Daily News logo Newsletter logo   Search News     Daily News   

The Road Movie Review

  Share With Friends

By

While identifying with characters in a bad situation is a movie audience must, drowning in their deep funk as much as they do, is a narrative no-no. And though the Cormac McCarthy bestseller on which the doomsday downer The Road is based, held readers in its sway with the lyrically conceived interior musings of its post-apocalyptic nomadic survivors, transporting that literary concept to the screen is even beyond the bleakness of the story's centerpiece planet in utter ruin.

Framed as a series of unhappy recollections before the end of the world left few people in existence to roam the planet in search of food, humans on the menu and otherwise, The Road is oddly crammed with a sense of overwhelming weight and a hollow core at the same time. This dreary travelogue trudges along ruined landscapes with a distraught but determined father simply called Man (Viggo Mortensen) and his son, Boy (Kodi Smit-McPhee). Man's wife known as Woman (Charlize Theron) has presumably died some years ago, as we learn in progressively grating flashbacks.

Unable to summon the will to live without much hope, and fearing a future as a victim of rape if not cannibalism by wandering tribes of men turned into predatory savages, Woman wandered off into the wilderness one day despite her husband's pleas, to seal her fate rather than prolong it. After which father and son take off in search of some vestige of civilization that may still exist somewhere.

The Road Movie

Though there are moments of unanticipated crushing emotional intensity and terrible heartbreak, those striking dramatic detours around the bend are few. And at all points in between, The Road is an utterly exhausting affair, likely leaving the audience nearly as perpetually pooped as the family in flight.

Mortensen, a far too little seen or heard Theron and an exemplary supporting cast of assorted ragged human prey and predators alike, admirably hold the sagging threads of dramatic tension together as they continually threaten to sink under the weight of a relentlessly depressing and overwhelming shrouded despair. And the muddy visuals, along with the miscasting of Boy with a child actor who excels at chronic whining but not much else, doesn't help matters.

Nor should a film adapted from a novel, have to require a knowledge of the original work in order to be a satisfying experience, as fans of the book will likely insist. In other words, if you've been mulling embarking on this journey, good idea to cancel your reservations.

Dimension Films
Rated R
2 stars

Prairie Miller is a multimedia journalist online, in print and on radio. Contact her through NewsBlaze.


 
Support Wikipedia


Follow NewsBlaze

on Twitter

@newsblaze


Find more stories recommended by Stumbleupon.

newsletter logo

What's Hot?
1 .The Disturbing Case of Susan Walsh: Vampires, Russian Mobsters and Sex Slaves! - 190
2 .Prosecution Paints a Portrait of Abuse in the Trial of George Huguely V! - 96
3 .Bullhead Review: The Meat Market, Steroids And Masculine Identity Addictions - 60
4 .How Did Jorelys Rivera's Killer Get Some River Ridge Security Access Codes? - 70
5 .These 10 Comfortable Walking Shoes Are a Step in the Right Direction - 63
6 .Husbands-Don't Commit These Valentine's Day Insults! - 51
7 .A Gun, a Shooting Range and a Minivan Paint a Picture of a 'public Execution!' - 57
8 .Do You Know Why The Mafia Grew Strong in America? - 41
9 .Censorship in America - 36
10 .Early Marriage Has Harmful Effects on Women - 32
Updated: 21:59 PST     9186

NewsBlaze Editors

editors

NewsBlaze Writers


Writers Wanted

Help NewsBlaze provide daily news, including top stories, Home and Garden, Technology, The Environment and more. NewsBlaze Writer

Follow NewsBlaze

NewsBlaze Social Media Logos NewsBlaze Facebook NewsBlaze LinkedIn NewsBlaze Twitter NewsBlaze YouTube NewsBlaze MySpace
NewsBlaze 
Copyright © 2004-2012 NewsBlaze LLC
Use of this website is subject to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy  | DMCA Notice |         Press Room