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Road, The
EMAILPRINTThe Weinstein Company

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 33 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 53 votes
Read user comments
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Movie Info
Genre(s): Adventure | Drama | Sci-fi | Suspense/Thriller
Written by:
Joe Penhall
Nick Wechsler
Directed by: John Hillcoat
Release Date:
Theatrical: November 25, 2009
Running Time: 119 minutes, Color
Origin: USA
Summary
RATING: R for some violence, disturbing images and language
Starring Viggo Mortensen, Charlize Theron, Robert Duvall, Kodi Smit-McPhee, and Guy Pearce
Based on Cormac McCarthy's beloved, best-selling and Pulitzer Prize winning novel, Academy Award nominee Viggo Mortensen leads an all-star cast in the big screen adaptation of The Road, the epic post-apocalyptic tale of a journey taken by a father and his young son across a barren landscape that was blasted by an unnamed cataclysm that destroyed civilization and most life on earth. (The Weinstein Company)
Also On The Web: Internet Movie Database Official Studio Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
USA Today Claudia Puig
While the film is not as resonant as the novel, it is an honorable adaptation, capturing the essence of the bond between father and son.
Read Full Review >Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
The Road evokes the images and the characters of Cormac McCarthy's novel. It is powerful, but for me lacks the same core of emotional feeling.
Read Full Review >Rolling Stone Peter Travers
In this haunting portrait of America as no country for old men or young, Hillcoat -- through the artistry of Mortensen and Smit-McPhee -- carries the fire of our shared humanity and lets it burn bright and true.
Read Full Review >Portland Oregonian Shawn Levy
The Road walks a tremendously daring and delicate line between inspiration and horror, and it does so not only in the events it depicts but in its very air and atmosphere. It was unforgettable on the page, and it impresses equally, or at least it does so remarkably often, on screen.
Read Full Review >Film Threat Elias Savada
It is compellingly enervating and a marvel in the filmmaking process.
Read Full Review >Wall Street Journal Joe Morgenstern
Between the two performances there's not a false note. Between the father and son there's an unbreakable bond. Though civilization has ended, love and parental duty shape the course of this fable, which is otherwise as heartwarming as a Beckett play shorn of humor.
Read Full Review >Empire Dan Jolin
One of the most chillingly effective visions of the world’s end ever put on screen -- and a heart-rending study of parenthood, to boot.
Read Full Review >New York Daily News Joe Neumaier
Intense and, yes, depressing - and earns every minute that it rattles inside your head.
Read Full Review >Time Out New York Joshua Rothkopf
And then, Robert Duvall appears—or, should I say, insinuates himself out of the muck. Cagily, his character wends his way into the story, played by the one American actor who might best understand the limits of bluster. “It’s foolish to ask for luxuries in times like these,” he mutters in the Duvall twang, the weather and indignity beaten into him, and The Road suddenly feels major.
Read Full Review >The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Rick Groen
Essentially a love story, as stripped of sentimentality as the landscape is shorn of green, yet an extraordinary love story nonetheless – powerful and poignant and, even in the midst of hope's imminent extinction, hopeful too.
Read Full Review >Philadelphia Inquirer Steven Rea
The Road isn't a masterpiece...But I cannot think of another film this year that has stayed with me, its images of dread and fear - and yes, perhaps hope - kicking around like such a terrible dream.
Read Full Review >San Francisco Chronicle Amy Biancolli
The latest in a year filled with Armageddon movies such as "Terminator Salvation" and "2012," and it won't be the last, but it's the most chilling so far.
Read Full Review >Premiere Mark Salisbury
This might just be a tad too grueling and bleak for everyone’s liking, but it’s a Road that’s definitely well worth traveling.
Read Full Review >ReelViews James Berardinelli
The movie The Road is nowhere close to its literary sire, but it's probably the best one could hope for from a movie version.
Read Full Review >Miami Herald Rene Rodriguez
The filmmakers capture enough of the book's essence -- and the power of its knockout, transcendent ending -- to more than justify the movie's existence.
Read Full Review >The Hollywood Reporter Deborah Young
Director John Hillcoat has performed an admirable job of bringing Cormac McCarthy's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel to the screen as an intact and haunting tale, even at the cost of sacrificing color, big scenes and standard Hollywood imagery of post-apocalyptic America.
Read Full Review >The New York Times A.O. Scott
Engrossing and at times impressive, a pretty good movie that is disappointing to the extent that it could have been great. Is this the way the world ends? With polite applause?
Read Full Review >Salon.com Stephanie Zacharek
John Hillcoat's The Road is an honorable adaptation of a piece of pulp fiction disguised as high art; it a has more directness and more integrity than its source material, the 2006 novel by Cormac McCarthy.
Read Full Review >Chicago Reader J.R. Jones
Portrayed ad infinitum in sci-fi and fantasy, the postapocalypse may now seem about as scary as Post Raisin Bran, but Hillcoat gives it an unnerving solidity by focusing on the drab details of survival and linking them to the more hellish aspects of modern American life.
Read Full Review >Austin Chronicle Marc Savlov
The Road deviates from McCarthy's original text via a series of flashbacks to the man's pre-apocalyptic life with the woman (Theron) who both leaves her family behind and is in turn left behind by them.
Read Full Review >Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman
There's enough foreboding in America right now to make sitting through a movie such as The Road seem like one more heavy burden that, frankly, no one needs.
Read Full Review >The Onion (A.V. Club) Scott Tobias
Aas grim as The Road gets, Hillcoat goes a little soft at the wrong time. Someone like Michael Haneke would have no trouble embracing this material’s uncompromising dreariness.
