
The Island
In 2019, Lincoln Six-Echo is a resident of a seemingly "Utopian" but contained facility. Like all of the inhabitants of this carefully-controlled environment, Lincoln hopes to be chosen to go to The Island — reportedly the last uncontaminated location on the planet. But Lincoln soon discovers that everything about his existence is a lie.
Director(s)
Don Michael Paul
Michael Bay
Steve Battaglia
Karen Golden
Josh McLaglen
John M. Levin
Kenny Bates
Rich Sickler
Douglas Dean III
Edoardo Petti
Paul Domick
Maria Battle-Campbell
Jason Roberts
Where to watch

Apple TV Store
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Google Play Movies
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YouTube
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Amazon Video
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Apple TV Store
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Google Play Movies
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YouTube
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Cast & crew

Kevin Daniels
Censor

Josh McLaglen
-

Steve Buscemi
James 'Mac' McCord

Don Creech
God-Like Man
Steve Battaglia
-

Matt McColm
Cop (uncredited)

Jamie McBride
Laurent Team Member

Troy Blendell
Laurent Team Member

Sean Bean
Dr. Bernard Merrick

Tim Halligan
Institute Coroner

Max Baker
Chief of Incubation

Kim Coates
Charles Whitman (uncredited)

Scarlett Johansson
Jordan Two Delta / Sarah Jordan
Paul Domick
-

Don Michael Paul
Bar Guy
Edoardo Petti
-

Glenn Morshower
Medical Courier
Shelby Leverington
Tour Group Woman

Djimon Hounsou
Albert Laurent
Karen Golden
-

Michael Clarke Duncan
Starkweather Two Delta / Jamal Starkweather
Jason Roberts
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Mary Pat Gleason
Nutrition Clerk
Maria Battle-Campbell
-

Ewan McGregor
Lincoln Six Echo / Tom Lincoln
Kenny Bates
-

Shawnee Smith
Suzie

Taylor Gilbert
Harvest Nurse

Mark Christopher Lawrence
Construction Worker

Gary Nickens
Laurent Team Member

Ray Xifo
Elevator Agnate

Michael Bay
-
Lewis Dauber
Tour Group Man

Brian Stepanek
Gandu Three Echo

Ethan Phillips
Jones Three Echo

Randy Oglesby
Harvest Surgeon

Yvette Nicole Brown
Harvest Nurse

Noa Tishby
Community Announcer

Siobhan Flynn
Lima One Alpha

Kevin McCorkle
Laurent Team Member

Kathleen Rose Perkins
Laurent Team Member

Katy Boyer
Harvest Surgeon

Wendy Haines
Harvest Nurse

Phil Abrams
Obgyn

Svetlana Efremova
Midwife
Michael Canavan
Extraction Room Doctor

Jimmy Smagula
Extraction Room Technician

Ben Tolpin
Extraction Room Technician

Rich Hutchman
Dept. of Operations Supervisor

Gonzalo Menendez
Dept. of Operations Technician

Olivia Tracey
Dept. of Operations Agnate

Whitney Dylan
Client Services Operator

Mitzi Martin
Atrium Tour Guide

Richard V. Licata
Board Member

Chris Ellis
Aces & Spades Barman

Eric Stonestreet
Ed the Trucker

Kenneth Hughes
Censor

Richard Whiten
Laurent Team Member
Robert Sherman
Agnate in Pod
Ashley Yegan
Stim Bar Bartender
Eamon Behrens
Censor

Alex Carter
Censor

Grant Garrison
Censor

Brian Leckner
Censor
Dakota Mitchell
Censor

Martin Papazian
Censor

Phil Somerville
Censor

Ryan Tasz
Censor

Kirk Ward
Censor

Kelvin Han Yee
Censor
James Granoff
Sarah's Son
James Hart
LAPD Officer

Trent Ford
Calvin Klein Model
Thomas Ely Sage
Girl at Beach
Jake Soldera
Little Boy in Line

