Also from our team — ToolYour: Best free online file converters, SEO toolkit, developer toolkit, resume builder & more.

28% match · this device
Sign in to save your profile

Age-restricted? YouTube often blocks those trailers inside other sites. Use the button to watch on YouTube — you may need to sign in and confirm your age.

Watch on YouTube

Trailer from TMDb metadata; playback via YouTube. If the player shows a restriction, use "Watch on YouTube" above.

Community reviews

From TMDb members · 5 total
  • Andres Gomez6/10

    Viggo Mortensen and Smit-McPhee deliver great performances but it doesn't really hook you up.

  • John Chard8/10

    The clocks stopped at 1:17 The Road is directed by John Hillcoat (The Proposition) and written by Joe Penhall (Enduring Love). Based on the 2006 novel of the same name by American author Cormac McCarthy (No Country For Old Men), the film stars Viggo Mortensen and Kodi Smit-McP…

All 5 reviews

Full text & links on TMDb in the reviews section below.

Rent, buy & download

Official stores and apps (Apple TV, Prime Video, Google Play, and others) let you rent or buy this title; many include offline downloads inside their app after purchase.

See rent, buy & download options

Stores (rent / buy)

  • Amazon Video logoAmazon Video
  • Apple TV Store logoApple TV Store
  • Google Play Movies logoGoogle Play Movies
  • YouTube logoYouTube
  • Fandango At Home logoFandango At Home

Also on subscription

  • Amazon Prime Video logoAmazon Prime Video
  • fuboTV logofuboTV
  • Paramount Plus Premium logoParamount Plus Premium
  • Paramount+ Amazon Channel logoParamount+ Amazon Channel
  • Paramount+ Roku Premium Channel logoParamount+ Roku Premium Channel
  • Amazon Prime Video with Ads logoAmazon Prime Video with Ads

Showing availability for region US. Opens The Movie Database / partner listings — not affiliated withWatchMind.

The Road

In a moment, the world changed forever.

Released
2009-11-25
Rating

70%

Type

Movie

Runtime

1h 51m

AdventureDrama

AI Analysis

The Road (2009) — AI movie analysis

WatchMind AI

WatchMind AI generated this AI analysis of The Road (2009) — a movie tagged as Adventure and Drama with balanced tone moods and fast-paced pacing.

fast-paced pacingaifamilywar

Story & themes: A father and his son walk alone through burned America. Nothing moves in the ravaged landscape save the ash on the wind and water. It is cold enough to crack stones and, when the snow falls, it is gray. Their destination is the warmer south, although they don't know what, if anything, awaits them there. Our models also surface themes such as ai, family, and war from synopsis and genre signals.

Watch context: Best suited for general audiences. Expect fast-paced storytelling (~111 min).

Community signal: TMDb members rate The Road 70% (4,274 votes) — solid community ratings for this movie.

AI verdict

The Road is a film worth prioritising when you want something with solid community ratings — our AI analysis flags it as a strong match for its genre and tone profile.

Preview on this device: 28% match — Matches your drama. Sign in to save your profile across devices.

Algorithmic AI analysis from genres, synopsis, pacing heuristics, and TMDb community scores — not a generative chatbot. How WatchMind works.

Insights

Audience & engagement

How WatchMind visitors interact with this title — views, saves, sentiment, and taste match when you're signed in, or a device preview while browsing. Aggregates are anonymous; last 30 days.

Early data — charts fill in as more people explore this title.

TMDb audience score

70%

from 4.3k TMDb votes

Taste match (this device)

28%match

Preview from browsing on this browser — not saved to an account yet.

Matches your drama

Sign in to save your profile →
  • Your rating
  • Watch queueNot saved

WatchMind sentiment

No thumbs or dismissals yet. Rate this title to help others see likeness trends.

Dismissals
0

Engagement breakdown

Page views0
Saved to queue0
Trailer plays0
Where to watch clicks0
Related title clicks0

0 unique visitors · no audience notes yet

Views trend (14 days)

2026-05-11: 0 views2026-05-12: 0 views2026-05-13: 0 views2026-05-14: 0 views2026-05-15: 0 views2026-05-16: 0 views2026-05-17: 0 views2026-05-18: 0 views2026-05-19: 0 views2026-05-20: 0 views2026-05-21: 0 views2026-05-22: 0 views2026-05-23: 0 views2026-05-24: 0 views
05-1105-24

Daily title page views on WatchMind

Synopsis

A father and his son walk alone through burned America. Nothing moves in the ravaged landscape save the ash on the wind and water. It is cold enough to crack stones and, when the snow falls, it is gray. Their destination is the warmer south, although they don't know what, if anything, awaits them there.

Quick facts

Type
Movie
Status
Released
Release date
2009-11-25
Runtime
1h 51m
TMDB rating
7.0
TMDB ID
20766

Watch & discovery tips

  • Read TMDb member reviews in the reviews section, and audience tips from other WatchMind visitors in Audience notes.
  • Use Rent, buy & download for official stores; offline viewing is usually inside their apps.
  • Browse trending and top-rated movies from the main Movies page.
  • Add titles to your watch queue from this page — order matters; the top pick can surface on your home page when you're logged into the same browser session.

