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The Road Poster

The Road

In a moment the world changed forever.
2009 | 111m | English

(264886 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

A father and his son walk alone through burned America. Nothing moves in the ravaged landscape save the ash on the wind and water. It is cold enough to crack stones, and, when the snow falls it is gray. The sky is dark. Their destination is the warmer south, although they don't know what, if anything, awaits them there.
Release Date: Nov 25, 2009
Director: John Hillcoat
Writer: Cormac McCarthy, Joe Penhall
Genres: Adventure, Drama
Keywords based on novel or book, post-apocalyptic future, dystopia, paternity, abandoned house, survival, on the road, duringcreditsstinger, starvation, bomb shelter, father son relationship, cannibalism
Production Companies 2929 Productions, Dimension Films, Nick Wechsler Productions, Chockstone Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $27,635,305
Budget: $32,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Viggo Mortensen Father
Kodi Smit-McPhee Boy
Charlize Theron Mother
Robert Duvall Old Man - Eli
Guy Pearce Veteran
Molly Parker Friendly Woman
Michael Kenneth Williams The Thief
Garret Dillahunt Gang Member
Bob Jennings Bearded Man
Buddy Sosthand Archer
Agnes Herrmann Archer's Woman
Kirk Brown Bearded Face
Jack Erdie Bearded Man #2
David August Lindauer Man On Mattress
Gina Preciado Well Fed Woman
Wilson Moore Boy running from cannibals
Mark Tierno Baby Eater
Name Job
Cormac McCarthy Novel
Javier Aguirresarobe Director of Photography
John W. Iwanonkiw Additional Set Dresser
Joe Penhall Screenplay
Leslie Shatz Sound Designer
Dan Kneece Steadicam Operator
John Hillcoat Director
Francine Maisler Casting
Barbara Harris ADR Voice Casting
James Plannette Gaffer
Anne Bergstedt Jordanova Stand In
Jeremy Fry Stunts
Gretchen Treser Stand In
Robert Stromberg Visual Effects Design Consultant
Goro Koyama Foley Artist
Nick Cave Original Music Composer
Warren Ellis Original Music Composer
Margot Wilson Costume Design
Toni G Makeup Department Head
Chris Kennedy Production Design
Chris Laurence Musician
Jon Gregory Editor
Gershon Ginsburg Art Direction
Robert Greenfield Set Decoration
Enzo Angileri Hairstylist
Jennifer Santiago Key Hair Stylist
Sherri Simmons Makeup Artist
Todd Beckett Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Chris David Sound Re-Recording Mixer
David Esparza Sound Effects Editor
A. Josh Reinhardt Sound Effects Editor
Edward Tise Sound Mixer
Robert Jackson Supervising Sound Editor
Geordie Sheffer Hair Department Head
Nancy Keslar Additional Hairstylist
Brett Kennedy Additional Set Dresser
Donald Lee Rager Additional Set Dresser
Amy K. Lamb Art Department Coordinator
Jesse Best Art Department Production Assistant
Scott Alplanalp Carpenter
Pete Frantz Carpenter
Ray Lovasz Carpenter
Dan Bothe Carpenter
Daragh Byrne Carpenter
Norm Johnson Carpenter
Joseph A. Manni Carpenter
Scott G. Smith Carpenter
Lance R. Walters Carpenter
Mark Zang Carpenter
Daniel McGuinness Carpenter
Jim Heastings Carpenter
Michael J. McKee Carpenter
Hugh Marchant Concept Artist
Charles Miller Construction Coordinator
Joseph Waterkotte Construction Coordinator
