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Red Riding: The Year of Our Lord 1983

  • TV Movie
  • 2009
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
9.2K
YOUR RATING
Red Riding: The Year of Our Lord 1983 (2009)
Red Riding: 1983 starts with the kidnapping of another young girl. Detective Maurice Jobson (David Morrissey) notices a number of powerful similarities to the abduction cases he had investigated back in the '70s--and for which a man was convicted and sentenced. Meanwhile, a reluctant local solicitor, John Piggott (Mark Addy), decides to take up the condemned man's cause.
Play trailer1:02
4 Videos
17 Photos
CrimeDramaHistory

When another child goes missing, washed-up solicitor John Piggott unwittingly provides a catalyst for Detective Chief Superindent Maurice Jobson to start to right some wrongs.When another child goes missing, washed-up solicitor John Piggott unwittingly provides a catalyst for Detective Chief Superindent Maurice Jobson to start to right some wrongs.When another child goes missing, washed-up solicitor John Piggott unwittingly provides a catalyst for Detective Chief Superindent Maurice Jobson to start to right some wrongs.

  • Director
    • Anand Tucker
  • Writers
    • Tony Grisoni
    • David Peace
  • Stars
    • David Morrissey
    • Lisa Howard
    • Chris Walker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    9.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Anand Tucker
    • Writers
      • Tony Grisoni
      • David Peace
    • Stars
      • David Morrissey
      • Lisa Howard
      • Chris Walker
    • 36User reviews
    • 79Critic reviews
    • 77Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos4

    Red Riding: 1983
    Trailer 1:02
    Red Riding: 1983
    The Red Riding Trilogy
    Trailer 2:27
    The Red Riding Trilogy
    The Red Riding Trilogy
    Trailer 2:27
    The Red Riding Trilogy
    Red Riding: 1983
    Clip 1:43
    Red Riding: 1983
    Making of The Red Riding Trilogy
    Featurette 3:01
    Making of The Red Riding Trilogy

    Photos17

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    Top cast38

    Edit
    David Morrissey
    David Morrissey
    • Maurice Jobson
    Lisa Howard
    • Judith Jobson
    Chris Walker
    • Jim Prentice
    Shaun Dooley
    Shaun Dooley
    • Dick Alderman
    Jim Carter
    Jim Carter
    • Harold Angus
    Warren Clarke
    Warren Clarke
    • Bill Molloy
    Sean Bean
    Sean Bean
    • John Dawson
    Sean Harris
    Sean Harris
    • Bob Craven
    Steven Robertson
    Steven Robertson
    • Bob Fraser
    Tony Mooney
    • Tommy Douglas
    Tony Pitts
    Tony Pitts
    • John Nolan
    Michelle Dockery
    Michelle Dockery
    • Kathryn Tyler
    Andrew Cryer
    • Mr Atkins
    • (as Andy Cryer)
    Mark Addy
    Mark Addy
    • John Piggott
    Beatrice Kelley
    • Mrs Myshkin
    Katie Simpson
    • Sister in Law
    Paul Kynman
    Paul Kynman
    • Stocky Guard
    Daniel Mays
    Daniel Mays
    • Michael Myshkin
    • Director
      • Anand Tucker
    • Writers
      • Tony Grisoni
      • David Peace
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews36

    7.19.2K
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    Featured reviews

    7kosmasp

    Conclusion ... or is it?

    The last part of the "Red Riding"-Trilogy (I'm assuming you have seen the other two at least), this concludes the story. The real main player here, was a side player in the previous ones (though he did have more to "say" than we might have guessed in those movies). The second guy who has a main role, is a solicitor. And while he is reluctant at first, he seems to get his head around to become more involved.

    But again as with the other characters throughout the series, there are no real likable characters at hand here. Someone called this an adult approach to the thriller genre. You have to figure out, how you feel about that, of course. You might find it dreadful. On the other hand, this is a great thriller. It just needs it's time to unfold. And all the loose points get together at last ... Though some might be disappointed at what we get served ... I personally still feel, that the first movie was the strongest.
    7kluseba

    The philosophical conclusion

    This third part of the mini series presents once more a different genre with this very insightful and philosophical conclusion. The movie is less darker and brutal than the first two ones and talks more about hope than desperation. The movie talks about moral, forgiveness and remorse and presents once more a few new and profound characters.

    The movie has three main actors and begins with the fact that another young girl has been kidnapped nine years after the last murder.

    The remorseful cop Maurice Jobson, played by the brilliant David Morissey, wants to stop the insanity and begins to question the corruption, the violence and lies within the police. He falls in love with a clairvoyant and wants to save the kidnapped girl with her while his partners try to find a scapegoat for the new crime. He realizes that he has done some mistakes in his life and wants to change. He is now looking for forgiveness, truth and justice.

    The second main character is the fat and disillusioned lawyer John Piggott, played in a rather mediocre way by Mark Addy, whose father was one of the corrupt police officers that has been killed in mysterious circumstances, helps after much hesitation the mothers of the two scapegoats that are or have to go to prison for crimes they didn't commit.

    The third main character is the young and homosexual BJ, brilliantly played by Robert Sheehan, who has escaped from Torkshire and travels around the country to come back for a last act of vengeance.

    All those three characters come together in a grand finale. But before this conclusion, the story meanders back and forth through space and time and creates connections to the first two movies and even new connections beyond that. Those scenes help to create once more some very diversified and profound characters but it is sometimes difficult to follow this pattern and to understand what is happening right now or in the past. There are many flashbacks and changes of space and time in the movie and that makes it less dynamical and intense to watch than the first two ones. The strong point of the movie are the interesting characters and the fact that many points are explained and many questions are answered to that haven't been before.

    But I still felt disappointed about the conclusion. It seems too simple to me and I would have liked to have some more original explications, for example concerning the connection of the businessman Dawson to the murders.

    Because of the conclusion and less intense atmosphere, this third part is the weakest one of the series in my opinion. But I still gave seven stars because of the interesting characters and the fact that almost everything is explained in the conclusion of the movie. The philosophical style of this movie is very interesting but I preferred the drama style of the second or the first movie that was a great film noir and my favourite part of the series.

    All in all, this trilogy is interesting to watch and really presents three different kinds of a movie and creates connections in between them in an interesting way. Artistically, those series are really well done and most of the actors did an amazing job. But there is a lack of suspense in this slow paced series and the criminal investigations are rather boring. It was a good idea to watch the series, but honestly, I wouldn't but it or watch it again for a while.

    1974: 7,5 stars 1980: 7 to 7,5 stars 1983: 7 stars
    8nesfilmreviews

    The final piece to a fine trilogy.

    The seemingly untouchable, corrupt West Yorkshire police, and the true evil mastermind behind the child abductions and murders of the last 14 years, can't resist doing it again. "Red Riding: 1983" sets the story that another young girl has vanished from the same area, nine years earlier. "Red Riding: 1983" cycles back to the terrible events set in motion in "Red Riding: 1974", when a series of young girls went missing and a mentally retarded man, Michael Myshkin (Mays), was wrongfully convicted for the crime. Detective Inspector Maurice Jobson (Morrissey), a regular if mostly background character in the first two films, becomes our first focal point here as a man deeply wrecked by his complicity in the Yorkshire Constabulary's general lawlessness.

    In 1983, another young girl disappears, and Jobson decides to do some actual police work--and reopening several old cases his colleagues would prefer to keep closed--and sniffing around the likes of series constant Rev. Lawes (Mullan, with the omniscience and eerie stillness of a very dark angel). Simultaneously, in the trilogy's first dual narrative, another lead emerges in the form of John Piggott (Addy), a sad-sack solicitor and Yorkshire native who reluctantly agrees to file an appeal on behalf of Myshkin. Piggott marks the trilogy's most uncomplicated hero.

