Hallow Road
- 2025
- 1h 20min
Due genitori entrano in una corsa contro il tempo quando ricevono una dolorosa telefonata a tarda notte dalla figlia dopo che lei ha causato un tragico incidente stradale.Due genitori entrano in una corsa contro il tempo quando ricevono una dolorosa telefonata a tarda notte dalla figlia dopo che lei ha causato un tragico incidente stradale.Due genitori entrano in una corsa contro il tempo quando ricevono una dolorosa telefonata a tarda notte dalla figlia dopo che lei ha causato un tragico incidente stradale.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Recensioni in evidenza
In the categories "disturbingly realistic" and "true nightmares you really don't want to go through yourself", Hallow Road is a film that scores very high. Director Babak Anvari ("I Came By") delivers a very intense and compelling thriller here, even though the story largely takes place in one enclosed location (a car) and has only two main characters (and also a few voices over the phone).
The concept is simple, but that makes it even more efficient. In the middle of the night, parents Maddie and Franck receive a panicky phone call from their teenage daughter Alice. She caused an accident with her father's car. The car is stuck and damaged, but - much worse - there is another girl lying motionless on the road. The parents jump in the car and stay in touch with Alice, but during the long journey the problems pile up. Is the girl who was hit by a car still alive? Where is the ambulance? Why did Alice drive to such a remote place? Was she sober? Will this incident destroy the rest of her life?
There are 2 main reasons why "Hallow Road" is the most haunting and unforgettable thriller you will see this year (and perhaps also in the coming years). First and foremost because it is - simply - a realistic scenario. The chance this horror will happen to yourself, or someone close to you, is much greater than, say, moving into a haunted house or having to fight werewolves and zombies. You read about hit-and-run accidents almost daily, and behind each of these incidents is a tragic story for both sides. Secondly, because Matthew Rhys and - especially - Rosamund Pike give away such incredibly strong performances. Director Anvari felt that the story couldn't just end like a random news fact, and so there are some weird twists in the script towards the end. Still very absorbing, though. The ending is completely open to interpretation, and that too is the best they could have done. Powerful film, recommended!
The concept is simple, but that makes it even more efficient. In the middle of the night, parents Maddie and Franck receive a panicky phone call from their teenage daughter Alice. She caused an accident with her father's car. The car is stuck and damaged, but - much worse - there is another girl lying motionless on the road. The parents jump in the car and stay in touch with Alice, but during the long journey the problems pile up. Is the girl who was hit by a car still alive? Where is the ambulance? Why did Alice drive to such a remote place? Was she sober? Will this incident destroy the rest of her life?
There are 2 main reasons why "Hallow Road" is the most haunting and unforgettable thriller you will see this year (and perhaps also in the coming years). First and foremost because it is - simply - a realistic scenario. The chance this horror will happen to yourself, or someone close to you, is much greater than, say, moving into a haunted house or having to fight werewolves and zombies. You read about hit-and-run accidents almost daily, and behind each of these incidents is a tragic story for both sides. Secondly, because Matthew Rhys and - especially - Rosamund Pike give away such incredibly strong performances. Director Anvari felt that the story couldn't just end like a random news fact, and so there are some weird twists in the script towards the end. Still very absorbing, though. The ending is completely open to interpretation, and that too is the best they could have done. Powerful film, recommended!
Honestly you could just skip 3/4 of the movie and it'd still be the same. I hope they weren't really driving in order to film this because that would be a waste of gas. The actors - good acting not gonna lie - seemed sad and confused and honestly by halfway I felt the same. Do your self a favour and skip this one.
It's the middle of the night and a married couple (Rosamund Pyke and Matthew Rhys) are woken by a frantic 'phone call from their teenage daughter Alice. Alice has taken her father's car without permission, she has crashed it on a remote woodland road, hitting a young woman in the process. Mum (a paramedic) and Dad drive the 40 something miles to find her. Most of the movie consists of Alice talking on the 'phone to her parents in their vehicle and their drive is in real time, quite an interesting idea though it will not please everyone, no doubt some viewers will find it boring. The good performances and the urgency of the family's plight do help keep the movie together. This is a film that you could follow with your eyes closed for the bulk of the running time. And it also proves that suggested horror can be far more scary than actually seeing it. Hallow Road is a creepy and unnerving journey. However, it is not all good. For a start I found the ending a bit disappointing, I had hoped for more. Also the film is set in England/The UK, the road markings aren't British, the car's Satnav reads in miles but its speedometer is in KM/H (it was filmed in Ireland and the Czech Republic). And it is obvious that the vehicle isn't always moving when it is meant to be (bear in mind most of the plot takes place in the car). I didn't know what to expect from this suspense thriller, it is quite unique and I was fairly happy with it though I wouldn't watch it again.
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 - ?
Lo sapevi?
- QuizOn 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.
- BlooperAt one point in the film, you are shown the sat-nav and it says that they are precisely 25 miles away. 15 minutes later, the sat-nav is shown again, and they are still exactly 25 miles away, despite having not stopped driving during that time.
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 264.792 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 20min(80 min)
- Colore
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