Site design and programming by
iTek Computers
and Design

 Movies
Bookmark and Share
Review: The Road (2009)
by Ailsa Windsor
06 February 2010
 
Viggo Mortensen and Kodi Smit-McPhee in 'The Road'
United International Pictures

Why, oh why is the future always portrayed as being bleak, barren and forlorn? ‘The Road’ which opens this weekend is yet another harrowing, post-apocalyptic tale, but it is a story of survival. Despite the odds a man and his son manage to make their way to the coast without compromising any of the values which they hold so dear

 

‘We are the good guys?’ is a question which is frequently re-iterated  by Kodi Smit-Mcphee as ‘the boy’. And this causes much consternation when his father determinedly attempts to avoid any human contact even if there is no apparent danger. It is only at the boy’s urging that he reluctantly provides a modicum of help.

 

Based on a novel by Cormac McCarthy (No Country for Old Men) ‘The Road’ sees the two main characters traversing a land destroyed by a cataclysmic event – what it was we (as the audience) are never told. There’s danger at every turn with all survivors intent on preserving their own lives – either evading the cannibalistic hunters or finely tuning their ‘scent’ to the source of new prey.

 

Continually on the move the man and boy traverse the lifeless land where their love for each other is the torch (or the ‘fire inside’) that keeps them going. Vegetation as we know it is no more – not a leaf on a tree, not a grain of wheat – what ever they can find they eat.

 

When, however, they find a veritable ‘treasure trove’ of edibles, it is with reluctance that they move on. There’s no staying at any one place for too long a time – the threat of discovery by ‘the bad guys’ keeps them looking over their shoulders and getting the jitters when they hear a sound.

 

A great deal of planning went into the making of the movie. Director – John Hillcoat even went as far as compiling a three – four page dossier on the themes he was looking to portray in the making of the film.

 

"The movie will operate on a number of different levels, where it can be viewed as a more mythic metaphoric journey of the soul, a fable, an adult fairytale about the passing of one generation to another, that inescapable reality of mortality and the archetypal parent's greatest fear, guilt and heartbreak in leaving the child behind (and by extension everyone’s fear of being left behind utterly alone),” states Hillcoat. “On another level is the morality tale, an urgent wake-up call to us all where kindness, trust, hope and faith must prevail against all odds in the face of impending destruction and horror. On another is the immediate visceral reality of a dark epic adventure filled with terror and tenderness.

 

"As we all bear witness to a new age of violent global conflict together with the spectre of apocalyptic environmental catastrophe, ‘The Road’ manages to tap into our collective psyche with the force of a universal nightmare. It evokes our deepest and darkest fears —and with prescience and lucidity addresses what matters most."

 

Brought to south Africa by Videovision and United International Pictures

To watch the trailer visit http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hbLgszfXTAY; To book at your favourite cinema click through to www.sterkinekor.com or www.numetro.co.za

Bookmark and Share
 
Event Listing
Click here for the full listing

Look and Book SMS Movies to 33717 - Subscription Service - No Free Minutes - SMS STOP to 33717 to Unsubscribe

Click here to buy posters!
Click here to buy posters!

 

Dutch portal about
South Africa

south africaSouth Africa

  Weekend  
Al Fresco Slow Food in Florida Road on Sunday 29 August  
  TV  
CNN launches new monthly art programme - Icon  
  Tourism  
Moyo Magic on Durban’s Pier  
  Theatre  
Arts & Culture Trust grant recipients announced  
  Sport  
Countdown to Durban SPAR Women’s 10 / 5km  
  People  
Through the eyes of a friend: Freddie Mercury’s legacy continues  
  Music  
Crowded House to tour SA in October  
  Movies  
Review: SALT (2010)  
  Motoring  
New vehicle sales in South Africa – August 2010  
  Gaming  
Soccer iPhone game launched in SA  
  Charity  
Reach for a Dream with Michael Naicker aka Kevin Perkins  
  Books  
Book Review: ‘Colours of the Kalahari’ – a Kalahari Kaleidoscope  
  Art  
A celebration of colour provides nourishment for the soul  
 

   MENU | Theatre | Movies | Music | Art | Tourism | Books | Food | Sport | Motoring | TV | Weekend | People | Copyright | Privacy Policy |