Abandon (2002)Description:
DS 1 Sheet Movie Poster - Advance Style A
Year: 2002
Condition: Mint
Dimension: 27 x 40
Genre: Psychological thriller, Drama
Features:
- Original
- One Sheet
- Double-Sided
- Advance, Style A
- Rolled
Benefits of an original poster:
- Original posters increase in value over time
- Lithograph (high image quality, which produces sharp and clean images)
- High quality paper stock
- Perfect for displaying in
lightboxes
- Guaranteed original
This is a DS or double-sided original
one Sheet theatrical poster that has printing on both the front and the back of
the poster (printing on back side is a mirror image of printing on the front
side).
This entertainment art item is an authentic original piece. Original
entertainment art items are
valued by collectors worldwide and can increase in value over time.
Cast:
Katie Holmes, Benjamin Bratt, Charlie Hunnam, Zooey Deschanel, Gabrielle Union,
Gabriel Mann, Mark Feuerstein, Melanie Lynskey, Will McCormack, Fred Ward;
Directed by: Stephen Gaghan
Synopsis: A young woman is faced with the disturbing reemergence of a man
she once loved in this psychological thriller. Embry Langan (Charlie Hunnam) was
a wealthy but reckless student at an exclusive private college until he
mysteriously vanished, with airline tickets to Europe left unused and plenty of
money still in the bank. Two years later, Katie Burke (Katie Holmes), Embry's
girlfriend, is still dealing with his disappearance as she goes into the home
stretch of her college career. With exams, a thesis, and job interviews to think
about, Katie is already walking an emotional tightrope when Wade Handler
(Benjamin Bratt), a police detective, enters the picture. Handler, a recovering
alcoholic, has been ordered to reopen the Langan case, and as he questions Katie
about the missing man, she finds her obsession with her former beau taking over
her life, which leaves her all the more unnerved when she begins seeing Embry
around the campus. Meanwhile, Handler's investigation begins to suggest Langan's
disappearance may have been more sinister than imagined, and could be connected
with other cases of missing students. Abandon marked the directorial
debut for screenwriter Stephen Gaghan, who won an Oscar for his script for
Traffic.