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The Red Riding Trilogy: 1974

Original title: Red Riding: The Year of Our Lord 1974
  • TV Movie
  • 2009
  • Tous publics avec avertissement
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
15K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
992
801
The Red Riding Trilogy: 1974 (2009)
Centered on a rookie journalist, Eddie Dunford (Andrew Garfield), whose investigation of a series of child abductions and murders leads him to suspect that there's a terrifying connection between the perpetrators and the upper echelons of Yorkshire power.
Play trailer1:02
12 Videos
24 Photos
CrimeDramaHistory

Rookie journalist Eddie Dunford is determined to find the truth in an increasingly complex maze of lies and deceit surrounding the police investigation into a series of child abductions.Rookie journalist Eddie Dunford is determined to find the truth in an increasingly complex maze of lies and deceit surrounding the police investigation into a series of child abductions.Rookie journalist Eddie Dunford is determined to find the truth in an increasingly complex maze of lies and deceit surrounding the police investigation into a series of child abductions.

  • Director
    • Julian Jarrold
  • Writers
    • Tony Grisoni
    • David Peace
  • Stars
    • Andrew Garfield
    • David Morrissey
    • John Henshaw
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    15K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    992
    801
    • Director
      • Julian Jarrold
    • Writers
      • Tony Grisoni
      • David Peace
    • Stars
      • Andrew Garfield
      • David Morrissey
      • John Henshaw
    • 63User reviews
    • 96Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 3 BAFTA Awards
      • 5 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos12

    Red Riding: 1974
    Trailer 1:02
    Red Riding: 1974
    The Red Riding Trilogy
    Trailer 2:27
    The Red Riding Trilogy
    The Red Riding Trilogy
    Trailer 2:27
    The Red Riding Trilogy
    Red Riding: 1974
    Clip 1:12
    Red Riding: 1974
    Red Riding: 1974
    Clip 1:18
    Red Riding: 1974
    Red Riding: 1974
    Clip 1:05
    Red Riding: 1974
    Red Riding: 1974
    Clip 1:42
    Red Riding: 1974

    Photos24

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    Top cast38

    Edit
    Andrew Garfield
    Andrew Garfield
    • Eddie Dunford
    David Morrissey
    David Morrissey
    • Maurice Jobson
    John Henshaw
    John Henshaw
    • Bill Hadley
    Anthony Flanagan
    Anthony Flanagan
    • Barry Gannon
    Warren Clarke
    Warren Clarke
    • Bill Molloy
    Jennifer Hennessy
    Jennifer Hennessy
    • Mrs Kemplay
    Mary Jo Randle
    Mary Jo Randle
    • Eddie's Mum
    Rachel Jane Allen
    • Susan Dunford
    Rita May
    Rita May
    • Aunty Win
    Graham Walker
    • Uncle Eric
    Berwick Kaler
    Berwick Kaler
    • George Greaves
    Katherine Vasey
    • Steph
    • (as Katharine Vasey)
    Danny Cunningham
    • Gaz
    Michelle Dockery
    Michelle Dockery
    • Kathryn Tyler
    Robert Sheehan
    Robert Sheehan
    • BJ
    Margaret Blakemore
    • Rochdale's Neighbour
    Eddie Marsan
    Eddie Marsan
    • Jack Whitehead
    Daniel Mays
    Daniel Mays
    • Michael Myshkin
    • Director
      • Julian Jarrold
    • Writers
      • Tony Grisoni
      • David Peace
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews63

    6.915.2K
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    Featured reviews

    7inacan-90-894261

    Christ that was bleak

    The acting superb, the setting haunting and the tale of corruption well told. But damn this movie was depressing. Hats off to Andrew Garfield who puts on a bafta level performance while Ensuring tortures await him. I recommend but watch it with somebody so you don't get haunted and sorrowful alone.
    6Catocala

    Compelling story, but told with flaws

    I was doubting between a 6 or 7, because it is a solid movie with pretty good acting. However, the complex story of corruption it tries to tell, is told a bit too disorderly to be easily followed at times.

