Red Road

2007
6.8| 1h53m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 13 April 2007 Released
Producted By: Zentropa Entertainments
Country: United Kingdom
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Jackie is a CCTV operator. One day, a man shows his face on her monitor, a man she hoped never to see again. Now she has no choice and is compelled to confront him.

Genre

Drama, Thriller

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Director

Andrea Arnold

Production Companies

Zentropa Entertainments

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Red Road Audience Reviews

Diagonaldi Very well executed
Rijndri Load of rubbish!!
Lollivan It's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.
Janae Milner Easily the biggest piece of Right wing non sense propaganda I ever saw.
MattyGibbs This is a fairly simple film of a CCTV operator who notices a face from her past that she didn't want to see again. It follows Jackie as she infiltrates the life of the man from her past and tries to gain her revenge. It's a slow moving film and maybe it could have been cut down by 20 minutes but it does at least steadily improve towards to end. It boasts good performances from a strong cast which helps keep interest at the beginning. Red Road is not a particularly nice film to watch, the setting is grim and it's a darkly lit film which only adds to the general depressing nature of the film. There is nothing to lighten the mood and it also contains one of if not the most explicit sex scenes I've ever seen on film. However if you can get through the first hour then it does turn into a very effective drama. For a low budget film this is a very good effort and is worth at least one viewing.
Rockwell_Cronenberg With Red Road, Andrea Arnold has followed in the footsteps of such masterpieces as The Conversation and Blow Out with her exploration of characters who live in a world of voyeurism. She doesn't quite reach the heights of those two films and as her narrative becomes more about the characters themselves it starts to become slightly less interesting, but the film still managed to make quite the impression on me. Her and the phenomenal Kate Dickie's study of this fragile, internally destroyed woman was very impressive and remarkably understated in their portrayal of her inner demons.I like that Arnold doesn't give us any answers right away and we're left in a state of mystery, having to trust that she'll bring things around and unveil the truth at some point. It was a strategy that definitely hooked me in and had me constantly guessing, but I found it to become less compelling the more the answers were revealed. Dickie's performance is heartbreaking and once again Arnold has created a fierce and determined female lead, who is set in her goals and won't let anyone stand in her way; I love seeing such a strong and layered female character.As much as I loved the character though, I have to admit that the most compelling moments in the film were those quiet ones where we just watched her watch the city. Arnold gave an excellent look into the world of someone whose job is to watch; as ours is during any film. I also have to give mention to the main sex scene, which is just...explosive, to say the least. As she did with her next film Fish Tank, Arnold has done something remarkably unique in film when it comes to sex and created a scene that is so many things at once; it's strangely erotic, majorly important for the characters and actually moves the plot forward. In a world with gratuitous nudity and sex for the sake of sex, Arnold has created two sex scenes in the last five years that break the mold and blew me away.
mdnobles19 What starts of as an fascinating mystery/thriller turns around and becomes more of a slow moving drama about grief, loss, revenge, moving on and forgiveness and it was a pretty good one at that but this film is definitely not for everyone. I thought the acting was pretty strong and believable and you felt her pain and struggle of the loss of her husband and her daughter and her odd way with dealing with it and it was just an intriguing but slow journey to find out what really happened that day to them and how she struggles to accept it and move on. This movie really had me guessing and thinking and surprised me in a couple of ways like thinking a certain character is more ruthless than they ended up being and how the mood changes towards the end and ends on a sad but positive note, believe me this is not a full blown thriller. There were some dark, erotic scenes in this film that is not for all tastes and might turn some viewers off so be warned. Overall this was not great but it was an interesting look at life, loss and kind of redemption and it was pretty satisfying, not really what I thought it would be at all but it's worth a look only once though. Don't expect too much from this film or you will be very disappointed, this one requires a lot of patience. More of a 2.5 out of 5 stars.
ozjeppe Mesmerizing account of security surveillance camera operator in Glasgow who one day, on one of her work monitors, spots a person who stirs up her personal past in unpredictably painful ways... and puts her in consequences that take the viewers on one of the best and roughest rides of the '00s! A small British miracle of a movie, thematically difficult and disturbing as it takes its time using minimal, low-key elements of social realism to carve out a story of edge-of-your-seat suspenseful thriller qualities and emotions of huge human drama that knocked the air out of me and left a big lump in my throat. Next to that, unforgettable, two-dimensional characterizations unfold just as brilliantly by simply showing and symbolizing (instead of overly telling) the action. This is film-making that is both masterful, sexually brave and movingly tragic as well as hopeful, with achingly good performances. For buffs, the stylistics with the surveillance camera topic view can almost unavoidably be discussed along with similar inputs from Antonioni's "Blow-up", Hitchcock's "Rear window" and Coppola's "The conversation" - as well with the gigantic ethical questions it raises, that are both timeless and contemporary: Can atonement be made, even with unforgivable crimes and long-time grief? Are Jackie's actions at all justified? What reverberations on privacy and authority responsibility does around-the-clock societal surveillance really have? Don't miss this one!9 out of 10 from Ozjeppe