Hard Road (1988) Poster

(1988)

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8/10
good down to earth drama
evans-j3421 December 2014
Warning: Spoilers
OK so I'm writing this review from what I can remember having watched it when it first come out & I was like 9 lol. Kelly meets max washing his dads car & encourages him to take her for a drive in it they then just seem to end up on the run in this car. Max is quite a stern character bit cold in his attitude and swears a lot! He kinda always seems off with Kelly till the end when they embrace & they kinda set up to live alone (I won't say how).. This is a good road movie, its not action packed Hollywood style, its a down to earth gritty drama. I would really love to see this film again the fact i can remember is after over 25 years means its something I've appreciated but i cant find it to buy or watch so if someone knows where let me know please.
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10/10
A story of escape
greg-23310 November 1999
I came across this film last year by sheer accident. I think "serendipity" is the appropriate word. My father turned on the television and I saw this boy and girl sitting in a Ferrari in the dark. For some reason this intrigued me. I was wondering what a young boy was doing driving around in a Ferrari so I looked in the TV magazine to see what the film was called. The title, of course, was "Hard Road". It's about a girl called Kelly who is bored with her life at home. When she meets the well-to-do boy Max she dares him to take her on a joyride to Brighton. The film follows the experiences they share on the journey. I had the good fortune to see this film again from the beginning as it was on cable television.

The two leading characters are very well drawn. Francesca Camillo is perfect as the compulsive liar Kelly, who frequently rings Child Line with stories about her "abusive" father. Max Rennie plays the son of a wealthy businessman. He too is unhappy with his life and expresses his rebellion with fake suicides. His prized possession is a 1959 Ferrari, which he cares for in the same way a doting father cares for his child.

I believe this is essentially a story of escape. The two characters are breaking free, discovering themselves. The film covers issues like class (Kelly is the poor one, Max is the rich one),the need children have for independence and their impatience to grow up, and most of all the freedom of leaving home. Although Max is breaking the law by being an under aged driver, he is still a sympathetic character. The two children seem to have a cynical and negative outlook on life despite their young age (both are 13 years old), they are children who are just beginning to discover what the world is really like and try to reject it.

What I find appealing about this film is the reminder of childhood. I was 12 when the film was made, and I remember how different everything seemed at that time from a child's perspective. More innocent and naive. Other good points of the film are the pleasant scenery of the English landscape and the music score. "Hard Road" is a good way to spend an hour and a half, a nice blend of drama and humour. I even wanted to know what happened to Kelly and Max after the film ended, but of course this has to be left to conjecture. I have to confess I am curious about what became of the two leading actors, who would now be in their mid twenties. Max Rennie has appeared in one other movie, made the following year, while Francesca Camillo made her only screen appearance in this work. The acting of these two people was above average and it seems a shame that they have since slipped into obscurity. I hope they are doing well in whatever paths they have followed.
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