    It may come as a surprise that the ending of "Red Riding: 1983" adds a dose of hope to its brackish main course. "Red Riding: 1983" provides a fitting conclusion to a whole that is, in some ways, greater than the sum of its parts." Red Riding" is an effective crime thriller, but it's an even more striking drama about the dark parts of the human soul and man's capacity for inhumanity. The third movie represents the middle ground between the promising-but-uneven" Red Riding: 1974" and its sequel, the shocking and haunting "Red Riding:1980." This time around, there's less in the way of a stand- alone narrative as screenwriter Tony Grisoni, working from the novel by David Peace, stitches closed various plot holes. The finale doesn't answer all of our question, but it provides a sense of closure and clears up a number of nagging questions left over from the previous two segments.

    What we can take away from all of this is not just an investigation into a series of child murders. This is an in-depth character study of three (or four) main protagonists--as they slowly unfold a ring of corruption surrounding an era of a very specific locale of the UK. As things get "hairy" within each of our main characters' worlds, rather than dig deeper into the case, they instead spend three quarters of the running time of each film digging deeper into their own psych--and begin to like what they see in themselves less and less.
    8Leofwine_draca

    "To the North...where we do what we want"

    And finally the loose ends are tied up in the last part of the acclaimed RED RIDING trilogy. This time around, a low-rent lawyer and a cop with a conscience combine forces to expose the child killer who has been eluding police from the very beginning.

    I'm a sucker for a happy ending and this film gives us one - well, sort of one. I found the story punchier and although events become even darker - and more shocking, if that's even possible - there is hope, finally, in the full-on powerhouse ending.

    What a coup in casting Mark Addy as the sympathetic lead (he's usually typecast as lovable rolly-polly types since THE FULL MONTY back in the day)! David Morrissey is given a chance to shine, too, putting memories of BASIC INSTINCT 2 into the distant past. The series definitely ends on a high and it's nice to have some closure after everything that happened.
    7SnoopyStyle

    nice wrap up

    In flashbacks, Maurice Jobson (David Morrissey), Bill Molloy, Bob Craven, Harold Angus, Dick Alderman, Jim Prentice, and others from the police are taking control of the vice trade in the north. They invest in the shopping mall being built by John Dawson (Sean Bean). It's 1983. Ten year old Hazel Atkins goes missing and Jobson wonders if they got the right man Michael Myshkin for the earlier dead girls. He is directed to medium Mandy Wymer (Saskia Reeves) who claims that there is a Wolf, a Rat, and a Pig. The Swan is dead and under the beautiful carpets. John Piggott (Mark Addy) is a local boy turned defense lawyer. He's asked to appeal Myshkin's conviction. His father was known as Arthur the Pig. Jobson known as the Owl arrests Myshkin's friend Leonard Cole. Piggott tries to sign him up as his lawyer but he is found hung in jail. Meanwhile, BJ is released from prison and Martin Laws is the local reverend.

    This third installment returns the story back to the kidnapped girls. It is sorely needed after taking a side trip in the second installment. I can do without the medium. Her revelations could easily be given to Myshkin. It is a nice wrap up although this is something that needs to be binged. A lot of the first movie needs to be remembered to fully appreciate this movie. David Morrissey and Mark Addy deliver emotionally conflicted characters. The final reveal could be more twisty. It is mostly about waiting to find the various animals.

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    Related interests

    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
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    History

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The context of the series uses fictionalized accounts of the investigation into the Yorkshire Ripper, a serial killer who stalked the Yorkshire area of England in the 1970s and 1980s. The name of the series is a reference to the murders and to their location, the historic county of Yorkshire being traditionally divided into three areas known as "ridings."
    • Quotes

      [raising his glass as he proposes a toast]

      Bill Molloy: To the North - where we do what we bloody want!

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: Dear John/Temple Grandin/From Paris with Love/Red Riding Trilogy/Frozen (2010)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 19, 2009 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Channel 4 (United Kingdom)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Red Riding 1983
    • Filming locations
      • Leeds Independent Studio, Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Channel 4
      • Screen Yorkshire
      • Lipsync Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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