On October 23, 2006, Paul Conroy, an American civilian truck
driver working in Iraq,
wakes up and finds himself buried alive in a wooden coffin, bound and gagged,
with only a Zippo lighter
and a BlackBerry phone
at hand. Although he initially has no idea how he got there, he starts to piece
together what has happened to him. He remembers that his and several other
trucks were ambushed by terrorists, who killed his colleagues; he was hit by a
rock and passed out. He receives a call from his kidnapper, Jabir, demanding
that he pay a ransom of $5 million by 9PM or he will be left in the coffin to
die.
Conroy calls the State Department, which tells him that due to
the government policy of not
negotiating with terrorists, it will not pay the ransom but will try to
rescue him. They connect him with Dan Brenner, head of the Hostage Working Group, who tells Conroy they
are doing their best to find him.
His kidnapper calls Conroy and demands he make a ransom
video, threatening to execute one of his colleagues who survived the attack.
Conroy insists that no one will pay $5 million, so the kidnapper drops the
amount to $1 million. Despite his compliance in making a video, the kidnappers
execute his colleague and send him the recording of it, which he watches in
horror. Shortly afterwards, distant explosions shake the area, damaging his
coffin, which begins to slowly fill with sand. Conroy continues sporadic phone
calls with Brenner, skeptical of the man's promises of help. To reaffirm his
wholehearted intentions, Brenner tells Conroy about a 26-year-old named Mark
White who was rescued from a similar situation three weeks previously, telling
him that the kid is home with his family and happy.
Later on, Conroy receives a phone call from his employers,
who inform him that he was fired from his job due to an alleged prohibited
relationship with a colleague (the one who was executed), and thus he and his
family will not be entitled to any benefits or pension he earned during his
time with the company. Brenner calls back and explains that the explosions that
had damaged his coffin earlier were in fact several F-16 bombings, and that
his kidnappers may have been killed. Conroy begins to lose all hope and does a
last will and testament in video form, giving his son all of his clothes and
his wife his personal savings. Jabir calls back demanding that Conroy video
record himself cutting his finger off, threatening Conroy's family back home in
Michigan if he refuses, saying that he lost all of his children. Conroy records
himself cutting off one of his fingers and sends the video.
Shortly after making the video, the cell phone rings, Paul
begins to hear shovels and distorted voices. The voices come clearer, saying to
open the coffin, and the coffin opens. But abruptly, it becomes obvious he
hallucinated the encounter.
After some minutes, Brenner calls, notifying Conroy that
they have found his location and are driving out to find him. Then Conroy's
wife Linda calls him, so Conroy hangs up on Brenner. She cries with him and
begs him to promise her that he will come home. He promises, but hangs up due
to another call from Brenner. Brenner reports that they have found the site.
The group starts to dig up a coffin, but Conroy cannot hear anyone near the
coffin. When they open it, the coffin turns out to be Mark White's, not
Conroy's, indicating that White was never rescued. Paul starts to cry as he
realizes he is not going to be saved. The sand fills his coffin and he
suffocates to death as the light goes out and the screen goes black. The last
thing we hear is Brenner, repeating, "I'm sorry, Paul. I'm so sorry."
as the connection finally times out and the end credits begin to roll.
0 comments:
Post a Comment