John C. Cameron First Assistant Property Master
Paul Blanchard Leadman
Chandler Vinar Leadman
Kevin C. Brady Leadman
Keith Walters Property Master
Ellen Lepinski Scenic Artist
Renee Prince Scenic Artist
Colin Baxter Scenic Artist
Julie Chill Scenic Artist
Edward Wayne Parrish Jr. Scenic Artist
Alexei Plotnicov Scenic Artist
Christopher St. Pierre Scenic Artist
Edgar Um Bucholtz Scenic Artist
Mary O'Brien Scenic Artist
Vincent Borrelli Scenic Artist
Victoria Ruskin Set Designer
Jason A. Pollock Set Dresser
Patcharee Blanchard Set Dresser
Jon Graubarth Set Dresser
Whitney Guerra Jr. Set Dresser
Ella Jackson Set Dresser
Adam Johnson Set Dresser
Jennifer Lagura Set Dresser
Joe Rynearson Set Dresser
David Lee Toth Set Dresser
Philip Blackburn Set Dresser
Janet Kusnick Storyboard Artist
Luis Russo Storyboard Artist
Jeff Vandermolen Best Boy Electric
Gregory L. Edwards Best Boy Grip
Joe Vitellaro Best Boy Grip
Amanda Rotzler Camera Loader
Moira Morel Camera Loader
Eric Alan Edwards Camera Operator
Joseph Ruiz Dolly Grip
Matthew Bulleri Dolly Grip
Glenn Kaplan First Assistant "A" Camera
Jeff Graham First Assistant "A" Camera
Andy Harris First Assistant "A" Camera
Peter Geraghty First Assistant "B" Camera
Steven Mann First Assistant "B" Camera
Don Benson First Assistant "B" Camera
Adam Grant Grip
Joseph Edward Myers Grip
Manny Duran Key Grip
Matthew Haskins Second Assistant Camera
Kyril Cvetkov Second Assistant Camera
Kevin Huver Second Assistant Camera
Luis Lopez DeVictoria Second Assistant Camera
Gabriel Velasco Second Assistant Camera
David A. Seekins Second Assistant Camera
Matías Mesa Steadicam Operator
Macall B. Polay Still Photographer
Frank DiMarco Still Photographer
Chris Hajek Techno Crane Operator
Steve Olsen Techno Crane Operator
Jimi Johnson Video Assist Operator
Kale Jessen Video Assist Operator
Elizabeth Chodar Casting Assistant
Eryn Goodman Casting Assistant
Katie Shenot Casting Associate
Lauren Grey Casting Associate
Lori Lewis Casting Associate
Nancy Mosser Extras Casting
Elizabeth Coulon Extras Casting
Lana Veenker Extras Casting
Michele Dunn Costume Supervisor
Rick Grayson Additional Editor
Craig Wood Additional Editor
Stephen R. Sheridan Color Timer
Michael Hatzer Digital Intermediate Colorist
Devon Miller Digital Intermediate Editor
Loan Phan Digital Intermediate Producer
Marc Lulkin Digital Intermediate
Philippe Majdalani Digital Intermediate
Anna Burd Assistant Production Coordinator
Krysta Kelley Craft Service
Anne Mendes Craft Service
Brittnee Dewald Craft Service
Drew Smith Craft Service
Don Wadsworth Dialect Coach
Karen Yokomizo First Assistant Accountant
Cynthia Seabock Payroll Accountant
M. Ross-Michaels Production Accountant
Benn Wiebe Production Assistant
Franses Simonovich Production Coordinator
Janet Smith Production Secretary
Rebecca Robertson Script Supervisor
Heidi Sturdevant Script Supervisor
Lucy Kim Robertson Second Assistant Accountant
William Gilson Set Medic
Michael Hinkel Set Medic
Karla Benson Set Medic
Carl Kent Set Medic
Diane Kerstein Set Production Assistant
Jenna Rae Set Production Assistant
Stacy Fortenberry Set Production Assistant
Gerald Medina Set Production Assistant
Jay Watt Set Production Assistant
Brian Amlin Set Production Assistant
Matteo Faeth Set Production Assistant
