TORONTO — ?A year after the debate stirred up by the torture scenes of "Zero Dark Thirty," several films at the Toronto International Film Festival are taking up stories of torture and prisoner rights with obvious contemporary relevance.


In "Prisoners," a rage-crazed father (Hugh Jackman) locks away the man (Paul Dano) he believes has kidnapped his daughter. "The Railway Man" looks at the lasting demons of a British officer (Colin Firth) who was water-boarded and tortured by the Japanese during World War II in Thailand.


Whereas "Zero Dark Thirty" sought to directly depict the interrogation techniques used by the United States in pursuit of Osama bin Laden (and found controversy for, many claimed, suggesting that torture paid intelligence dividends), these new films approach the subject more broadly and metaphorically. By contemplating the perspectives of both torturer and victim, they dig into questions of morality, revenge, forgiveness and human dignity.


In "Prisoners," a father who will do anything for his missing daughter stands in for a vengeful America: National issues are told through a domestic lens. The Quebec director Denis Villeneuve responded to Aaron Guzikowski's script because, he says, of how it "raised moral questions about our actions in the world."


"I thought it was a pretty accurate portrait of North America today," Villeneuve said in an interview. "It was pretty brilliant the way Aaron Guzikowki was describing tensions and moral questions that as North Americans we are dealing with. But he was approaching it from an intimate point of view."


The film, which Warner Bros. will release Sept. 20, is about the varied reactions of a suburban community after two young girls go missing. When police, lacking evidence, are forced to release their chief suspect, Jackman's father boards him up in a vacant building where he tries through different means of brutality to coerce him to talk.


"It was very much in the DNA of the script," says Jackman of the film's allegory. "What are the boundaries to justice on a national level? To act or not, to follow a gut instinct that you're doing the right thing?"


Jake Gyllenhaal, who plays a police detective trying to navigate both the pursuit of the kidnapper and the rights of the case's suspects, says the film's themes don't mean the movie is trying to weigh in on arguments about Guantanamo Bay or the treatment of captured terrorists. Rather, he says, it's about the emotions underneath.


"I don't think it's politicized," Gyllenhaal says. "It just brings it all the way back to the home."


"The Railway Man," which is based on the 1995 memoir by Eric Lomax, premiered at Toronto seeking distribution. Directed by Jonathan Teplitzky and co-starring Nicole Kidman as Lomax's wife, it's about a man traumatized years after WWII by his experience as a prisoner of war.


As seen in flashbacks with Jeremy Irvine as the young Lomax, he was among the POWs forced to gruelingly work on the Thai-Burma railway. After an incident, he's beaten, kept in a bamboo cage and water-boarded.


Years later, when Lomax learns the identity and whereabouts of his torturer, he must decide if he'll reciprocate the same treatment on his former captor (Hiroyuki Sanada). Another film at the Toronto Film Festival, the upcoming Nelson Mandela biopic "Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom," also focuses on whether the unjustly imprisoned should seek payback through violence.


"These are very live issues," Frank Cottrell Boyce, who wrote the script to "The Railway Man" with Andy Patterson, told reporters in Toronto." This isn't just about a forgotten moment in history. The way that Eric was tortured was water-boarding. When we first started working on this film that seemed like a kind of antique, remote thing, and now, it's part of how we do business in the West."


___


Follow AP Entertainment Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jake_coyle




Loading Slideshow...



  • Kristen Stewart - 2012


    (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)




  • Tilda Swinton - 2011


    (Photo by Aaron Harris/Getty Images)




  • Kate Hudson - 2012


    (Photo by Joe Scarnici/Getty Images)




  • Carey Mulligan - 2010


    (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)




  • Keira Knightley - 2011


    (Photo by Toby Canham/Getty Images)




  • Keira Knightley - 2012


    TORONTO, ON - SEPTEMBER 07: Actress Keira Knightley attends the 'Anna Karenina' premiere during the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival at The Elgin on September 7, 2012 in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)




  • Emma Watson - 2012


    (Photo by Jerod Harris/Getty Images For Vitaminwater)




  • Rachel McAdams - 2008


    (Photo by Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images)




  • Drew Barrymore - 2009


    (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)




  • Angelina Jolie - 2011


    (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)




  • Maggie Gyllenhaal - 2005


    (Photo by Donald Weber / Getty Images)




  • Jessica Chastain - 2011


    (Photo by Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images)




  • Julianne Moore - 2012


    (Photo by Mark Davis/Getty Images)




  • Julianne Moore - 2009


    (Photo by C.J. LaFrance/Getty Images)




  • Chloe Moretz - 2011


    (Photo by Sonia Recchia/Getty Images)




  • Kirsten Dunst - 2011


    (Photo by Peter Bregg/Getty Images)




  • Jennifer Lawrence - 2012


    (Photo by Terry Rice/Getty Images)




  • Jennifer Connelly - 2010


    (Photo by Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images)




  • Sandra Oh - 2008


    (Photo by C.J. LaFrance/Getty Images)




  • Andrea Riseborough - 2011


    (AP Photo/Evan Agostini)




  • Evan Rachel Wood - 2011


    (AP Photo/Evan Agostini)




  • Megan Fox - 2009


    (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)




  • Natalie Portman - 2009


    (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)




  • Sridevi Kapoor - 2012


    (Photo by Jag Gundu/Getty Images)




  • Penelope Cruz - 2012


    (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Nathan Denette)




  • Diane Kruger - 2012


    (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)




  • Abbie Cornish - 2012


    (Photo by Joe Scarnici/Getty Images for WGC)




  • Emily Blunt - 2012


    Actress Emily Blunt arrives at premiere for "Arthur Newman" during the Toronto International Film Festival on Monday Sept. 10, 2012 in Toronto. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)




  • Winona Ryder - 2010


    (Photo by Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images)




  • Halle Berry - 2012


    (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)




  • Doona Bae - 2012


    (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)




  • Gwyneth Paltrow - 2005


    (Photo by Evan Agostini/Getty Images)




  • Eva Mendes - 2012


    (Photo by Sonia Recchia/Getty Images)




  • Kristen Stewart - 2007


    (Photo by Evan Agostini/Getty Images)




  • NEXT: Best And Worst TIFF Style




  • WORST: Drew Barrymore, TIFF 2009


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>




  • WORST: Juliette Lewis, TIFF 2011


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>




  • BEST: Alexander Skarsgard, TIFF 2011


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>




  • BEST: Anna Faris, TIFF 2011


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>




  • WORST: Julianne Moore, TIFF 2008


    <em>Credit: WireImage</em>




  • BEST: Elizabeth Olsen, TIFF 2011


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>




  • WORST: Stacy Kiebler, TIFF 2011


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>




  • BEST: Rachel Weisz, TIFF 2011


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>




  • WORST: Tilda Swinton, TIFF 2011


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>




  • BEST: Michelle Monaghan, TIFF 2011


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>




  • WORST: Sarah Silverman, TIFF 2010


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>




  • BEST: Keira Knightley, TIFF 2011


    <em>Credit: CP</em>




  • WORST: Kirsten Dunst, TIFF 2011


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>




  • BEST: Ryan Gosling, TIFF 2011


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>




  • WORST: Maggie Gyllenhaal, TIFF 2011


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>




  • BEST: Sarah Gadon, TIFF 2011


    <em>Credit: Getty</em>