Mike Sullivan works as a hit man for crime boss John Rooney. Sullivan views Rooney as a father figure, however after his son is witness to a killing, Mike Sullivan finds himself on the run in attempt to save the life of his son and at the same time looking for revenge on those who wronged him.
Tom Hanks
Michael Sullivan
Tyler Hoechlin
Michael Sullivan, Jr.
Paul Newman
John Rooney
Jude Law
Harlen Maguire
Daniel Craig
Connor Rooney
Stanley Tucci
Frank Nitti
Jennifer Jason Leigh
Annie Sullivan
Liam Aiken
Peter Sullivan
Dylan Baker
Alexander Rance
Ciarán Hinds
Finn McGovern
David Darlow
Jack Kelly
Kevin Chamberlin
Frank the Bouncer
Doug Spinuzza
Calvino
Kurt Naebig
Tenement Murderer
Duane Sharp
Father Callaway
Michael Sassone
Motel Manager
Roderick Peeples
Nitti's Henchman
Keith Kupferer
Nitti's Henchman
Lara Phillips
Ruby the Waitress
Mina Badie
Betty the Waitress
Heidi Jayne Netzley
Prostitute
Lance Baker
Crime Scene Policeman
Nicolas Cade
Boy Michael Fights
John Judd
Rooney's Business Associate
Kerry Rossall
Rooney's Henchman
Ian Barford
Rooney's Henchman
Rob Maxey
Drug Store Owner
Maureen Gallagher
Michael's Teacher
Diane Dorsey
Aunt Sarah
Harry Groener
Mr. McDougal
Peggy Roeder
Farmer Virginia
James Greene
Farmer Bill
Anthony LaPaglia
Al Capone (uncredited)
Paul Turner
Finn McGovern's Henchman
Craig Spidle
Rooney's Henchman
Jack Callahan
Rooney's Business Associate
Director
Sam Mendes
Graphic Novel
Max Allan Collins
Graphic Novel
Richard Piers Rayner
Screenplay
David Self
July 10, 2020
8
Damnation Alleyway.
When his son witnesses him enacting a hit, mob enforcer Michael Sullivan finds that the man whom he likened to a father has ordered a hit on him and his family. Too late to save his wife and youngest child, Sullivan goes on the run with his eldest boy and plots revenge along the way.
How refreshing to find a gangster movie in the modern age, more so, how refreshing to find a gangster movie set in the early 1930s and not involving foul mouthed Mafioso types. Directed by Sam Mendes and starring Tom Hanks, Paul Newman, Daniel Craig and Jude Law, Road To Perdition is an adaptation of the Graphic Novel that was brought to us by Max Allan Collins & Richard Piers Rayner. The film deals with themes of violence and its consequences and fathers and sons, set to a watery back drop during the Great Depression. It's also a pulse pinging treat of visual magnificence thanks to cinematographer Conrad L. Hall (his last film before he passed away).
Comparisons with great gangster film's of the past are inevitable, but Mendes' film has more in common with something like "Eastwood's Unforgiven" and "John Ford's The Searchers", the journey of the lead protagonist is fraught and telling, and motivated by circumstance. Yet the trick for first time viewers that Road To Perdition has up its sleeve, is that we don't know how it will work out for Hanks' Sullivan. It makes for a riveting experience with many transcendent rewards along the way.
As regards the cast, Hanks is a touch miscast, but his play off relationship with the quite terrific Newman gives the film some solid ground from which to launch the sombre story. Daniel Craig does a nifty line in weasel and Law convinces as a mouldy toothed hired killer who enjoys taking photographs of his victims. Pic has almost philosophical mediations on good and bad, and it's elegiacally drawn by Mendes. The melancholic mood is enhanced by Thomas Newman's musical score, where he reworks his "Shawshank Redemption" score for narrative tightness.
The film thrives as a poetic and atmospheric piece. The story might be basic, but it manages to rise above that because it be a superbly directed and well acted picture. One that just happens to be beautiful in spite of the bleakness that lingers on the main protagonist and the journey he undertakes. 8/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$80,000,000.00
Revenue:
$181,001,478.00