Telluride Review: The Road
Filed under: Drama, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Telluride, Theatrical Reviews

Just before the kid was born, the world burned. We don't know why, and the characters don't talk about it -- perhaps they don't quite know themselves, or maybe they've decided that it no longer matters. The Boy's universe is grey, full of ash, dust, and the ruins of a civilization he never saw. This is all he knows. His mother, seeing no point in going on, killed herself shortly after his birth. She was not alone. Many of those who didn't take their own lives were soon murdered by the desperate and hungry.
Skip ahead nine or ten years. The kid and his father wander the barren roadways heading south toward the coast for no clear reason other than that it gives them a tangible goal toward which to strive. (And there's always the hope that the ocean will be something other than gray.) Every day is a knock-down, drag-out fight for survival. They run, hide, starve, and fight off attackers who want their food, or their clothes, or, at one point, their flesh.
I set the stage like this not to horrify you or to gross you out, but to give you a sense of the relentless, pervasive grimness of The Road -- and then to turn around and say that The Road may be the most profoundly optimistic and life-affirming film you will see this year. Those who have read Cormac McCarthy's novel of the same name won't be surprised by this. John Hillcoat's faithful, near-perfect adaptation beautifully captures McCarthy's synthesis of all-encompassing darkness and enduring hope.
The father (Viggo Mortensen) and the son (Kodi Smit-McPhee) are driven -- kept alive, really -- by different things. For the Man, the Boy is all that matters. "The child is my warrant," he tells us in mournful voiceover. "And if he is not the word of God, then God never spoke."
What keeps the Boy going is the notion that, in a world of murderers and thieves, he and his dad are the Good Guys. They're "carrying the fire." When they pass friendly, desperate wanderers, the Boy pesters his father to donate some food. When dad decides to strip and abandon a man who tried to steal their possessions, the boy begs him to stop. It is here that McCarthy and Hillcoat begin to reveal their fundamentally positive view of human nature. The murderers and thieves are trying to recapture, by whatever means necessary, remnants of the world they used to know. The Boy is more or less a clean slate, and his empathy and kindness are instinctive, innate.
The Road is unremittingly focused on the Man and the Boy. This is not really an "apocalyptic thriller," though it has genre elements, and plenty of suspense. The father will do anything to protect his son, including putting a bullet in the Boy's brain if it comes to that. The Boy is the father's sole reason for carrying on, but the reverse is not true. It's really the Boy who's "carrying the fire." He is humanity, in every sense.
Viggo Mortensen is excellent here, but The Road is anchored by Kodi Smit-McPhee, whose performance is staggering in both its force and its surprising, artful understatement. I don't know how it's even possible to get a performance like this in a role this demanding and intense (he's in all but a few scenes) from an 11-year old boy -- who, by the way, is from Australia and is all the while doing a beautiful American accent. The 11-year olds I've known couldn't sit still for long enough to watch a movie, never mind make one. (An aside: Smit-McPhee was awesome during the post-screening Q&A, too, quickly improvising a charming answer to a rambling non-question from moderator Ken Burns.)
The ending, which brought me to tears, is not merely optimistic or hopeful -- it is uplifting, and the uplift is earned. The movie is a moving gesture of faith in our species. Doomsaying about the fate of mankind is as old as civilization: wrath of the Gods, nuclear war, global warming, what have you. The Road insists that we're going to be okay -- and I think I believe it.










Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
9-08-2009 @ 9:27AM
Ben said...
I wanted to see this since the first trailer. Never read the book but the trailer was gripping and yet didn't seem to over-promise what the movie would give. Not to mention that Mortensen has more then earned my respect in his recent work. Can't wait to get out to the theater for this.
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9-08-2009 @ 9:38AM
ttm said...
The trailer was horrible, and the exact opposite of the wonderful book - too focused on the tragedy and the wife, and making the film look like a run-of-the-mill apocalyptic thriller and not the heart-rending, slow-moving masterpiece that the book (and hopefully the movie as well) is.
