Hallow Road
- 2025
- 1h 20m
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueTwo parents enter a race against time when they receive a distressing late-night phone call from their daughter after she caused a tragic car accident.Two parents enter a race against time when they receive a distressing late-night phone call from their daughter after she caused a tragic car accident.Two parents enter a race against time when they receive a distressing late-night phone call from their daughter after she caused a tragic car accident.
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This film had so much potential yet failed to delivery the major blow to be classed as a wonderful thriller. Yes, it's pretty clear that this is a storyline example of trauma/parenthood, but I think it could have been projected in better light at the end. The film itself wasn't all bad, the acting was good and it was actually quite believable up until quite late on. Half way through this film I had it down for a possible 7/8 but sadly the meaningless/emotion-only ending left it somewhat short of that mark.
STAR RATING: ***** Brilliant **** Very Good *** Okay ** Poor * Awful
Maddie (Rosamund Pike), a paramedic, and her husband, Frank (Matthew Rhys), are a middle class couple, who receive a late night phone call from their teenage daughter, Alice (Megan McDonnell), who has been involved in a hit and run incident. The pair race to the scene, keeping in touch on speaker phone, but as they do, tensions erupt between the couple, before things take a sinister turn.
For those not lulled in by the big new Mission: Impossible film, this little (virtually un) publicised film might be a decent distraction. After checking the running time, it becomes quickly evident that it's another addition from the 'real time' staple (with events playing out exactly as they occur with no cuts) , the last I can remember being Paul Andrew Williams's 2010 effort Cherry Tree Lane.
In a film with pretty much only two cast members, Pike and Rhys play well off each other, and develop an effective chemistry as a couple with conflicting approaches and attitudes towards their daughter, and what may have led to and how to resolve her current predicament. Likewise, McDonnell does well in a voiceover role, descending further into distress and disbelief while her happy, carefree profile picture stares back at us. It's all genuinely compelling and inspired , until an unwelcome supernatural element is added to the story that detracts from the realism of the events. Indeed, it's at this late point that we suddenly learn the film is set at Halloween (which may have been foreshadowed by the Hallow in the title.)
It remains genuinely suspenseful until the end, which comes in not the most comprehensible fashion, with matters feeling unresolved. Could have been highly recommendable, if it had just stayed on track. ***
Maddie (Rosamund Pike), a paramedic, and her husband, Frank (Matthew Rhys), are a middle class couple, who receive a late night phone call from their teenage daughter, Alice (Megan McDonnell), who has been involved in a hit and run incident. The pair race to the scene, keeping in touch on speaker phone, but as they do, tensions erupt between the couple, before things take a sinister turn.
For those not lulled in by the big new Mission: Impossible film, this little (virtually un) publicised film might be a decent distraction. After checking the running time, it becomes quickly evident that it's another addition from the 'real time' staple (with events playing out exactly as they occur with no cuts) , the last I can remember being Paul Andrew Williams's 2010 effort Cherry Tree Lane.
In a film with pretty much only two cast members, Pike and Rhys play well off each other, and develop an effective chemistry as a couple with conflicting approaches and attitudes towards their daughter, and what may have led to and how to resolve her current predicament. Likewise, McDonnell does well in a voiceover role, descending further into distress and disbelief while her happy, carefree profile picture stares back at us. It's all genuinely compelling and inspired , until an unwelcome supernatural element is added to the story that detracts from the realism of the events. Indeed, it's at this late point that we suddenly learn the film is set at Halloween (which may have been foreshadowed by the Hallow in the title.)
It remains genuinely suspenseful until the end, which comes in not the most comprehensible fashion, with matters feeling unresolved. Could have been highly recommendable, if it had just stayed on track. ***
When parents "Maddie" (Rosamund Pike) and husband "Frank" (Matthew Rhys) get a call from their teenage daughter to say she has been in a road accident, they immediately get into their car and head to the quite far distant and remote scene. The rest of the film sees the couple trying to think what is best to do as the paramedic mother tries to help with an immediate problem whilst the father takes a more long-term and sacrificial view in the event of a worst case scenario. Things only get more fraught when another couple encounter "Alice" first and her folks become increasingly concerned that their "help" might only make matters even worse! With only the intensity of their car as the scenario as this all takes place via the telephone, and what I must admit was probably the slowest and/or safest driving to the site of an accident I've ever witnessed on film (or anywhere else, for that matter) we are introduced to a couple with demons galore and a somewhat confused sense of the ridiculous and of their own priorities. It's that very superficiality and flakiness that makes this a bit more potent than your average thriller and at times it has a characterful intensity akin to a late night radio play with limited visuals and audio: just two people and an increasingly effective and frenzied script. Rhys tends to overact a bit but Pike and the gripping pace of the film deliver something that asks what we might do for our kids, but in a much less typical and frankly more pragmatic fashion. It's only eighty minutes long and that really helps to keep the film focussed and though it isn't a film you are likely to recall for very long, it does work well enough on a big screen.
The film was fantastic in places, and highly original in terms of content, but the whole point of the movie was the worry, the panic, and the racing rush from everyone to get to their destination; and yet the man driving could have pushed his car faster. The trees and streetlights passing by the car windows at 4cm-an-hour ruined the panic. How anyone at all can say 'They rushed to the scene' must have a car made of plasticine. The editor also forgot to put the engine noise in, yet dropped it back in on the gear changes - ?
I really liked the movie, the premise, the suspense and it keeps you at the edge of your seat, the acting is great and exceptional even the girl who played alice via phone and the mystery woman all good but and it's a BIG BUT at the end what the police officer's were discussing about trauma could be known from phone records or just check the call log. It seems they couldn't find a better reasoning which leaves a bit of source taste but still the movie is a must watch.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesOn the first day of shooting, the crew filmed one continuous take of the entire script. This gave them a framework that they could use, discard and embellish over the rest of the shoot.
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Détails
Box-office
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 264 792 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 20m(80 min)
- Couleur
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