Yarden Levo Set Production Assistant
Kristin Trabucco Set Production Assistant
Benjamin Jeran McGinn Stand In
T.J. Civis Stand In
Logan C. Sayre Stand In
Jeffrey Raines Studio Teacher
Lynn Raines Studio Teacher
Emma Cooper Unit Publicist
Elizabeth Chambers Travel Coordinator
David Norris Transportation Coordinator
Katie Scott Transportation Coordinator
Marc Scott Transportation Coordinator
Poland Perkins Transportation Coordinator
Byron Roland Transportation Captain
Matt Shelton Music Editor
Martyn Casey Musician
Gerard McCann Musician
Paul Clarvis Musician
Chris Lawrence Musician
Warren Zielinski Musician
Peter Lale Musician
Bruce White Musician
Thomas Peters Assistant Location Manager
Don Baldwin Assistant Location Manager
Jason Planitzer Assistant Location Manager
Batou Chandler Location Manager
Jimi Woods Location Manager
Craig W. van Gundy Location Manager
Andrew L. Ullman Location Manager
Phil Bradshaw Additional Visual Effects
Othmar Dickbauer Additional Visual Effects
Luke Forker Additional Visual Effects
Craig Needelman Additional Visual Effects
Mark Norman Additional Visual Effects
Leon Sanginiti Additional Visual Effects
Clarissa Shanahan Additional Visual Effects
Jack Swern Additional Visual Effects
Jeffrey Cox Additional Visual Effects
John Goraj Jr. Additional Visual Effects
Tony Trov Additional Visual Effects
Kyle Boylen Compositing Artist
Ed Mendez Compositing Supervisor
Cathy Gochnour Compositor
Jun Zhang Compositor
Chris 'Pinkus' Wesselman Compositor
Kurt Frey Compositor
Brian Sales Compositor
Takashi Takeoka Compositor
Tim Bowman Compositor
Ryan Leonard Compositor
Anton Moss Compositor
Christopher Riemann Compositor
Fred Pienkos Digital Effects Supervisor
Joseph DiValerio Digital Effects Supervisor
Dylan Cole Matte Painter
Brian Flora Matte Painter
Steven Messing Matte Painter
Christopher Evans Matte Painter
Brice Liesveld Visual Effects Coordinator
Lily Kerrigan Visual Effects Coordinator
Adica Manis Visual Effects Coordinator
Keith Croket Visual Effects Editor
Bryan Baker Visual Effects Editor
Mark Wawrzenski Visual Effects Editor
Christa Tazzeo Visual Effects Producer
Richard Friedlander Visual Effects Producer
Christina Graff Visual Effects Producer
Phillip Moses Visual Effects Producer
Andrea D'Amico Visual Effects Producer
Glenn Allen Visual Effects Supervisor
Paul Graff Visual Effects Supervisor
Noel Hooper Visual Effects Supervisor
David Fletcher Special Effects Coordinator
Thomas Kittle Special Effects Supervisor
Eric Thompson ADR Mixer
Travis MacKay ADR Recordist
Callie Thurman Assistant Sound Editor
Jason Johnston Boom Operator
Andy Malcolm Foley Artist
Brian Dunlop Foley Editor
Jonathan Williams Musician
Robert Jackson Boom Operator
Joshua Hogan Scenic Artist
Erin Fite Set Decoration Buyer
James Wright Dolby Consultant
Name Title
Steve Schwartz Producer
Mark Cuban Executive Producer
Nick Wechsler Producer
Paula Mae Schwartz Producer
Mike Upton Co-Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 56 121 30
2024 5 179 219 113
2024 6 101 200 56
2024 7 45 73 22
2024 8 27 41 19
2024 9 23 42 14
2024 10 33 65 17
2024 11 22 36 15
2024 12 24 40 15
2025 1 29 43 20
2025 2 22 41 5
2025 3 9 27 2
2025 4 5 7 3
2025 5 5 9 4
2025 6 4 6 3
2025 7 4 7 3
2025 8 3 3 3

