Dead Man's Shoes
Closed CaptioningShane Meadows
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Plot Summary
Richard (Paddy Considine of In America) returns to the rural region of Derbyshire, where he grew up, after seven years in the military. His mentally challenged brother, Anthony (newcomer Toby Kebbell), tags along. Something awful has happened to Anthony, and Richard means to set things right. Richard angrily confronts Herbie (Stuart Wolfenden), a small-time drug dealer, in the local pub, then creepily apologizes to him a few minutes later outside. Herbie runs to his mates and tells them what happened, but before they have a chance to respond, they find that they're targets. Richard starts out with relatively harmless pranks, vandalizing their houses and painting their faces while they're asleep. Sonny (former boxer Gary Stretch), the gang's bullying leader, confronts Richard on the street, but Richard refuses to back down. Sonny's ragtag crew are ill equipped to respond to Richard's ruthless military tactics. As Richard inexorably goes about his business, and the bodies begin to pile up, we learn, through flashbacks, what happened to Anthony. Dead Man's Shoes was directed by Shane Meadows (Once Upon a Time in the Midlands), who co-wrote the script with Considine. The film had its U.S. premiere at the 2005 Tribeca Film Festival.
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Rotten Tomatoes Movie Reviews
TOMATOMETER
57%- Reviews Counted: 42
- Fresh: 24
- Rotten: 18
- Average Rating: 5.7/10
Top Critics' Reviews
Rotten: Despite some hints at conscience and humanity, Dead Man's Shoes is a typical slasher film at the core.
Rotten: In the end, the picture's more pulp than juice.
Fresh: Like Park Chan-wook's Vengeance trilogy, it explores the nature of the beast of revenge, leaving the audience in a sweat of dread.
Fresh: Dead Man's Shoes is for the true connoisseur: a tight, well-made, evocative piece of filmmaking that recalls the extreme emotions in some of Sam Peckinpah's genre-benders about retribution and vigilante justice.
Customer Reviews
Very Good Indie film
This is a simple but moving indie-film that packs some strong, emotional scenes and a meditative quality that is absent in most Hollywood films that have mined similar territory. On the surface we have a revenge flick. A brother who can't live with the fact he went off to war and left his mentally disabled brother to be abused by a group of small town thugs. But the lead actor (and director) plays it with such sincerity that even scenes that don't mechanically and structurally work 100% are still effective. There is no tongue-in-cheek violence and snappy retorts to hide behind. It feels raw and truthful. Well worth watching for anyone into small budget films and the independent spirit of making moves that mean something.
Incredible!
This film is absolutely brilliant!! It's tense, very well acted, perfectly filmed and the story will stick with you for a long time. Paddy Considine deserved an oscar for this role! He is simply astounding!!
Much, much more than a simple horror film!
Simply an amazing film! It is raw, compelling and well acted, with an ending you won't soon forget.
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