Click Movie
PopularTop RatedUpcomingNow Playing
AboutPrivacy Policy

© 2025 Click Movie. All rights reserved.

This site is powered by the TMDb API but is not endorsed or certified by TMDb.

    The Vanishing
    The Vanishing

    The Vanishing

    "Obsession is the ultimate weapon."

    6.1•February 5, 1993•1h 49m
    ThrillerDramaMysteryHorror

    Storyline

    The boyfriend of an abducted woman never gives up the search as the abductor looks on.

    Director
    George Sluizer
    Writers
    Todd Graff

    Top Cast

    Kiefer Sutherland

    Kiefer Sutherland

    Jeff Harriman

    Jeff Bridges

    Jeff Bridges

    Barney Cousins

    Nancy Travis

    Nancy Travis

    Rita Baker

    Sandra Bullock

    Sandra Bullock

    Diane Shaver

    Park Overall

    Park Overall

    Lynn

    Lisa Eichhorn

    Lisa Eichhorn

    Helene Cousins

    George Hearn

    George Hearn

    Arthur Bernard

    Lynn Hamilton

    Lynn Hamilton

    Miss Carmichael

    Maggie Linderman

    Denise Cousins

    Garrett Bennett

    Cop at Gas Station

    George Catalano

    George Catalano

    Highway Cop

    Frank Girardeau

    Frank Girardeau

    Cop at Apartment

    Featured Reviews

    W

    Wuchak

    April 27, 2021
    7 / 10
    _**FREEWILL to kill – evil and good**_ Released in 1993 and directed by George Sluizer from a novel by Tim Krabbé, "The Vanishing" is a crime drama/mystery/horror about a man (Kiefer Sutherland) whose girlfriend goes missing during a trip in Washington State (Sandra Bullock) and he searches in vain for her for years. After he starts a relationship with a new girlfriend (Nancy Travis), the abductor (Jeff Bridges) finally contacts him. Will he find his former girlfriend? This is the second time the director shot this same story; the first time was the 1988 Euro film of the same name. The stories are identical except for the final acts and the fact that this newer version has a better character/part for the new girlfriend (Travis). Both films are worth catching, but I prefer this one for reasons explained below. Fans of the first movie object to the changes, arguing that the producers of this version were pandering to North American tastes. While this may be true, it's also likely that the director didn't want to make the same exact movie. After all, we already have the first version, why make an exact duplicate with different actors and locations? Besides, what's wrong with appreciating BOTH versions? My comments below reveal why Sluizer wanted to change things up a little with this version. Audiences may have rejected the film at the box office on the grounds that they weren't used to Bridges playing a contemptible villain or Sutherland playing the good guy, but they're both fine in these roles, particularly the former, who's great and fascinating to observe. One thing that keeps you watching during the drama of the first two acts is to find out what his motivations are. But, as hinted above, it's Travis who steals the show, at least as far as protagonists goes. Perhaps audiences didn't receive her or the movie well because her character's merely a waitress whose story arc doesn't end in a reversal of fortune, which is in contrast to the typical movie heroine. Who knows? I think she's awesome. In any case, if you like psychological drama/thrillers like "Fatal Attraction" (1987) and "Single White Female" (1992) you'll appreciate "The Vanishing." The movie runs 109 minutes and was shot mostly in Washington State, but also Cody Tunnel, Cody, Wyoming (the tunnel sequence) and La Canada and Long Beach, CA (the diner and pool hall scenes respectively). GRADE: B+ ***SPOILER ALERT*** (Don't read further unless you've watched the movie) While the first film could be interpreted as a commentary on nihilism, since the villain wins and the hero loses, it doesn't HAVE to be interpreted this way. After all, it's a simple fact of life that sometimes evil wins a battle now and then; and sometimes A LOT of them, but this doesn't mean evil wins the war, so to speak. If there's ultimate good then evil will eventually have its day of reckoning. In any event, the 1988 movie ends on a decidedly downbeat note. And this is why I appreciate this newer version: While it is also downbeat, and evil wins to a point, the changes in the final act show good triumphing over evil, not to mention perseverance over intellect and love over absence of love. The subtext is all about freewill – freewill to kill for no good reason and freewill to kill for good when absolutely necessary. The theme of the first movie is limited in that it drives home the first point whereas this version drives home both, and is the better for it.

    Details

    StatusReleased
    LanguageEN
    BudgetN/A
    Revenue$14,543,394

    Keywords

    #buried alive#remake
    IMDb

    You Might Also Like

    Going to Pieces: The Rise and Fall of the Slasher Film
    6.8

    Going to Pieces: The Rise and Fall of the Slasher Film

    2006

    Repentance
    4.8

    Repentance

    2014

    Stamping Ground
    5.5

    Stamping Ground

    1971

    MindGamers
    4.7

    MindGamers

    2015

    Brute Force
    7.3

    Brute Force

    1947

    Shattered
    6.1

    Shattered

    1991

    Love in Bora Bora
    5.6

    Love in Bora Bora

    2018

    Extreme Measures
    6.0

    Extreme Measures

    1996

    White Squall
    6.3

    White Squall

    1996

    The Thief of Bagdad
    7.1

    The Thief of Bagdad

    1940

    The Baytown Outlaws
    6.0

    The Baytown Outlaws

    2012

    Anne of Green Gables
    7.2

    Anne of Green Gables

    2016

    Love Potion No. 9
    6.2

    Love Potion No. 9

    1992

    Close Enemies
    5.9

    Close Enemies

    2018

    Klute
    6.7

    Klute

    1971

    Downrange
    5.7

    Downrange

    2018

    Good People
    5.5

    Good People

    2014

    My Soul to Take
    5.5

    My Soul to Take

    2010

    Operation Petticoat
    7.2

    Operation Petticoat

    1959

    Sorority Row
    5.5

    Sorority Row

    2009