Cast and Crew Information
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Just before Tim Robbins got all persecuted in Shawshank he was getting very much harassed in Jacob's Ladder. This is an excellent piece of thriller crossed with horror, it is painful, claustrophobic... Read the whole review at MatchFlick