MovieChat Forums > The Road (2012) Discussion > My Personal Review of 'The Road' (12-01-...

My Personal Review of 'The Road' (12-01-11)


I do not know why there is no option to review this film yet, so I am posting it here first.

"The Road" tells about a mysterious series of grisly murders that occurred on a lonely stretch of road. The story was told in three parts, spanning three decades. It starts in 2008 when three youngsters were terrorized by a driver-less red car one night when they happened to pick this particular road on which to practice driving. The story shifts to 1998, when two sisters (one of them Rhian Ramos) whose red car overheated on that same road, only to fall victims to a quiet but mentally-disturbed teenage boy (Alden Richards) who had unspeakable violent tendencies. Finally, the story shifts further back to 1988, when a child is tormented by his virago of a mother (Carmina Villaroel). In the end, the story returns to 2008, when everything was tied up together.

I must say that the opening credits alone was very effective to establish the creepy atmosphere of the whole film. The music (by Swedish composer Johan Soderqvist) was so chilling as the camera follows the spooky shadows that line the titular road. The three parts all had a different kind of horror to show. In the first one, the horror is supernatural. I found the first one the best as we can really feel how helpless the three youngsters were against the vengeful ghost. The second part was scary in a more physical manner, since we can see that the antagonist was an actual psychotic killer. While the third part is more of psychological horror as we see how a little boy's delicate psyche was slowly being corrupted by his parents.

As with most horror flicks, there will be plot holes, some big ones, in fact. But I say, do not think too much, let the eerie atmosphere envelop you as director Yam Laranas tells you his stories with his well-placed camera angles and effects, as well at the amazing lighting of scenes. While the more senior actors like Carmina Villaroel, Marvin Agustin, TJ Trinidad and Rhian Ramos expectedly did well in their respective roles, I was most impressed with the talent of Renz Valerio, the child actor who played the boy in the third part. He was able to convey his gradual descent into madness so well, keeping that last chapter interesting. It is very good to learn that Yam Laranas has once again succeeded to gain the attention of the international market with this release, following his "Sigaw" (2004) which was given the Hollywood treatment as "The Echo" in 2008. "The Road" is a definite must-watch for horror movie fans!

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I hope you don't mind, but I have a quick question since you saw the movie. I run a web site that catalogs which movies have post credits scenes, a.k.a Stingers, and was hoping you would be able to help me out and let me know if there are in fact any scenes that occur either after or even during the credits?

I would be more than happy to personally thank you on this entries page and link to your website if you can help me out.

Thanks!

http://AfterCredits.com

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Don't know if you have watched it by no, but in answer to your question, no there is nothing during or after the credits.

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Part 3 is by far the best segment, and yes, Renz Valerio is quite the little actor.

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@OP thanks for taking the time to write a good review. I am watching this tonight and can't wait to see it.


On a side note, I would love to hear the "plot holes". I am watching this tonight and I'm hoping to put to sleep some of these because every single time I see the word "plot hole" on imdb 99.9% of the time they are not plot holes.

Most of the time plot hole on IMDB translates to, "something I missed or didn't understand". Another common misuse would be something that was meant to be up for interpretation by the viewer. Not everything should be spoon fed to the viewer and interpreted endings have some of the best in horror,sci-fi, and film in general IMO.

To those who don't know, plot holes are unknown(to the writer/director/editors)* inconsistencies or errors in the plot of the movie. They are not bad decisions made by characters. In life or death situation people are not always going to make perfect and correct decisions, whats the saying ,hindsight is always 20/20.

Also, plot holes also have nothing to do with the world we live in, they have to do with the plot of the movie and the world the characters live in.



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"The Road" was a pleasant surprise.
I had no idea what to expect going in, and when the plot started to twist and turn I kept watching just to see if they could really pull it all together in the end. An that they did!
Near the end I realized I had just been tricked into watching the biography of a serial killer, and now I felt sorry for the poor guy.

As for plot holes, I think they were all filled-in. Even down to things you might not notice, like the shallow grave with Joy's fresh body lying on top of older remains. Later we learn that Carmela's body was also buried there.
Also the ghosts were shown to be real because the police rescued one victim and she described the experiences of the ghost instead of her own.
So there really isn't much left to be confused about.

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