Red Road Movie Review
Red Road Review

"Red Road" Overview

Rating: NR
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Andrea ArnoldProducer : Carrie Comerford,Gillian Berrie,Sisse Graum Jorgensen
Screenwiter : Andrea Arnold
Starring : Kate Dickie,Tony Curran,Martin Compton,Natalie Press
It's a sign of the times that in a film like Andrea Arnold's Red Road, the
presence of omnipresent CCTV cameras which spiderweb Glasgow, are controlled
from a central command called City Eye, and can peek into practically every
corner of the city, is barely remarked upon. This is not a film that is going
to waste time maundering about the implications of ubiquity of surveillance in
21st century life (especially in the British Isles, which has a particular
fetish for filming their citizens at all times); instead it's just one more sad
detail of the characters' shabby, limited lives in a shabby and limited world.
Technology without progress, knowledge without wisdom, security without safety.
For all the watching going on in Red Road, there is precious little safety --
in fact one of the tropes that writer/director Arnold (in an extremely
impressive feature debut) insistently returns to is the resolute unsafety of
these people's worlds, no matter how much technology surrounds them. Arnold's
protagonist is Jackie (the fantastically affecting Kate Dickie) a bracingly
cold and shut-off woman who works at the City Eye, controlling a bank of
cameras with a joystick, occasionally zooming on something menacing or just
plain out of the ordinary, watching. Her contact with the human race is limited
practically to these TV screens, having shut herself off from her parents and
seemingly keeping no friends; the only relationship with any regularity we see
is a functional and depressing affair carried on with a married man
occasionally in his van. Arnold sinks viewers deep into Jackie's self-induced
loneliness, letting out only the faintest hints about what tragedy has pushed
her into this suffocating state (Was there a husband? A daughter?), before
Jackie sees a man's face on the camera one day which she remembers from her
past.
At this point, Red Road shifts swiftly from a coolly appreciative voyeur's take
on a voyeur's life to something more unnerving. Jackie starts obsessively
tracking the movements of the man, all of which we know about him is that he's
recently out of jail (where he may have been put for a crime that had something
to do with Jackie) and now living in a grim towering block of council flats.
Quickly, Jackie moves from watching him on camera to following him in person,
quietly circling this prey who seems dangerous enough to be well left alone.
With an unwavering precision, Arnold tracks Jackie's steady and mystifying
progress toward the man -- played with a dangerous bonhomie by Tony Curran --
in a quiet but none-too-stealthy manner, as though seeking her own annihilation
at the hands of this ginger-haired stranger with a secret to unleash, and maybe
even set her free.
Though possessed of a certain modern lo-fi thriller mindset, with its stark
mise-en-scene and handheld camerawork, Arnold's work has a thrilling rawness
that's really more akin to Ken Loach than Hitchcock (one of her many superb
stars, the puckish Martin Compston, starred in Loach's Sweet Sixteen). Red Road
is a film so dedicated to its workaday Glaswegian roots that the English
subtitles which appear seem at first to be a joke (could their accents be that
thick?) are quickly clung to like a life line (yes, indeed they are that
thick). There's no obvious, touristy totems of Scottishness; but for the
accents, the average outsider could believe the action to be taking place in
any working-class British Isles city. Perhaps that's the point: the eyes in the
sky, bleak housing towers and people clinging roughly to each other for no good
reason but to stave away the loneliness; this could be anywhere and so feels
like nowhere. It's the people who are specific and real -- punishingly so.
She's on a road to somewhere... maybe Edinburgh!
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti





