
Trapped
2002 • Action, Crime, Drama, Thriller • R
When their daughter is abducted by experienced kidnappers, the Jennings turn the tables on their seemingly fool-proof plan.
Runtime: 1h 46m
Why you should read the novel
Before you watch Trapped (2002), experience the original story in 24 Hours by Greg Iles. This gripping kidnapping thriller novel delivers richer psychology, bolder stakes, and a chillingly plausible criminal scheme from page one.
On the page, Iles builds relentless tension with layered perspectives, intricate planning, and forensic detail you won’t find on screen. The novel’s atmosphere and character depth turn every chapter into a breathless, can’t-stop read.
If you love crime fiction and psychological suspense, read 24 Hours by Greg Iles in paperback, ebook, or audiobook. Discover the definitive version of the story that inspired the film—and why the book keeps readers up all night.
Adaptation differences
Trapped (2002) follows the core premise of Greg Iles’s 24 Hours, but the movie streamlines subplots and compresses motivations to keep the cat-and-mouse action front and center. The novel spends more time on the kidnappers’ method, prior victims, and law-enforcement tactics, creating a wider, more procedural canvas.
One notable change involves the child’s medical condition. In the book, the kidnapped daughter’s diabetes and insulin schedule drive the ticking clock; the film shifts this to severe asthma and inhalers. That swap alters specific suspense mechanics, scene beats, and how parental decisions ratchet the pressure.
Characterization also diverges. The novel grants Joe Hickey and Cheryl fuller backstories, moral ambiguity, and psychological nuance, while the film simplifies relationships and heightens immediate menace. Will and Karen’s interior thoughts and fears, explored extensively on the page, are necessarily reduced to on-screen actions and expressions.
Pacing and payoff differ as well. The movie favors a tighter timeline, fewer locations, and a more conventional, action-forward climax. The book sustains dread through procedural detail and darker shades of threat, including elements the adaptation softens or leaves off-screen, resulting in a grimmer, more textured reading experience.
Trapped inspired from
24 Hours
by Greg Iles