Richard John Walters
Agnate (uncredited)
John M. Levin
-
Rich Sickler
-
Douglas Dean III
-
Details
Reviews
markuspm
I have watched this movie soooo many times already and I am still not tired of it. OK I confess I really am a big fan of "Jordan Two Delta".
John Chard
Lincoln Six Echo and the Utopian Redemption. Lincoln Six Echo is having vivid dreams about a past existence, here in this Utopian world he lives in, he's starting to question the function of his world. In this perfectly formed existence the inhabitants dream of winning the lottery, the prize? Relocation to an outside paradise known as The Island. After stumbling upon something sinister, Lincoln escapes with fellow inmate Jordan Two Delta, and now the consequences for both of them are as dangerous as it is for the rulers of this strange and intriguing place. If you are entering a movie that is directed by Michael Bay then one can reasonably assume you know what you are going to get, cue explosions, ear splitting sound mix and a host of carnage set pieces. Bay's formula works and mostly his efforts have entertained the popcorn masses. So it's interesting to find that "The Island" does have some intellectual nous in amongst the Bayhem that the director is famed for. Working from a tantalising cloning story written by Caspian Tredwell-Owen (though the similarities to Robert Fiveson's "The Clonus Horror" resulted in a law suit being filed), "The Island" now more than ever is highly engrossing sci-fi in premise, where certainly the ethics of the story's core are worth scrutinising. One of course can argue that Bay was the wrong director for such interesting material, and yes it's a point to note that the characters and plot arcs are not given any depth or a serious second glance, but really we are here for the bang to go with the buck are we not?. Ewan McGregor (Lincoln) and Scarlett Johansson (Jordan) play it just about right, the bemusement of their situation is coupled with daring do heroics, while suitably tongue in cheek performances come from Sean Bean, Djimon Hounsou and a picture stealing Steve Buscemi. This is not a film that is easy to recommend because it can frustrate as much as it entertains, but entertain it does, and with big screen TVs and glorious home cinema a staple requirement for the movie fanatic, "The Island" is something of an essential purchase - check out the highly octane outrageousness of the road pursuit here, it's fabulous through the speakers. A serious topic is given a nonsense sheen for sure, but hell what a blast it is. 7/10
Kamurai
Great watch, will watch again, and can recommend. Even though this is from 2005, it's amazing that when you have a futuristic world, it holds up over time as the 2020 new tech doesn't seem to matter as much, or you design characters that wouldn't have average technology, this sort of does both. Ewan McGregor, Scarlett Johannson, Djimon Hounsou, even Sean Bean, Steve Buscemi and Michael Clark Duncan. This has a great cast and clearly had too much money to work with. There are all sorts of sci-fi effects, crazy constructed sets, and some really over the top action sequences for this premise. And this premise is excellent: a clone discovers he's a clone and makes an escape attempt, it's a race for survival. The writing is excellently paced, and structure with a little too much of an establishing act, but it's useful and not boring, so that's still good. The leads truly embody the characters, showing a line between ignorance and intelligence: they are ignorant of societal constructs but incredibly intelligent as they've spent the last 3 years attempting to escape a puzzle box. The mechanisms to keep the pursuit of the fugitives going are all rather seemless, and there is open discussion of morality of the facility's actions by most of the cast without harping on about it. There is science and action abound, please enjoy.
The Movie Mob
**With the right expectations, The Island is a fun action-packed sci-fi flick that is every bit Michael Bay and explosion filled as it should be.** I never understood the hate this movie gets. It's a Michael Bay movie to the core, which means you know there will be some insane action, incredible visuals, and there may or may not be a great story. But The Island does a decent job of making you care about the characters as they grow and discover who they are. The cast is excellent. The chase scene is one of the best you will see. It's a big loud over-the-top action blockbuster, but I guess this is a movie that rises or falls to your expectations. If you expect a Michael Bay action movie with some sci-fi influence, you will probably enjoy yourself.
GenerationofSwine
It's not bad for a movie that should have been made in the 1970s, and if it had the ending would be have been bleaker, the tone more depressing, there would have been more turtlenecks and it would have been a bigger hit. Instead it's more modern which means there is more action, more Fx, less story, less atmosphere, and a happier ending. That being said, it's one of Michael Bay's better movies and, honestly probably his best, it's a shame it flopped, he could have learned from it had it succeeded and started putting more depth in his films. It was almost there, and oh so close to being a bleak turtle necked distopian gem reminecent of the 70s with modern special effects and a happier ending. But for 2005, it's better than it should be.