    Without spoilers: this movie has a grim atmosphere about conspiracy and corruption among people in a position of power. Andrew Garfield plays a reporter who tries to uncover some of the awefulness, but he has his own demons, which the movie leaves unexplored almost entirely. Why bring that up then? Same goes for some "love" scenes, which seemed forced/irrelevant to the plot, or at the very least redundant. Another let down was that everybody "bad" had zero redeeming qualities, making them kind of caricaturistic.

    I think the movie was successful in creating a captivating vibe, but it had quite a few plotholes/unanswered questions which together with the chaotic disquisition failed to bring it to a good enough movie to want to recommend it to others unless they have nothing better to watch.
    6Simon_Says_Movies

    Everyone has demons...

    Don't let the 1974 fool you, this year merely indicates the time period in which this British crime drama is set. The first film of a trilogy, 1974 sets up the desolate Yorkshire town which has again been struck with the grizzly and brutal murder of a young girl. This makes her merely an entry in string of disappearances over the previous decade. Despite atmosphere thick enough to ski upon, this movie fails to offer much compelling and is a tough slog not only due to its grimy nature but also its convoluted narrative.

    What begin with an investigation into a young girls disappearance, gives way to a murder, then to police corruption and bureaucratic cover-ups. Dropped squarely in the center is amateur journalist Eddie Dunford (Andre Garfield) whose combination of determination and coyness take him down a dark road. I will not even delve into the plot more than I have, as not only is it too complex to adequately lay out, but I am still trying to sort it all out myself.

    While the performances are uniformly good, the characters are thoroughly unlikeable. Even our protagonist Eddie has a smarmy quality to him that makes it difficult for a real connection to be achieved. This is so with much of Red Riding: 1974, we are kept at arms length; never able to engage with any of the players nor the grief and depression the town is experiencing. Such is amplified further by the engrained ugliness at every corner which inhibits any discernible depth; everyone has demons, everything is wrong and nobody is happy. Thus, the instances of violence are muted by the grimness by which it is surrounded.

    If you are really hankering for a dark tragic crime film starring Andrew Garfield, check out Boy-A; a supremely better and more resonant film. The highlight of the film for me was seeing Sean Bean again. His presence in films is an iota of what it should be and he gives one of the films best performances. Not having yet seen the following two instalments of this series I can not say with confidence this film will not be elevated when viewed in context. At this point, what I can say with confidence is Red Riding: 1974 was not an enjoyable experience. Perhaps, then, it was a success in its own right.

    Read all my reviews simonsaysmovies.blogspot.com
    bob the moo

    Strong on atmosphere and tone but the story-telling and characters feel rushed and lose impact as a result

    The Red Riding films have been sitting recorded waiting for me to watch them for quite some time. I set the recorder at the time for them because of the praise they received and the number of well-known names in there, other than this I didn't know too much and didn't know the books they are based off. The plot sees a young journalist returning to northern England and picking up a story about a murdered girl who was found with swan wings sewn onto her back. The police seem to be content with the usual suspects but when he starts digging deeper he finds a world of police corruption and cronyisms, putting him in danger.

    When I watched this film I tried to put the hype and critical acclaim out of my mind and just come to it as I found it. As such I was not overly impressed by it but did enjoy it for the grimness that it does well. The film does have an engaging sense of foreboding and toughness that suits the material and it delivers this aspect of it very well in terms of tone, locations, costumes and general feel. However, this is ultimately a story, not just atmosphere, and I was surprised that the film didn't deliver on this particularly well. I've never read the books but I do presume they are longer than this 90 minute film represents and I presume this because it seems like a lot is rammed in here and nothing really has much time to develop or grow before we're onto the next thing. This reduced the impact of the story for me because it did feel like I was being rushed through it rather than being allowed to move around within it. It isn't helped by it more or less going where you think it will go almost by virtue of how quickly it hands you everything, thus focusing on mind on certain characters and scenarios rather than allowing the bigger world to be a thing.

    The cast do well even though so many of them seem to have a few minutes each. Garfield is solid in the lead even if he seems to spent a lot of the time just being beaten. Hall works well next to him but outside of these two the cast seem too deep in faces and not deep enough in screen time for them. So people like Marsan, Mercer, Bean, Mullan etc really don't feel like they are well used even if they are good in their moments. Everyone has a good accent but it is worth saying that to those not familiar with it, it may be difficult to always pick up what is being said – this is not just down to the thickness of the accents but the sound engineering here has lots of background noise and, for the sake of atmosphere I guess, seems to have lots of mumbling.

