FILM REVIEWS
CAPSULE REVIEWS
INTERVIEWS
FILM BLOG
ARTICLES
TECHNOLOGY
SUBSCRIBE

« Dear John | Main | Night of the Living Dead (Classic Film Pick) »

Red Riding Trilogy

Red-riding-trilogy-afm Precariously ambitious in its scope, the "Red Riding Trilogy" consists of three interconnected films--directed by three different directors--about a series of child abductions in Northern England over a nine-year period. The trio of films is based on David Peace's crime saga, loosely based on the true-life case of the Yorkshire Ripper (Peter Sutcliffe was convicted of murdering 13 women between 1975 and 1980). Director Julian Harold draws the long straw with "Red Riding - 1974" in which a young hotshot Yorkshire newspaper reporter named Eddie Dunford (well played by Andrew Garfield) sees a pattern in the disappearances of children in the area. A web of deception connects local business maverick John Dawson (Sean Bean) with the Yorkshire police department, who have no patience for Eddie's sixth sense about the murder of a young girl. "Red Riding - 1980" (directed by James Marsh) shifts narrative gears considerably to focus on a full-scale investigation into the Yorkshire Police Department's mishandling of the ongoing case. Paddy Considine gives his strongest performance to date as lead investigator Peter Hunter, whose personal life implodes under the corruption that he valiantly attempts to expose. Sadly, the triad ends with a whimper rather than the iconic bang promised by the gut-wrenching climax of the first film. Arnand Tucker ("Leap Year") draws the short straw with "Red Riding - 1983," a comparatively sloppy final chapter that tries too hard to put a bright bow on a determinedly downbeat story. A surprise protagonist, a surprise victim, and a surprisingly miscalculated narrative arc add up to a closing film that all but ruins the lasting effect of the previous two installments. If I had it to do over again, I'd see only the first two films and call it a day. One thing's for sure. You'll never want to go to Yorkshire after seeing this respectable but flawed experiment.

(IFC FIlms) Not Rated. 305 mins. (B-) (Three Stars - out of five/no halves)

Posted by Cole Smithey on February 5, 2010 in Crime Drama | Permalink
Save to del.icio.us | Digg This

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c2b7953ef0128776ae0c0970c

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Red Riding Trilogy :

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Post a comment