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Red Riding: In the Year of Our Lord 1983 (2009)

Crime | 100 minutes
3,32 152 votes

Genre: Crime / Thriller

Duration: 100 minuten

Country: United Kingdom

Directed by: Anand Tucker

Stars: David Morrissey, Mark Addy and Sean Bean

IMDb score: 7,1 (9.431)

Releasedate: 28 February 2009

Red Riding: In the Year of Our Lord 1983 plot

"Nine years on, another Morley child has gone missing on her way home from school."

Nine years later, another child disappears on the way to school. Detective Chief Maurice Jobson is forced to recall the similar case involving little Clare Kemplay in 1974. Resigned attorney John Piggott steps in because he's convinced mistakes have been made in that particular case.

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Full Cast & Crew

Actors and actresses

Maurice Jobson

Judith Jobson

Jim Prentice

Dick Alderman

Harold Angus

Bill Molloy

John Dawson

Bob Craven

Tommy Douglas

Reviews & comments


avatar

Guest

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avatar van kos

kos

  • 46685 messages
  • 8843 votes

A nice conclusion to this Red Riding trilogy that, apart from the pleasant atmosphere of the other parts, also puts some puzzle pieces in the right place, which is nice.

Not that the story is suddenly completely great, there are still a lot of loose ends or implausibilities that are covered up under the motto of the film ' this is the North, where we do what we want', but oh well.

As mentioned, the atmosphere is by far the best thing about the films, a beautiful bleak depiction of Yorkshire in the 70s/80s

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van mrklm

mrklm

  • 11374 messages
  • 9897 votes

The final part of the trilogy has a less interesting central character in John Piggott [Mark Addy] and the screenplay by Tony Grisoni also has to tie up all the loose ends, which means that director Anand Tucker does not succeed in maintaining the suspense of the first two parts. The story places the events of the first part in a different perspective and provides us with new information that ultimately leads to a not very interesting denouement. Robert Sheehan is again excellent as key witness BJ and Daniel Mays impresses as the retarded main suspect who barely understands what is happening to him. But Sean Bean is much less scary here than in part 1, which confirms that the end of the trilogy is clearly the weakest part.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van AngelicV

AngelicV

  • 901 messages
  • 1097 votes

1234567, all good children go to heaven. 3rd part and strong ending in which back and forward shots set the tone. The more complex plot comes to light linked to the abuse of power by the top figures of civil institutions, for their finances and their personal deviations. High Dutroux content... Morrissey and Sheehan convincing in their role. Made on the basis of true facts make this trilogy even more repulsive. Best viewing trilogy, everything in a row... take 5 1/2 hours for this.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original