    This first film has enough good about it for me to check out the second in the trilogy, but I hope it does better with the actual story telling part. In this case atmosphere and time/place was very well done but the story and characters felt rushed and the impact of the tale was lessened due to this, which is a shame.
    8miloc

    The landscape of the soul

    It is 1974. Our protagonist, young and hip, has shaggy hair, sideburns, and a slick leather jacket. Asked about his suit at his father's funeral: "Carnaby's," he admits. "Oh, ay," says one mourner, with a hint of added dismay.

    He's been in the South, you see. American viewers with a limited perception of the UK may, at the beginning of Channel Four's remarkable Red Riding trilogy, have little understanding of what difference that makes. They will soon learn. "This is the North," says one of the terrifying policemen who populate this film's haunted Yorkshire. "Where we do what we want."

    Red Riding: In the Year of Our Lord 1974 begins under lowering skies. A girl of ten has vanished. A young and callow crime reporter Eddie Dunford (Andrew Garfield) gets clued in by a conspiracy-minded colleague that the vanishing resembles two previous cases within a close range. Eager to make his mark, he senses opportunity, and in excitement at the idea that a serial murderer might be at work he blurts, "Let's keep our fingers crossed."

    As the story deepens, however, so does the character. The grief of the victims' families needles him; he begins a relationship with one girl's heartsick mother (Rebecca Hall). Picking apart the story that emerges, he is drawn into the orbit of a wealthy developer (Sean Bean) with an unwholesome degree of influence in Yorkshire and its power structure. The perpetrator of the crimes is unquestionably psychopathic -- he stitches "angels' wings" into his victims' backs. Yet, in the film's most disturbing element, the police department itself functions as a psychopath, achieving its desires through brutalization, torture, and even possibly murder.

    Caught in a conscienceless land, Dunford's own conscience, in reaction, grows, and what began as mere ambition transforms into a perhaps doomed lust for the truth. If this sounds like a conventional trope of the genre, it is -- plotwise much of what happens here is conventional. But Red Riding makes the narrative fresh by treating it not just as a story of crime and justice but as one of the soul, and its environs. When Dunford begs the mother to escape with him from the prevailing madness, he tells her, "In the South the sun shines." What he's telling her is that the sickness is inseparable from the place. Yorkshire is filmed (with gorgeous gloom) as a cloud-shrouded ruin, an economic disaster site in which financial power trumps morality. Starting out fresh-faced, vain, and cocky, Dunford will, by the end of his journey, be considerably the worse for wear. Looking at the landscape around him, we think, how could he not be?

    Red Riding 1974 is not flawless -- some scenes feel repetitive and the bleakness can be overwhelming. But it compels you forward, it stays with you, and it genuinely rattles the spirit. This is not easy viewing, but in approaching the continuing saga, it promises hard- earned reward.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The television trailers for all three Red Riding episodes bore the tagline "Based on True Events." Nevertheless, none of the characters, nor the murder victims, bear the names of real people and only a few have obvious real-life models.
    • Goofs
      Sean Bean's Jensen is plated 'P.' This denotes 1975 and 1976, not 1974, as new plates were issued every August. Andrew Garfield's Vauxhall Viva, registered in August 1974 with 'M' plates, would therefore have been brand new.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Eddie Dunford: Little girl goes missing, the pack salivates. If it bleeds it leads, right? Eddie Dunford, crime correspondent, back home to take the north. Business first. Dad won't mind waiting.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Big Fat Quiz of the Year (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      In the Court of the Crimson King
      Written by Ian McDonald and Peter Sinfield

      Performed by King Crimson

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    FAQ1

    • Are there subtitles in English to compensate for difficult accents Northern England?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 11, 2009 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Channel 4 (United Kingdom)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Red Riding: The Year of Our Lord 1974
    • Filming locations
      • Ferrybridge, Kirkhaw Lane, Knottingley, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, England, UK(Ferrybridge Power Station)
    • Production companies
      • Channel 4
      • Screen Yorkshire
      • Lipsync Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $9,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $151,644
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $14,526
      • Feb 7, 2010
    • Gross worldwide
      • $151,644
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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