Grief has rarely seemed so ordinary.
Reservation Road (2007)
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Reviews Counted:106
Fresh:39
Rotten:67
Average Rating:5.2/10
Consensus: While the performances are fine, Reservation Road quickly adopts an excessively maudlin tone along with highly improbable plot turns.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for language and some disturbing images.
Runtime: 1 hr 43 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Oct 19, 2007 Limited
Synopsis: A wrenching drama based on the novel by John Burhnam Schwartz, RESERVATION ROAD is the story of two men whose lives are torn apart by a tragic accident. Ethan Learner (Joaquin Phoenix) and his wife... A wrenching drama based on the novel by John Burhnam Schwartz, RESERVATION ROAD is the story of two men whose lives are torn apart by a tragic accident. Ethan Learner (Joaquin Phoenix) and his wife Emma (Jennifer Connelly) are consumed with grief after their son Josh (Sean Curley) is struck by a hit and run driver. The man behind the wheel was Dwight Arno (Mark Ruffalo), a divorcee who was racing to get his own son back in time in accordance with a custody agreement. A lawyer himself, Dwight is all too familiar with the consequences of his actions. Unsure of what to do, he panics, then conceals his car in his garage. Lucky for him, the police can't find any leads, and the case quickly turns cold. Time passes, and Emma wants her family to heal and get on with their lives, but Ethan has become consumed with finding his son's killer. In a bizarre coincidence, he shows up at Dwight's office seeking legal advice about how to catch and prosecute the perpetrator. The guilt is eating away at Dwight, and he makes a plan to turn himself in, but not before he has a proper goodbye with his own son. When an image suddenly jars Ethan's memory of the accident, he begins to piece things together, causing him to quickly seek his retaliation, which results in a gripping and emotional stand-off. Joaquin Phoenix and Jennifer Connelly are excellent as the grieving parents, both offering a painfully realistic portrait of grief. Mark Ruffalo is equally impressive as the tormented and conflicted Dwight. While the film works nicely as both thriller and family drama, it at times has an emotional intensity that can be almost difficult to watch. Yet, all tear-jerking elements aside, director Terry George has crafted a smart and complex tale of loss, and the long, difficult road to healing. [More]
Starring: Joaquin Phoenix, Mark Ruffalo, Jennifer Connelly, Mira Sorvino
Starring: Joaquin Phoenix, Mark Ruffalo, Jennifer Connelly, Mira Sorvino, Elle Fanning
Director: Terry George
Director: Terry George
Screenwriter: John Burnham Schwartz, Terry George
Producer: Nick Wechsler, A. Kitman Ho
Composer: Mark Isham
Studio: Focus Features
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Reviews for Reservation Road
But the family's suffering in Reservation Road is nothing compared to what the audience is put through in this painfully contrived drama.
This could have been a crackerjack paranoid thriller of the Fritz Lang school, but director Terry George is more interested in making a prestige picture, full of yelling and crying.
A flawed presentation of compelling material and intriguing characters.
[Mark] Ruffalo ... is the only thing that saves Reservation Road from being utterly forgettable.
It starts with devastation and closes, after a few reels of narrative dithering, with a climax of hairpin emotional turns and indisputable power.
With a cast like Phoenix, Ruffalo and Connelly, you know you’re in for, at the very least, some compelling performances -- a fact that thankfully saves Reservation Road from utter banality.
Reservation Road is built as a thriller, but a thriller of the emotions.
It makes for moments of suspense and drama, but the over-elaboration produces an exhaustion level that dissipates engagement with the moral question being mined for meaning.
Adds nothing new or fresh to our understanding of how individuals cope with the sudden and tragic death of a loved one.
Has the makings of a seething human drama yet somehow fails to move us in the manner everybody involved clearly intended.
Even more than its lame dissection of white grief, Road has no moments of actual tension for a film that has been called, in many publications, a thriller.
Such TV-movie style set-ups may have worked better in the original novel, but on the silver screen play as an eye-rolling chore.
What starts as a sensitive, involving drama about grief and guilt annoyingly degenerates into a trite thriller.
Reservation Road is a car wreck of a movie about an auto accident. It's designed as a psychological suspense film, but every character development and plot twist can be seen far in advance. It's a mystery with no guessing.
The tears and the blame mix uneasily in Reservation Road, a grim, mechanistic thriller about death and suffering, life and healing among the civilized.
It's the conflict between these two fathers that makes this worth a look.
Conventional in its storytelling and far less effective for the effort, but [Ruffalo's] performance often overshadows his Oscar-nominated castmates.
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