Road to Perdition
Road to Perdition
R | 12 July 2002 (USA)
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Mike Sullivan works as a hit man for crime boss John Rooney. Sullivan views Rooney as a father figure, however after his son is witness to a killing, Mike Sullivan finds himself on the run in attempt to save the life of his son and at the same time looking for revenge on those who wronged him.

Reviews
Spoonixel

Amateur movie with Big budget

Lollivan

It's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.

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Yash Wade

Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.

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Sanjeev Waters

A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.

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merelyaninnuendo

Road To Perdition3 And A Half Out Of 5Road To Perdition is a character driven dramatic thriller about a relationship between a father and a son which is brewed at a critical stage and higher stakes. Despite of portraying an essential chapter or episode of a young kid, the writing wisely accounts in the bonding of him with his father from the scratch. And it is so well fed to the audience that despite of its dark tone and poignant theme, there is a cathartic experience on each tiny moments of them. One of the primary strengths of the feature is its uncertainty and unexpected outcome that it evaluates keeping the audience tangled in its world where the sense of urgency too factors in a lot. Each supporting character gets enough range and space to factor in and work effectively which shows how the makers were chewing the characters properly and were not in any rush. The costumes designing is out of the park and so is the finely detailed production design but what draws in most of the attention is the metaphorical cinematography that is just pure passion throughout the course of it. An elevating background score, glorifying camera work and perfect editing are too some of its rich details. The writing is simple as it can be but sensible and justifying as you've never seen. Mendes; the director, at the heart of it, has done a tremendous work on executing such a balanced feature. Hanks has never been more impactful with a excellent support from Newman, Craig and Law. Jaw dropping visuals, whistle-blowing dialogues and a heartbreaking chemistry are the high points of the feature that makes you look twice. Road To Perdition is more salvation than damnation since it has such a risky tone to explore at let along triumph over it; a masterstroke by the makers.

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tfmiltz

This was a troubling experience to witness.I had no idea what it would be about.Key concepts are - loss of innocence.And the scene where Tom Hanks locks away his weapons It was most painful to witness the loss of innocence by his son.Some Star Wars - find out what Daddy does for a living elements here.Good ole Darth - eh- depends on what day you catch him on I guess.I am only 1/4 way through the movie by the way writing this :) HIGHLY RECOMMEND SO FAR?

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NateWatchesCoolMovies

Sam Mendes's Road To Perdition reads like Oscar bait on the surface, but it's anything but once it gets down to business. Based on a downbeat graphic novel, it's a dark and tragic downward spiral of violence, betrayal and crime with beautifully acted characters and burnished, shadowy cinematography that brings the pages of the book to life in moody, snow blanketed detail. Tom Hanks, taking a chance and playing a rougher character for once in his goody two shoes career, is Michael Sullivan, enforcer for small town Irish mob boss John Rooney, played with force and feeling by Paul Newman in his final cinematic outing. Rooney treats Sullivan like a son, as his own offspring (Daniel Craig, cast way against type and loving it) is an insidious, hateful psychopath. After Craig needlessly murders a subordinate (Ciaran Hinds) and Sullivan's youngest son (Taylor Hoechlin, excellent) inadvertently witnesses it, Sullivan is left no choice but to go on the run after his wife (Jennifer Jason Leigh) and youngest child (Liam Aiken) are subsequently slaughtered. The rift that forms between Hanks and Newman is tough to watch, a paternal relationship soured by the ugliness of the lives they live, violence finding its way in and grabbing hold of any goodness that once was, like it always does. Forced to seek help from infamous Chicago gangster Frank Nitti (Stanley Tucci), Sullivan soon finds himself on his own and fast becoming a vigilante with a short life span amongst the underworld, especially when a dangerous assassin (a rodent like Jude Law) is dispatched to kill him. Sullivan knows his way around both a pistol and a tommy gun though, and won't go down in a hail without raising hellfire first. There's a calmness to the action scenes, the most hectic of which is accompanied by no sound effects whatsoever, just simply a lyrical piece of the score, cushioning the violence with mood instead of hammering us with the sound of bullets. It's a revenge piece, no doubt, but it's also a careful treatise on how a parent's actions and choices can affect their young, and in cases of extreme peril or trauma, sometimes bring them closer together where there once was distance. My only real issue with the film is the casting of Jennifer Jason Leigh, a unique, mesmerizing force on camera whose talents are wasted here in the throwaway wife role, getting to do basically nothing. There's a deleted scene featuring Anthony Lapaglia as lively Al Capone, which is not in the final film but can be found on YouTube. Hanks and Newman anchor the film respectively, as hard, determined men who would rather see things go in a more agreeable way, but have both left each other no choice other than willfully striding towards bitter ends. There's an eerie poetry in that which the film captures perfectly.

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TheLittleSongbird

For me, 'Road to Perdition' is Sam Mendes' second best film after 'American Beauty', though it is a very close call. It is every bit as wonderful a film, and while it may not click with everybody there is just so much to admire.'Road to Perdition' has been criticised for starting off sluggish, Jennifer Jason Leigh being underused, Jude Law being out of place with a cartoonish one-dimensional villain, the action scene in the rain being anti-climactic, having a generic script and a lack of emotional attachment.From personal opinion, however, the first ten minutes isn't as good as the rest of the film, but it is not due to the fact that it's uninteresting, just that 'Road to Perdition' is one of those films that gets even stronger and even more interesting as it goes on. It is true too that Jason Leigh is underused, though she still does a good job. So in conclusion from this paragraph, the criticisms are understandable, just don't happen to agree.As said, there is so much to admire about 'Road to Perdition'. The cinematography is superb, some of the best and most beautiful of any film from the 2000s, while the evocative production design is every bit as good, completely transporting the viewer back to the a moody 1930s Chicago. Once again, Thomas Newman's music score is hauntingly hypnotic, achingly melancholic and at times ominous, one of his best scores and he has impressed many times.Sam Mendes does a remarkable job directing, keeping the film at an assured pace and keeping the atmosphere alive, the chemistry between the actors and the characters' development never undermined. The script is intelligent and thought-provoking, there are better scripts around certainly but also far worse. The story is compelling and makes the most of its fascinating and complex themes, while the characters are well-fleshed out and certainly not stereotypical.Didn't feel that it was detached emotionally, 'Road to Perdition' to me more often than not was intense and moving. The action is well-staged, and the aforementioned scene in the rain had a good amount of tension.Cast against type, Tom Hanks is the epitome of haunting understatement, his eyes and facial expressions have such a haunted quality that is so telling and tells so much. In one of his last roles, Paul Newman was rarely more intimidating than here.In a role far removed from his usual roles, Jude Law is chillingly eccentric, the character is kind of one-dimensional but still interesting and very well performed. Daniel Craig also excels in an atypical role, and Tyler Hoechlin surprised me in how good he was. Jennifer Jason Leigh, Ciaran Hinds and Stanley Tucci are all solid.All in all, a wonderful film that drew me in from the start and never let go and got better and better. 10/10 Bethany Cox

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