“Hallow Road” works best whenever it just focuses on the dynamic interactions between its two lead performers, and I enjoyed that during its first two acts. As one ordinary couple suddenly cornered by a very, very, very serious situation, these two wonderful performers are quite believable on the screen, and their joint efforts hold the movie to some degree even when it takes a sudden left turn during its flawed last act.
The opening scene quietly and succinctly establishes a sense of uneasiness inside the residence of Maddie (Rosmund Pike) and her husband Frank (Matthew Rhys). Along the story, we gradually gather that 1) something unpleasant happened between this couple and their adolescent daughter during their dinner and 2) they waited for any call from their daughter for hours after she angrily drove one of their cars away from their residence.
When their daughter finally calls them, she is quite hysterical to say the least. After leaving their residence, she went to some forest area and used some drug for letting out her anger and frustration a bit, and then an unexpected incident happened when she subsequently drove the car along a road in that forest area. She accidentally hit some young girl around her age, and now she is nearly overwhelmed by panic and fear.
Once they see that their daughter is in a big trouble, Maddie and Frank soon get in their other car for going to that remote spot where their daughter is helplessly waiting for them. Because she happens to be a professional paramedic, Maddie calmly and patiently instructs her daughter to do some CPR (Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation) on that unfortunate girl, but, alas, things only get worse instead mainly due to her daughter’s growing panic.
As things naturally become all the direr for not only their daughter but also them, Maddie and Frank find themselves facing a serious moral conflict. As parents, they certainly feel the obligation to do anything for their troubled daughter, but they also feel quite conflicted about how much they can actually do under this increasingly desperate circumstance. They should surely call for paramedics as well as the police right now, but, because neither they nor their daughter has called anyone yet, they cannot help but become tempted about covering up everything for protecting their dear daughter and her promising future.
Not so surprisingly, they come to have a lot of argument between them as they keep going to where their daughter is waiting. While Maddie believes that they should not hide anything at all, Frank, who has clearly been more lenient and protective of their daughter, thinks otherwise, and the middle act of the movie steadily accumulates tension on the screen as both of its two main characters clash more about what should be really done for their daughter. The more they argue with each other, the more they discern how different they are from each other, and that certainly puts some serious strain on their supposedly stable relationship.
It surely helps that these two archetype characters are vividly illustrated on the screen by the undeniable talent and presence of the two lead performers of the film. Rosamund Pike deftly alternates between the strong and vulnerable sides of her character, and she is especially effective during one scene later in the story where Maddie reveals a certain emotional wound and pain she has hidden from her family for a while. On the opposite Matthew Rhys, who has steadily advanced both in TV and movie since his Emmy-winning performance in American TV drama series “The Americans”, is her equal acting match, and the movie is constantly engaging as their characters pull or push each other along their uneasy drive course.
However, the screenplay by William Gillies unfortunately becomes rather deficient during its last act due to the aforementioned sudden narrative turn. Instead of pushing its two main characters more into their accumulating moral dilemma, the movie tries something quite contrived to say the least, and its eventual finale may feel a little too hollow and superficial for some of you.
Nonetheless thanks to the competent direction of director Babak Anvari, who unfortunately went down a bit after his impressive first feature film “Under the Shadow” (2016), the movie held my attention along with its two lead performers up to that narrative point, and Pike and Rhys are also supported well by several voice performances during a number of crucial scenes in the movie. While Megan McDonnell holds her own small place well as the voice of Maddie and Frank’s daughter, and you may be surprised by who actually provided the two other substantial voice performances in the film. Although this is not a very big surprise, I can only tell you that, after checking out its end credits, you may wonder a bit about how reliable the main viewpoint of the story really is.
In conclusion, “Hallow Road”, which incidentally went straight to streaming here in South Korea, is a little too underwhelming for recommendation just like Anvari’s two previous films “Wounds” (2020) and “I Came By” (2022), but it occasionally shows his considerable skill and competence at least. Considering its fairly effective aspects, he may soon bounce from this current low point of his filmmaking career someday, and I will certainly be delighted by that.













































