Red State (18)

Film image

The ViewLeeds Review

StarStarStarNo StarNo Star
Review byMatthew Turner28/09/2011

Three out of Five stars
Running time: 89 mins

Impressively shot and superbly acted, this is an intriguing change of direction from Kevin Smith that's interesting enough to scrape a pass, even if it doesn't always work.

What's it all about?
Written and directed by Kevin Smith, Red State stars Michael Angarano, Kyle Gallner and Nicholas Braun as Travis, Jarod and Billy-Ray, three horny Middle-America teenagers who attempt to meet up with a 38 year old woman (Melissa Leo) for group sex after finding her through a phone application (beware the evils of phone apps, kids!). However, the woman turns out to be bait and the three teens find themselves caged and wheeled before the baying members of a religious cult, where fundamentalist preacher Abin Cooper (Michael Parks) is preparing to execute them.

Fortunately, help is at hand in the form of ATF agent Joseph Keenan (John Goodman) and things quickly develop into a Waco-style stand-off as Keenan's team surround the cult's isolated church. However, Keenan's hand is forced by a trigger-happy Sheriff (Stephen Root) and he's soon under pressure to contain the situation by whatever means necessary.

The Good
The performances are superb, particularly the always excellent Leo and Goodman, while Michael Parks is suitably disturbing as Cooper without descending too far into caricature. Similarly, Angarano is good as the least up-for-group-sex member of the trio, though it's hard to care all that much about Gallner and Braun.

The most intriguing thing about Red State is its daring central shift from torture porn-style horror to thriller and then political satire. Smith just about makes this work, even if some of the elements are stronger than others; at any rate, he proves an adept director of shoot-outs and some of the camerawork is more risky and experimental than we're used to seeing in his films, most notably during an extended and effective close-up sequence involving Angarano's character.

The Bad
The main problem with the script is that the dialogue is much stronger in the character interaction (particularly between the three teens and between Goodman and his men) than it is when it comes to the sermonising or the political satire (there's a supposedly pointed coda that doesn't really work). Similarly, though the religious fanaticism is handled in an interesting way, the Waco-style conspiracy angle seems like overly familiar territory and lacks the dramatic impact it's supposed to have.

Worth seeing?
Red State is an entertaining, well acted horror-slash-thriller that marks an intriguing change of direction for writer-director Kevin Smith. Worth seeing.

Film Trailer

Red State (18)
Be the first to review Red State...
image
01 Focus (15)

Will Smith, Margot Robbie, Rodrigo Santoro

image
02 Selma (12A)

David Oyelowo, Carmen Ejogo, Tim Roth

image
03 Far from the Madding Crowd (tbc)

Carey Mulligan, Tom Sturridge, Matthias Schoenaert...

image
04 Chappie (tbc)

Hugh Jackman, Sigourney Weaver, Sharlto Copley

image
05 A Most Violent Year (15)

Oscar Isaac, Jessica Chastain, David Oyelowo

Content updated: 28/10/2015 16:26

Latest Film Reviews

Film Blog

Urban Pundit

Keep up to date with everything in film and cinema at Urban Pundit, the exciting new blog.

Film of the Week

The Conjuring (15)

Hugely enjoyable, genuinely scary horror flick that provides a welcome throwback to classic 1970s chillers, thanks to impeccable production design, a superb script, powerfully atmospheric direction, intense set-pieces and terrific performances.

Latest Close Up

Noah Baumbach Interview

The Frances Ha director discusses co-writing the script with Greta Gerwig, shooting against the backdrop of New York and the real lives of the city’s people, Greta Gerwig’s performance, the music in the film and the picture's visual style.