REVIEW: “Stolen Girl” (2025)

In “Stolen Girl” Kate Beckinsale plays Mara, a down on her luck, divorced single mother living in Ohio with her four-year-old daughter Amina and her ailing father Joe (Matt Craven). Mara’s world is turned upside down after Amina wanders off while in a grocery store and is abducted. That kicks off this complicated story about a determined mother and the many obstacles she navigates in her efforts to find her daughter.

Directed by James Kent, “Stolen Girl” is inspired by a true story although the storytelling doesn’t always feel like it. Nagging frustrations such as narrative shortcuts, undercooked relationships, and instances of clumsy editing sometimes distract from the more serious issues at hand. But Kent, along with screenwriters Kas Graham and Rebecca Pollock, don’t take their subject lightly. And inside the film’s 1990s thriller veneer is a strong message that’s worth listening to.

Things escalate quickly after Amina’s disappearance as Kent hurries us through the first act. Basically Mara is convinced her ex-husband Karim (Arvin Kananian) took their daughter. The police check Karim’s home only to find it cleaned out with no signs of him. Everything points to Karim having left the country, but no one, from the local police to the CIA, offer much help. Two years leads to four years, and despite Mara’s determined efforts, there’s still no headway made.

A glimmer of hope comes when Mara is approached by a man who goes by Robeson (Scott Eastwood), an ex-Marine who now works as a child recovery specialist (aka a mercenary). He makes her a deal – help him find other people’s kids and he’ll help her find Amina. She agrees and a few scenes later she is accompanying Roberson and his partner Carl (Jordan Duvigneau) to Colima, Mexico. Her job is to “play mother” by keeping the recovered child calm while they transport him back to his rightful parent.

Too much of the film’s first half unfolds with very little meaningful buildup. Mara’s work to get answers both locally and in Washington DC is referenced more than it is realized. Her jump to mercenary fieldwork happens with practically no training whatsoever. Even her relationship with Roberson goes from strictly business to making out in a motel without a hint or spark of attraction.

But the story’s focus sharpens in the second half as the thriller elements take form. Eight years after Amina first disappeared, Mara gets a lead that Karim is in Lebanon. But unexpected obstacles arise from unexpected places paving the way to a surprising finish that packs the kind of emotional heft that almost makes you forget the rocky road to get there.

While the storytelling is a bit messy (specifically early on), the same could be said for the handful of action sequences that are hampered by clumsy edits, shaky cameras, and an over reliance of quick cuts. But to Kent’s credit he manages to hold it all together in large part thanks to Beckinsale. The sheer conviction in her performance brings home the weightiness of the subject matter. And there is never a moment where we question her character’s pain, frustration, and resolve. “Stolen Girl” is now available on VOD.

VERDICT – 2.5 STARS

14 thoughts on “REVIEW: “Stolen Girl” (2025)

  1. When I think of action scenes with editing issues, am reminded of Taken 3 which disappointed. Because Taken 1 and 2 were well executed

      • I can imagine that. I watched it at home and the chop work was too noticeable and confusing. The success of action scenes are very conditional imo. I guess there is a market for martial arts. But the more memorable ones are in the Bruce Willis movies, Lethal Weapons, Terminal Velocity, Bourne series, and Taken series to name a few.

  2. I left a nice long comment about Beckinsale and then wordpress claimed I wasn’t logged in and wouldn’t let me login until they emailed me a login link. So I lost it all.
    Good review but probably not for me since it features a kidnapped child. Not a fan of that idea in movies at all.

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