Home     > Film     > Movie reviews     > Red State film review

Music_news_and_reviews.html

TV

Art

© 2009 Tuppence Magazine. All Rights Reserved.

Tuppence entertainment magazine Sitemap

Privacy Policy

Tuppence Magazine UK is an entertainment, news & reviews website that delivers my take and your take on stuff about music news, film release dates & trailers, television, books, computer games, food & drink, politics, theatre, comedy, art and fashion. Send in your reviews.

Red State

Red State
In a complete departure from films like Clerks and Mall Rats, Kevin Smith has created Red State, a psycho-candy, religious terrorist hostage flick of mind bending proportions. It's slick, unconventional and unexpected in the extreme, but it will split the Smith fans down the middle with some following the twist with warped appreciation and others feeling slightly disappointed.


The plot revolves around a group of kids in small town America that head off to a trailer out in the middle of nowhere to meet a women one of them had found online for an odd group thex thing. However, when they pass out (Wolf Creek style) and wake up in a fundamentalist religious group's church just as a gay man is being "judged" horrifically, their sordid liaison turns into a nightmare of epic proportions. The situation turns into a hostage shoot-out as John Goodman and his government agency team turn up to sort the mess out.

 

It's great to see John Goodman back on the big screen, and he plays the part of the agent team leader with typical big man presence. Michael Parks adds convincing conviction in the part of religious zealot, Abin Cooper, and supporting roles by Melissa Leo as the aged trailer park siren come religious nut, Sarah Cooper, and Kerry Bishé as her wavering daughter Cheyenne make the film work as well as it does.


However, the crux of it all comes down to how well you take a complete departure from conventional movie plot development. There's something refreshing about a film that does things differently and does it well, but if you're the kind of person that needs to see a scrap through to its completion then you're probably not going to get behind what Kevin Smith has done with Red State. What's hard to argue with though, no matter what you think of the culmination of the film, is the judicious way the film looks at the debates that underly the themes of the film, including morality, religion, judgement and retribution.


Red State film review: 4/5

Film home


  ---------------------------


Movie news


  ---------------------------


Movie reviews


  ---------------------------


DVD & Blu-ray
    news


  ---------------------------


DVD & blu-ray
    reviews


Follow Tuppence Magazine on:






Twitter






Facebookhttp://twitter.com/tuppencemaghttp://www.facebook.com/pages/Tuppence-Magazine/418499815297?ref=search&sid=100000637388035.3163739187..1shapeimage_19_link_0shapeimage_19_link_1
Entertainment news