Read Full Review >Boston Globe Ty Burr
Everything about the film is a welcome rebuke to the happy-face apocalypse of “2012,’’ a movie that turns mass extinction into the Greatest Show on Earth. In The Road, what has been lost is recognized as infinitely precious; what’s left is bitter and our due.
Read Full Review >St. Louis Post-Dispatch Joe Williams
The Road has the signposts of an important film, but it lacks the diversions of an inviting trip.
Read Full Review >Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips
The best thing about the film is Viggo Mortensen’s performance. A stealth talent of many shadings, Mortensen has a way of fitting easily into nearly any period, any milieu.
Read Full Review >Washington Post Ann Hornaday
The Road possesses undeniable sweep and a grim kind of grandeur, but it ultimately plays like a zombie movie with literary pretensions.
Read Full Review >Los Angeles Times Kenneth Turan
The Road is a road you'll wish hadn't been taken. Not because anything's been badly done, but because there's a serious imbalance in the complicated equation between what the film forces us to endure and what we end up receiving in return.
Read Full Review >New York Magazine David Edelstein
Evocative as it is, The Road comes up short, not because it’s bleak but because it’s monotonous.
Read Full Review >New York Post Kyle Smith
Doesn't offer plot or an inquiry into the evil in men's hearts. It simply wallows in the filth and inhumanity that surround a father and his pre-adolescent son as they march across the shattered remains of this country.
Read Full Review >Slate Dana Stevens
For everything the movie gets right--most notably the impressively pared-down script by Joe Penhall and the two truthful and fearless performances from Mortensen and McPhee--there's a corresponding painful blunder, like the overwrought score from Nick Cave.
Read Full Review >Christian Science Monitor Peter Rainer
The novelist Cormac McCarthy was served well by the Coen Brothers' adaptation of his novel "No Country for Old Men" but comes a cropper in The Road, a lugubrious trek through postapocalyptic debris.
Read Full Review >Variety Todd McCarthy
Except for the physical aspects of this bleak odyssey by a father and son through a post-apocalyptic landscape, this long-delayed production falls dispiritingly short on every front.
Read Full Review >Village Voice J. Hoberman
Pale by comparison to an action thriller like "Children of Men" or gross out eco-catastrophe like "Land of the Dead," squandering its ready-made zombie scenario.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this movie is 7.7 (out of 10) based on 53 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Lucas C. gave it a9:
truly interesting and memorable movie. Couldn't take my eyes off it from start to finish.
Sandy gave it an8:
Thank god for a quiet apocalyptic movie that DOESN'T have zombies in! Thoroughly convincing world created, focusing on the purpose of survival, not blockbuster destruction or exaggerated horror. It's enough to allude to the grimness of the vision without rubbing our noses in it. For those that want gratuitous horror, look elsewhere. Good playing by Viggo Mortensen and Smit-McPhee.
Danielle F gave it a9:
This film hit a perfect emotional point for me. I haven't yet read the book and therefore am not biased from that foundation, but found the portrayals of love, kindness and relationships to be beautiful. In addition, the cinematography was superb. The small nods to materialism in our society were generally done well too. The two key reasons I did not give this film a 10 were the ridiculous product placements during the scene in the shelter (I refuse to believe that such a thoughtfully stocked cellar would contain a 99c bag of Cheetos and bottles of Vitamin Water) as well as the ending, which had a little too much cheese for my liking (perhaps the Cheetos were resurfacing).
jason g. gave it a9:
Bleak sad and powerful brilliant acting really enjoyed it i really don't understand some of poor reviews this film has received.
Matt W. gave it a10:
I agree with Q, loved the book and the film was exactly what I'd pictured it to be. I thought it captured the essence of the story perfectly. Amazing performances too, from Mortenson and Duvall, but especially from the boy, who was an absolute revelation.
David J. gave it a10:
Awesome book and awesome movie. Not a feel good movie as it is very dark.
r. ramdom gave it a7:
Loving the book was easy -it was poetic, stark, brutal and uncomprimising. Thinking of yourself without heat or electricity for 2 weeks can give you just a taste of what it would be to survive in 60% of North America in the face of an energy catastrophe, let alone of a nuclear scale or massive environmental rupture. But what did this movie lack that reduced empathy or trivialized the book? What could have made it the celluloid equal? The CGI was adequate and not over-bearing. The score was bleak in all the places. The casting of Theron and the boy was inspired as they literally look to be of the same DNA - that was uncanny. The characters that were scattered through out the movie were barely recognizable, but were. And I never forgot (nor was allowed to forget), for one instant, that they loved the book too and fought with their agents for those parts. I'll tell you what I think it was. The Road was empty. As a book you never saw the face of the man or the boy: they were as elemental and tortured as their environs. Not that the casting wasn't inspired but I'll be damned if I want the Returning Lord of All Rings as my 'Man', or a 'monster' or moll such as Charlize as the Woman. This is one movie that required unknown actors to lend the vehicle it's providence and impact, randomness and believability. It was that simple. The Road's universal message of paternal love is washed away and marred by Hollywood and it's agents. Viggo and Guy and Duvall and Theron were all amazing, but that is beside the point. In order to display the true and majestic truths and magnitude of the loss portayed in this adaptation, these had to be players you could not associate with any other plot. It's that simple. Not that Viggo didn't method un-wash, and unshave himself or didn't stink like a bear but this movie needed a... unknown face to portray a fearsome and unknown future.
