In "It's time for his retirement. "Stone" is a messed up film. Jack reports to work at a prison, where he is a parole officer. A convicted arsonist looks to manipulate a parole officer into a plan to secure his parole by placing his beautiful wife in the lawman's path. Jack has a new case in his office, named Gerald Creeson. Directed by John Curran. She shows up at the prison the next day to meet Jack. Is her promiscuity useful to him? Stone tells him he deserves to be free. And Norton, the puppetmaster — it may not even be freedom he requires, but simply the pleasure of controlling others to obtain it.Roger Ebert was the film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times from 1967 until his death in 2013.

In 1975, he won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished criticism. With Edward Norton, Milla Jovovich, Robert De Niro, Frances Conroy. De Niro is so good at playing a man who has essentially emasculated himself because of fear of his anger, so that sex and anger may be leashed in precisely the opposite way, as in "Raging Bull." Music is added to a movie to create a sense about the characters emotions, the atmosphere and the event. At prison, two guards arrive to escort Stone to the Jack soon goes to see Lucetta several more times for sex. The Soundtracks used in Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s stone were music, sound effects and dialogue. Apart from whatever she does, she loves her husband without reserve, which is peculiar because he doesn't seem to deserve it, but then you never know. His upcoming retirement is brought up.

It's not so much that the story is hard to understand, more so that nothing actually happens.
Stone is a 2010 U.S. crime thriller film directed by John Curran and starring Robert De Niro, Edward Norton and Milla Jovovich.Most of the filming was done in Washtenaw County, Michigan. Jack tells her no-one can know about their relationship. Stone asks Jack if he can help him get out early. Jack requests that he keep all of his inmates until he leaves, in order to see them through until review. Edward Norton is a convicted criminal up for parole, overseen by parole officer Robert De Niro. Does she know it? "Stone" could have been some sort of a procedural, a straightforward crime movie, but it's too complex for that.

He runs upstairs to the bedroom and holds their daughter out the window, threatening to drop her if Madylyn leaves. The warden informs him Stone's parole hearing is in an hour and no changes can be made. They end up at Lucetta's home. Stone is informed that he will be released. Norton plays Gerald Creeson, imprisoned for his role in a crime that resulted in the murder of his grandparents and the burning of their house. Stone is a flawed film, largely because Lucetta is a B-movie seductress preying on believable human beings with backgrounds and complicated hearts.

That night, Jack goes home with paranoia and is awoken by a fire in his home. She was arrested and admitted to a local hospital.The main theme for the film was composed by musician Milla Jovovich received the Hollywood Spotlight Award for her work in

The next morning, Jack asks the warden for Stone's report. Jack picks up the phone and hears a woman's voice.

I would like to say that I don't know what the story was about, but that's not really true as it was a very simplistic plot. De Niro is an old hand at playing inner demons. He could pass his case load on to his successor, but no: He will do his duty to the last detail. One day, he tells Stone that he sent the report recommending early release.
Jack does not stay for the hearing. "Stone" has Robert De Niro and Edward Norton playing against type and at the top of their forms in a psychological duel between a parole officer and a tricky prisoner who has his number. The inmate insists that he likes to be called Stone. Stone later phones his wife, Lucetta, from prison. The title Stone is double-meaning, referring both to Norton’s nickname and the end of the Biblical tenet that begins, “Let him who is without sin…” At its best, the film works as a morally freighted film noir, with Jovovich particularly good as a breathy femme fatale who seduces De Niro with a mere change in inflection. Film umiejętnie splata drogi dwóch mężczyzn borykających się ze zgubnymi pragnieniami i pokazuje, że przedstawiciel prawa oraz łamiący to prawo nie różnią się wiele od siebie. That night Lucetta leaves a message on Jack and Madylyn's answering machine. After the child is asleep, she goes downstairs and announces she's leaving him. Because The Sorcerer's Stone is the first film in a ginormous franchise, no one wanted to get fancy with the narrative. Jack is now retired trying to determine his future. Late that night a call wakes them. (They left the magic and tricks for the wizards.) Jack explains that he does not want to discuss his wife, and that they are there to talk about his case. He watches TV and drinks in an identical pose. After a few drinks, he sleeps with Lucetta. Lucetta has a key role in finding and exploiting an avenue through Mabry's defenses.