Jesse Stone: Benefit of the Doubt

2012

Action / Crime / Drama

9
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled54%
IMDb Rating7.0103270

jesse stone

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Tom Selleck Photo
Tom Selleck as Jesse Stone
Robert Carradine Photo
Robert Carradine as Arthur Gallery
Kathy Baker Photo
Kathy Baker as Rose Gammon
William Sadler Photo
William Sadler as Gino Fish
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
822.89 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 29 min
P/S ...
1.65 GB
1920*1072
English 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 29 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by bkoganbing6 / 10

In grisly fashion

This latest in the Jesse Stone series contains little suspense as the only new character introduced in the anthology turns out to be the perpetrator or at least one of them. Part of the problem is that you really would have to see the previous film to get into what is going on here.

In that previous film Tom Selleck who steps on a lot of toes in the small ocean town of Paradise, Massachusetts got fired as police chief and the snot nose son-in-law of one of the town councilmembers took his job. Well in this episode the new chief and another officer are killed in a most grisly fashion, a bomb thrown under their police car blows them up. You'd think it was Afghanistan.

In fact Selleck who is brought back as chief thinks it's not terrorism and so does Stephen McHattie from the Massachusetts State Police homicide squad. They think it's local and personal and it turns out it is.

One problem Selleck does have is that he IS the Paradise police because the others quit when he left and the two deceased were the previous force. He could have used a little help, but Kathy Baker and Kohl Sudduth just aren't ready to return.

These two hour Jesse Stone movies give Tom Selleck a chance to get into his deeply flawed alcoholic character. The enforced idleness in his absence as chief have put a lot of temptation to return to his drinking ways.

Fans of the series and of Selleck should like this film.

Reviewed by blanche-27 / 10

Jesse is back and Paradise has got him

When two police officers are blown up in a police car while investigating a fire, Jesse Stone is brought back as the Chief of Police. The town council fired him; they now re-hire him, as one of the men on the council's son-in-law was one of the cops.

Jesse breaks into his old office, where there is no staff and no action. He calls Rose (Kathy Baker) who is staying with her mother; she says she'll think about it. Suitcase decides to stay away as well.

Jesse works to sort through what little he has: money in the trunk of the police car is but one. He speaks with his various sources: his analyst (William Devane),a Massachusetts State Patrol Captain (Stephen McHattie) a Mob kingpin (William Sandler),and the felonious Hasty (Saul Rubinek),now out of prison.

Were the cops dirty? Who made the call to bring them to the site? Can Jesse keep from drinking his way through the case? Will Rose and Suitcase ever return?

Somehow these characters grow on one. I still think Selleck is too one-note and depressed, though this script had a little humor in it. Still, people enjoy the show, and that's what counts.

Reviewed by edwagreen6 / 10

No Benefit to Jesse's Doubt Here **1/2

The problem with the Jesse Stone series in general is that they try to incorporate the various shows in relationship to his personal life. In other words, we get side tracked here and that's not very good.

This episode was another perfect example here. More should have been stated about the grieving father-in-law. Was the son-in-law an innocent victim when Butler's car was fire-bombed? Who was Arthur? Was he just a hit-man?

Saul Rubinek's character of Hasty was hastily put together. All of a sudden, he was a big deal in this.

Rose (Kathy Bates) briefly appears. She always seems so depressed here. One wonders if she is just under contract to fulfill her role as Rose.

The show was slow-moving and basically uneventful considering that a car bombing killing two police officers should have generated much more interest.

Read more IMDb reviews