I'm heartened to read a positive review; the fact that there's voice-over work sort of scares me, though...
9-08-2009 @ 9:51AM
Ben said...
As I said, I haven't been fortunate enough to read the book yet(and currently still between like 3 other books so not likely)
Though I do feel fairly different from you ttm. I mean, without knowing what as in the book that was being overlooked, I felt it drew in my interest well. I didn't get the feel of the usual apocalyptic fair, I felt that it was more focused on the social/family drama of the man and boy. That is hat I've been waiting for in these apocalyptic works, the better human drama that makes us feel the reality of this dark potential world. That is where Terminator Salvation or even Day After Tomorrow(for a different take) failed so severely.
9-08-2009 @ 10:45PM
YouFaceTheTick said...
book was good but mortensen is so miscast. he's nothing like the protagonist of the book. The book represents a somewhat intelligent everyman. Viggo is too manly for this role.
9-09-2009 @ 1:34PM
Carole M. said...
Read the book. Then, you'll want even more to see the movie.
10-09-2009 @ 6:32PM
rob said...
Ben, you really should read the book. Everyone should read the book. Seriously. Stop what you're doing, go pick up the paperback for $5.99, and read it. I guarantee you it will take you less than 2 days to read it, even around work or school.
It is easily "the most important book of a generation." Theres no wonder why this book won the 2007 Pulitzer Prize.
It is a remarkable work of literature, and will stick in your head like no other. I read it almost a year ago, and it's been burned into my brain.
9-08-2009 @ 9:49AM
Elizabeth said...
Thanks for such a touching review. I think you have hit the nail on the head in observing that Kodi's performance is every bit as striking as Viggo's. I am going to be very disappointed if Oscar nominations are not in the future for both of them for these roles.
I have read The Road many times and will probably want to watch this movie over and over just to appreciate the beauty of what is being said (verbally and non-verbally), how it is said, as well as what is left unsaid, which, in this movie, I believe will speak volumes.
Unspoken communication with his face and eyes and body language is one of Viggo's hallmark talents (to steal a whole scene without saying a word!), and I think that will be very apparent in this movie!
Can't wait till October 16th!
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9-10-2009 @ 12:14PM
JLA said...
Have you seen Kodi's performance in the 2007 film Romulus My Father, based on the Australian philosopher Raimond Gaita's critically acclaimed memoir?
Gaita's recent books:
A Common Humanity: Thinking about Love and Truth and Justice
Good and Evil: An Absolute Conception
9-08-2009 @ 10:04AM
Drewbacca said...
I wasn't a big fan of the book. Perhaps the visualization of the movie will sway my negative opinion.
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9-08-2009 @ 1:21PM
matt d. said...
haha ben the trailer did exactly what you said it didnt, by showing over promise of something it isnt...
anyways good review...
things are in place (the director, two main stars, source material) for this to be one of the best movies ever made
people go out and watch the proposition
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9-08-2009 @ 5:24PM
Maria Stahl said...
*Maria feels better after reading this review*
Everybody, please, PLEASE go read the book before seeing the film. Please. I'm begging you.
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9-09-2009 @ 4:46PM
Laurie Mann said...
I'm only sorry we have to wait an extra month or so since the release was pushed back to THANKSGIVING WEEKEND!
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9-10-2009 @ 4:37PM
vampireheart said...
I'm sorry I'm not a big fan of this review. You told us exactly what the film meant and what it had to say. Surely that is just too prescriptive? Shouldn't people be able to take what they will from an artwork? I certainly didn't glean exactly the message that you did from the book.
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10-17-2009 @ 11:11AM
TCP said...
Mr. Novikov, I have not seen the movie yet, but in the book it is quite clear why they are moving towards the coast...hopefully a warmer climate.
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11-08-2009 @ 4:18PM
Dave said...
This is the best book i have ever read. I hope the movie folks didnt ruin it. One thing is for sure, it will be hard to watch in a theatre. Fellas, if you have a son, you Will cry.
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