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 6 414 631
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 364 764
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 917 935
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 655 774
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 365 615
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 715 777
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 885 924
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 143 463

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Reviews

tanty
6.0

Viggo Mortensen and Smit-McPhee deliver great performances but it doesn't really hook you up. ...

Jun 23, 2021
John Chard
8.0

The clocks stopped at 1:17 The Road is directed by John Hillcoat (The Proposition) and written by Joe Penhall (Enduring Love). Based on the 2006 novel of the same name by American author Cormac McCarthy (No Country For Old Men), the film stars Viggo Mortensen and Kodi Smit-McPhee as a father and ... his son trying to survive in a post-apocalyptic world. How do you sell such a sombre piece to the film loving public? I'm not sure I personally can, such is the whirly like emotions dominating my thoughts. OK, it's a grim and bleak film, of that there's no doubt. Director Hillcoat is not out to make a thrilling end of the world actioner. Staying faithful to McCarthy's novel, this is now a world where animal & plant life is practically extinct, where this particular part of America is lawless and populated by cannibal types. Humanity has long since left the arena. How we arrived at such desolation is not clear - intentionally so. We are now just witnessing the after effects of something world changing, the fall out personally involving us as we hit the road with man & boy. Hillcoat and his cinematographer Javier Aguirresarobe have painted a clinically dead world from which to tell the story. Scorched soil is home to threadbare trees, the skyline punctured by the wreckage of man's progress passed, storms come and go as if to taunt the characters. It's a living hell that begs the question on why would anyone want to survive in it? So here's the thing that finally hit me like a sledgehammer some five days after watching the film, it's not just the bleakness of the apocalypse that gnaws away at you, it's also the expertly portrayed study of parenting. So emotively played by Mortensen, with Smit-McPhee essaying incredible vulnerability, it sinks the heart the longer the movie goes on. All of which is leading up to the ending, where we get something absorbing, revealing and utterly smart. Tough viewing for sure, but compelling and thought provoking throughout. 8/10

May 16, 2024
Wuchak
5.0

_**Grey, maudlin post-apocalyptic drama with some horrific thrills**_ After a mass extinction event, a man & his son (Viggo Mortensen and Kodi Smit-McPhee) walk from western Pennsylvania to the Southeast coast trying to survive a life-or-death situation in a world without laws as people prey on e ... ach other. Charlize Theron, Robert Duvall, Guy Pearce and Molly Parker show up for small parts. Based on Cormac McCarthy’s final novel, "The Road" (2009) is similar to “Carriers,” released almost three months earlier. Unlike semi-goofy post-apocalyptic films like the original Mad Max trilogy, "The Road" and "Carriers" are deadly serious from beginning to end with no comic book nonsense. This works in their favor because both films give us a window into what life would be like after a worldwide crisis destroys conventional society. Each film explores one's reaction to such a world-ending disaster: Do we forsake all sense of morality in an attempt to survive – lie, steal, forsake and murder – or do we hold on to our moral compass, come what may? Is life worth living if you must become an immoral, wicked savage to survive? Isn't it better to live with dignity at all costs – fight with nobility and die with dignity when and if we must? Some denounce both flicks on the grounds that they’re too downbeat and depressing, but wouldn't a lawless world be a very dire situation? In other words, the downbeat vibe reflects the reality of the story. However, “Carriers” is the superior of the two by far. “The Road” is tediously one-dimensional and unrelentingly somber. Plus the dynamics of the father & son are boring with the annoying boy almost singlehandedly ruining the movie. They needed to find a girl or a woman to shake things up – anything to dispel the grey monotony. The film runs 1 hour, 51 minutes, and was shot mostly in western Pennsylvania & West Virginia (the towering bridge), plus Oregon and Spirit Lake near Mount St. Helens, Washington (the log-jammed lake). GRADE: C+

Jun 23, 2021
mooney240
6.0

**The Road paints a grim and genuine picture of the dangers and greed of a world surviving the collapse of society and hope.** The Road is a realistic and super depressing depiction of a post-apocalyptic world. Viggo Mortensen’s portrayal of an unyielding father doing whatever he can to keep his ... son alive and prepare him for survival is gripping and powerful. This movie made me want to hold my kids close, hug them tight, and thank the Lord we don’t live in that situation. Because of the gritty and gloomy atmosphere and subject matter of the film, it is not a movie I can say I enjoyed, but it was incredibly well done and well acted. The ending seemed pretty hopeful and easy compared to the rest of the film, which was disappointing and comforting as it felt unearned but also eased my concern for the characters' future. I will not revisit The Road, but I’m glad I have seen it.

Dec 09, 2022