WT

Prisoners

2013 · Directed by Denis Villeneuve

🧘4

Woke Score

70

Critic

🍿82

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 66 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #626 of 1469.

🎭

Representation Casting

Score: 25/100

The cast is racially diverse, including Viola Davis, Terrence Howard, and others in substantial roles, but this diversity is presented as natural to the story rather than foregrounded as a statement about representation.

🏳️‍🌈

LGBTQ+ Themes

Score: 0/100

No LGBTQ characters, themes, or representation are present in the film.

👑

Feminist Agenda

Score: 10/100

While female characters are present and grief-stricken mothers are depicted with agency and emotional depth, the narrative remains centered on masculine violence and paternal desperation rather than feminist critique.

Racial Consciousness

Score: 5/100

The film contains characters of color in significant roles, but racial identity is not examined, discussed, or thematically relevant to the story's concerns.

🌱

Climate Crusade

Score: 0/100

No climate-related themes, messaging, or imagery appear in the film.

💰

Eat the Rich

Score: 0/100

The film contains no critique of capitalism, wealth inequality, or systemic economic injustice.

💗

Body Positivity

Score: 0/100

No body positivity messaging or themes related to body image, disability representation, or size acceptance are present.

🧠

Neurodivergence

Score: 15/100

A key character exhibits behaviors consistent with developmental disability, though the film does not explicitly label or engage with neurodivergence as a thematic concern.

📖

Revisionist History

Score: 0/100

The film contains no revisionist historical framing or reexamination of historical events.

📢

Lecture Energy

Score: 0/100

The film maintains moral ambiguity throughout and never lectures the audience about correct social attitudes or values.

Consciousness MeterUltra Based
Ultra BasedPeak Consciousness
Share this score

Synopsis

Keller Dover is facing every parent's worst nightmare. His six-year-old daughter, Anna, is missing, together with her young friend, Joy, and as minutes turn to hours, panic sets in. The only lead is a dilapidated RV that had earlier been parked on their street.

Consciousness Assessment

Prisoners stands as a monument to moral ambiguity in an era increasingly hostile to such uncertainties. Denis Villeneuve's 2013 thriller concerns itself with the question of whether a desperate man can be justified in torturing a suspect to save his child, a scenario that permits no easy answers and offers no progressive reassurance. The film features a diverse cast, including Viola Davis as a mother whose grief and rage mirror Hugh Jackman's protagonist, yet these characters exist within the story's logic rather than as assertions of representational virtue. There is no lecture, no moment of awakening toward social justice consciousness.

The film's moral framework is fundamentally conservative, rooted in traditional masculine codes and the primacy of family loyalty. Vigilantism, not systemic reform, drives the narrative. The police detective, played by Jake Gyllenhaal, is competent and sympathetic, suggesting institutional trust rather than institutional critique. The film's treatment of violence is unflinching but not celebratory, presenting torture as a consequence of desperation rather than as a tool for liberation or social correction. This is a film about individual moral failure, not structural injustice.

By the standards of modern progressive cultural sensibility, Prisoners remains largely indifferent. It contains no LGBTQ representation, no climate messaging, no examination of capitalist systems, no revisionist historical framing, and no particular investment in body positivity or neurodivergence awareness. The racial diversity of the cast is presented as unremarkable, which is to say it is not weaponized for thematic purposes. The film is morally serious without being socially conscious in the contemporary sense. It asks us to sit in discomfort without offering the comfort of ideological clarity.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

70%from 53 reviews
Entertainment Weekly100

The thriller that's exciting, cathartic, and powerfully disturbing. Prisoners is that type of movie. It's rooted in 40 years of Hollywood revenge films, yet it also breaks audacious new ground.

Owen GleibermanRead Full Review →
Observer100

When it comes to thrillers, this one is as good as it gets. Not for the squeamish, but for anyone who loves movies, it’s too exhilarating to miss.

Los Angeles Times100

Exciting, terrifying, worrisome stuff saturates every second of Prisoners, holding you captive, keeping you guessing until the bitter end.

Betsy SharkeyRead Full Review →
Salon30

Don’t get me wrong, I like trash just fine, and the twisty-loo, triple-abduction plot of Prisoners certainly kept me watching to the end. (You’ll figure out some of screenwriter Aaron Guzikowski’s plot twists, but not all of them.) It’s the imitation-David Fincher pretentiousness that gets on my nerves.

Andrew O'HehirRead Full Review →

Consciousness Markers

🎭
Representation Casting25

The cast is racially diverse, including Viola Davis, Terrence Howard, and others in substantial roles, but this diversity is presented as natural to the story rather than foregrounded as a statement about representation.

🏳️‍🌈
LGBTQ+ Themes0

No LGBTQ characters, themes, or representation are present in the film.

👑
Feminist Agenda10

While female characters are present and grief-stricken mothers are depicted with agency and emotional depth, the narrative remains centered on masculine violence and paternal desperation rather than feminist critique.

Racial Consciousness5

The film contains characters of color in significant roles, but racial identity is not examined, discussed, or thematically relevant to the story's concerns.

🌱
Climate Crusade0

No climate-related themes, messaging, or imagery appear in the film.

💰
Eat the Rich0

The film contains no critique of capitalism, wealth inequality, or systemic economic injustice.

💗
Body Positivity0

No body positivity messaging or themes related to body image, disability representation, or size acceptance are present.

🧠
Neurodivergence15

A key character exhibits behaviors consistent with developmental disability, though the film does not explicitly label or engage with neurodivergence as a thematic concern.

📖
Revisionist History0

The film contains no revisionist historical framing or reexamination of historical events.

📢
Lecture Energy0

The film maintains moral ambiguity throughout and never lectures the audience about correct social attitudes or values.