Beyond Borders

2003

Action / Adventure / Drama / Romance / War

31
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 14% · 103 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 72% · 25K ratings
IMDb Rating 6.4/10 10 29230 29.2K

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Plot summary

Sarah Jordan, an American living in London in 1984, is married to the son of a wealthy British industrialist. She encounters Nick Callahan, a renegade doctor, whose impassioned plea for help to support his relief efforts in war-torn Africa moves her deeply. As a result, Sarah embarks upon a journey of discovery that leads to danger, heartbreak and romance in the far corners of the world.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
October 20, 2018 at 10:19 PM

Top cast

Angelina Jolie as Sarah Jordan
Clive Owen as Nick Callahan
Teri Polo as Charlotte Jordan
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
1.05 GB
1280*544
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
2 hr 7 min
Seeds 4
2.02 GB
1920*816
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
2 hr 7 min
Seeds 7

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by ctr4etrnty 6 / 10

Jolie "Issue" Movie Not Bad

Beyond Borders is a slightly better film than most of the reviews I've read would indicate. Examining the people and politics behind relief aid to war torn and poverty stricken countries, it's an `issue' movie that tries to make a statement that is overshadowed by Hollywood special effects and dialogue that is a bit too trite at times. And, while it bogs down in several places, it does bring to light in a very emotional way the struggles of entire countries of people to survive and the valiant efforts of those who would save them in spite of overwhelming odds. Much has been written concerning the casting of Angelina Jolie in this role. Many have felt that she looks out of place in the film, too sexy and glamorous to play the part. But, I think that's exactly what makes her perfect for it. The idea behind Sarah Jordan is that she is pampered, sheltered in a family whose idea of philanthropy is to write a check from a comfortable distance. She's out of her element and when she shows up in the desert of Ethiopia wearing am impeccably white ensemble, complete with wide-brimmed hat and smelling of perfume, her motives immediately become suspect to the hard-edged and frustrated Nick. It is Jolie's look that sells the idea that his woman would have no business being there were it not for her relentless compassion for these people. And, Jolie does a nice job with what the script offers. Owen (Gosford Park, The Bourne Identity) is intensely focused as the doctor willing to do whatever it takes to meet the needs of the people he cares for. Teri Polo (Meet The Parents, Domestic Disturbance) delivers a quietly effective supporting performance as Sarah's journalist sister and Linus Roache (RFK, Pandemonium) does good work as Jolie's long-suffering husband. Beyond Borders is a fairly good film that could have benefited from a bit less proselyting and a bit more storytelling.

Reviewed by MarkC 7 / 10

Good Movie, where do I send the check?

The movie had some great scenes and plenty of action. Not an Epic mind you but the film was well worth seeing. Makes you want to donate money right now. Watching this film while I was at my 15th anniversity scored points in the feeling column with my wife!

Reviewed by irish23 5 / 10

Half a movie

This would have been a far more interesting film if told from the aid workers' point of view. Or, if it had to be told from her point of view, it would've been much more effective if we had actually ever been able to get inside Angelina Jolie's character. I'm not sure *she* ever got inside the character, which makes it more difficult for the rest of us. Since she's a decent actress, and the subject matter is near to her heart, I expected her to bring more to her performance. Clive Owen did the best with what little was given, but the inadequacies of the script couldn't ultimately be overcome.

The film has excellent, complex, gripping moments, and is strongest when grappling with the complex issues surrounding trying to help people in the midst of factional violence. It presents the moral question of whether to do some wrong in order to serve the greater good, or to risk being shut out of doing good altogether. The scene in Cambodia with the baby and hand grenade was an exceptional tableau of the reality of warfare and the people who get caught in the middle.

But who were these people?? Who was Sarah before she married Henry? Where did she come from? Where did Nick come from? There is no context whatsoever for the characters or why they make the choices they do, except in the broadest, fairy tale sense. There is just a series of choices that move the story forward to the next plot point.

If the film had been told from the aid workers' point of view, we could have gotten inside the characters' skins and understood why they chose as did. As it was, we have to guess. We know that Nick is "driven," that Sarah is "compassionate," and that the warlords are "ruthless." Not much more going on besides that. We never understand what happened in Sarah and Henry's marriage that made him commit adultery. We don't know what happened to the female aid worker whose face was horribly slashed in the Cambodian scene. We don't know how often Sarah and the others write to each other, or what they write about, or if she changes as a person because of her own work with the UN (outside of her experiences in the field). There's no character arc at all.

I also am automatically turned off by love stories where the "love" happens only in the abstract -- whether it's "first love" or, as in this film, "I loved you the whole time I was 10,000 miles away and unaware of anything you were doing or thinking." It's easy to "love" when you haven't been around the object of your affection long enough to get completely annoyed with them, or to face a relationship crisis together, or to try to find some way to keep bringing a sense of renewal to a relationship after years spent together. It's just not compelling to see people making cow eyes at each other and then somehow be expected to cry that they didn't get the chance to have sex more than once. That's not love.

I was also obscurely irritated by Sarah's heavy make-up in the Chechnya sequences. I'd been pleasantly surprised in earlier "field" scenes that Angelina Jolie's face looked relatively "real," but, come Chechnya, she's suddenly all Dr Zhivago.

The subject of the film deserves attention, and the tension generated in every scene where an individual faces an unbearable choice (Elliot and the grenade, Sarah and the mine, Nick and the CIA) shows what level of drama and storytelling was possible. It's unfortunate that that potential couldn't be more fully explored.

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