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Red Road
Red Road

Red Road (2006)

65% User Rating
1h 53min
Drama
Thriller

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.

Andrea ArnoldDirector

Cast

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Kate Dickie

Kate Dickie

Jackie

Tony Curran

Tony Curran

Clyde Henderson

Martin Compston

Martin Compston

Stevie

Natalie Press

Natalie Press

April

Paul Higgins

Paul Higgins

Avery

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John Comerford

Man with Dog

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Andrew Armour

Alfred

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Carolyn Calder

Cleaner

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Martin McCardie

Angus

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Jessica Angus

Bronwyn

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Martin O'Neill

Frank

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Cora Bissett

Jo

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Charles Brown

Broomfield Barman

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Annie Bain

Aunt Kath

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Frances Kelly

Woman in Denim Skirt

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John McDonald

Broomfield Barman

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William Cassidy

Stevie's Dad

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Sarah Haworth

Police Woman

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Elizabeth Allan

Kind Lady on Bus

Anne Kidd

Anne Kidd

Brenda

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Allan Sawers

Rob

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Frances McEwan

Woman Who Flirts with Clyde

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Anne McColgan

Purple Coat with Cat

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Graeme Wright

Top Man Jacket

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Sanije Robeli

Blonde Cleaner

Reviews (1)

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CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
Rating 70%

September 1, 2024

"Jackie" (Kate Dickie) has a job supervising an array of CCTV cameras monitoring the city overnight. It's pretty dull work watching the drunks go home, or keeping an eye out for the opportunistic criminals who share Glasgow's streets during the wee small hours with the foxes that scavenge the waste ground. One morning, she espies a couple in flagrante delicto up against the wall of the Jet garage and she thinks she recognises the man. A bit more investigation and she discovers that this is, indeed, "Clyde" (Tony Curran). She becomes more and more obsessed with this man, and swiftly we appreciate that she has some unfinished business with him. She develops quite a cunning plan and sets about implementing a sting operation with quite a devious twist - one that she hopes will offer her some closure and a degree of retribution for his actions past. Gradually we become aware of just what did happen, but the presentation avoids making it a simple good v. evil style story, but actually one as much about redemption and maybe even forgiveness. Dickie holds it together well enough but maybe she's left to do a bit too much of the heavy lifting as neither Curran nor Martin Compston's "Stevie" do very much to add any depth to a screenplay or characterisation that does take it's time to get going. True, that might illustrate a little of the mundanity of her job, but that's no reason to impose that on an audience keen to establish just who's who to whom. There is some fairly graphic sex, but it's not prurient - it's all part of the natural evolution of her plan within a bigger plan - and that works effectively. It also makes you realise that it's not that hard to concoct a story plausible to many that's a complete work of well orchestrated fiction too. Shave twenty minutes from it and focus more on the two principals - and their backstory - and it'd be better, as it is, though, it's still a dark and watchable look at boundaries, lies and revenge.

Media

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Official UK Trailer

Official UK Trailer

Mark Kermode reviews Andrea Arnold's Red Road

Mark Kermode reviews Andrea Arnold's Red Road

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