[My predicted rating: 4]
Some of the best Gritty Drama Actors of the British Screen unite for the 3rd installment to the Red Riding Concluding part.
The high standard of acting, sometimes outweighs the actual story (which admittedly, at times were confusing) but stay with it, i... read more
Mark Addy,
Sean Bean,
Jim Carter,
Warren Clarke,
Andrew Garfield
... see more
The Red Riding Trilogy draws to a close in this installment that finds Detective Chief Superintendent Maurice Jobson (David Morrissey) realizing that the Yorkshire Ripper may still be at large, despit... read more
DVD Release Date: July 1, 2010
Stats: 174 reviews
Your Rating
Flixster Reviews (174)
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November 3, 2011
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August 22, 2011
An extraordinary final chapter to the unforgettable "RED RIDING TRILOGY." "1983" ties up most of the loose ends from the first two entries, which alone might make this the most gratifying installment.
I still prefer "1980," but this film contains some of the best, most intense, ... read more -
May 15, 2011
The last of the Trilogy but did they catch the wolf, I had to raise my eyebrows when it was all over. In the third of three in this series children are still disappearing. Who's to blame, did they put the right person in jail in the last film? Is it the man of God, is it the high... read more
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February 21, 2011
On the whole, Red Riding is highly convoluted, and not always easy to follow. It was easy for me to recognize characters by their faces, but there are a lot of names to remember, and I was not always 100% on track with the movie. But patience and persistence does pay off, and thi... read more
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October 16, 2010
Cast: David Morrissey, Lisa Howard, Chris Walker, Shaun Dooley, Jim Carter, Warren Clarke, Sean Bean, Sean Harris, Steven Robertson, Michelle Dockery, Mark Addy
Director :Anand Tucker
Summary: When the current case of a missing 10-year-old becomes linked to the abduction an... read more -
October 5, 2010
a conscience-ridden copper and a second-rate lawyer are finally moved to see justice served in the finale. up until the somewhat overwrought ending, this was my favorite installment, mainly in the sense of providing closure to some long-standing mysteries. thumbs up on the enti... read more
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September 15, 2010
Peter Hunter: You don't like the police much, do you?
Martin Laws: No love lost, no.
Peter Hunter: So when someone kicks down your front door, kills the dog and rapes the wife, who you gonna call?
Martin Laws: Well it certainly wouldn't be the West Yorkshire Police - they'd alrea... read more -
August 4, 2010
After the intriguing second instalment, there was no way I could have avoided this for long. While I wasn't too excited & didn't have my hopes high, I'd at least reasonable expectations from it. Even an average fare would've sufficed. Better than that experience was very much wel... read more
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May 23, 2009
The final chapter to the trilogy is more of a sequel to the first film than it is the second. 8 years after the first film another young girl goes missing. People start to question the guilt of the man charged with the original crimes and this rattles the corrupt police. Our hero... read more
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February 8, 2010
It is 1983.
Another young girl, Hazel Atkins, has gone missing, bringing back bad memories of similar cases. Detective Chief Superintendent Maurice Jobson(David Morrissey) is so desperate for leads that he consults with a medium(Saskia Reeves). Meanwhile, John Piggot(Mark Ad... read more
Critic Reviews
Raises the bar for crime drama on the boob tube. Full Review
1983 shifts to an unlikely hero: a slovenly solicitor...[and] "soul man"... [Blu-ray] Full Review
Like the overall trilogy, it's as haunting as it is riveting, the kind of movie that will keep your attention while it's playing, and stick with you after the closing credits. Full Review
There's still a great deal of satisfaction to be had in both the resolution of the plot's many mysteries and the thematic throughlines of the three films. Full Review
Anand Tucker's direction and Tony Grisoni's screenplay aren't perfect but is yet another work that stands relatively well on its own but is made infinitely better when viewed in the light of the first... Full Review
...satisfying in that we see many events in a new light, but Jobson is too complicit in the evil that has taken place to be sympathetic which is the light he is cast in by director Anand Tucker. Full Review
1983 is executed rather messily and demands a very concentrated viewer, but the rhythms of violation and corruption remain intact, supplying a fulfilling closer to this ambitious project. Full Review
Exposing a society where every institution is rank with moral disease, and where the innocent serve out the sentences of the culpable, it's hard to tell whether those involved in this project are horr...
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