Frequently asked questions

Where can I watch The Road (2009)?

The Road is available for discovery on WatchMind. You can find official links to rent, buy, or stream from licensed digital stores like Apple TV and Amazon in our "Where to Watch" section.

Is there an official trailer for The Road?

Yes, you can watch the official trailer for The Road directly on this page. We pull the latest video metadata from TMDb and play it via YouTube integration.

What is The Road about?

A father and his son walk alone through burned America. Nothing moves in the ravaged landscape save the ash on the wind and water. It is cold enough to crack stones and, when the snow falls, it is ... This is the official synopsis available via TMDb community metadata.

Is there an AI analysis for The Road?

Yes. WatchMind publishes an AI analysis on this page — tone, pacing, audience fit, and community scores from TMDb metadata and recommendation models (not a chatbot). Scroll to the AI Analysis section or read the meta description summary.

How long is the movie The Road?

The official runtime for The Road is approximately 111 minutes.

Cast & crew

Names and photos from The Movie Database (TMDb). Follow links on themoviedb.org for full filmographies.

Audience notes

Quick tips, watch-order ideas, and “worth it?” takes from other WatchMind visitors — not from TMDb. Reply to continue a thread, tap Helpful to surface useful notes, and keep things kind — no spoilers in the first line when you can help it.

0 / 2000

Discussion0 notes

No notes yet — be the first to leave a suggestion for the next viewer.

Community reviews

Written by TMDb members — same catalogue as our movie & TV metadata. API terms

5 on TMDb
  • A
    Andres Gomez6/10
    View on TMDb

    Viggo Mortensen and Smit-McPhee deliver great performances but it doesn't really hook you up.

  • John Chard profile picture
    John Chard8/10
    View on TMDb

    The clocks stopped at 1:17 The Road is directed by John Hillcoat (The Proposition) and written by Joe Penhall (Enduring Love). Based on the 2006 novel of the same name by American author Cormac McCarthy (No Country For Old Men), the film stars Viggo Mortensen and Kodi Smit-McPhee as a father and his son trying to survive in a post-apocalyptic world. How do you sell such a sombre piece to the film loving public? I'm not sure I personally can, such is the whirly like emotions dominating my thoughts. OK, it's a grim and bleak film, of that there's no doubt. Director Hillcoat is not out to make a thrilling end of the world actioner. Staying faithful to McCarthy's novel, this is now a world where animal & plant life is practically extinct, where this particular part of America is lawless and populated by cannibal types. Humanity has long since left the arena. How we arrived at such desolation is not clear - intentionally so. We are now just witnessing the after effects of something world changing, the fall out personally involving us as we hit the road with man & boy. Hillcoat and his cinematographer Javier Aguirresarobe have painted a clinically dead world from which to tell the story. Scorched soil is home to threadbare trees, the skyline punctured by the wreckage of man's progress passed, storms come and go as if to taunt the characters. It's a living hell that begs the question on why would anyone want to survive in it? So here's the thing that finally hit me like a sledgehammer some five days after watching the film, it's not just the bleakness of the apocalypse that gnaws away at you, it's also the expertly portrayed study of parenting. So emotively played by Mortensen, with Smit-McPhee essaying incredible vulnerability, it sinks the heart the longer the movie goes on. All of which is leading up to the ending, where we get something absorbing, revealing and utterly smart. Tough viewing for sure, but compelling and thought provoking throughout. 8/10

  • Wuchak profile picture
    Wuchak5/10
    View on TMDb

    _**Grey, maudlin post-apocalyptic drama with some horrific thrills**_ After a mass extinction event, a man & his son (Viggo Mortensen and Kodi Smit-McPhee) walk from western Pennsylvania to the Southeast coast trying to survive a life-or-death situation in a world without laws as people prey on each other. Charlize Theron, Robert Duvall, Guy Pearce and Molly Parker show up for small parts. Based on Cormac McCarthy’s final novel, "The Road" (2009) is similar to “Carriers,” released almost three months earlier. Unlike semi-goofy post-apocalyptic films like the original Mad Max trilogy, "The Road" and "Carriers" are deadly serious from beginning to end with no comic book nonsense. This works in their favor because both films give us a window into what life would be like after a worldwide crisis destroys conventional society. Each film explores one's reaction to such a world-ending disaster: Do we forsake all sense of morality in an attempt to survive – lie, steal, forsake and murder – or do we hold on to our moral compass, come what may? Is life worth living if you must become an immoral, wicked savage to survive? Isn't it better to live with dignity at all costs – fight with nobility and die with dignity when and if we must? Some denounce both flicks on the grounds that they’re too downbeat and depressing, but wouldn't a lawless world be a very dire situation? In other words, the downbeat vibe reflects the reality of the story. However, “Carriers” is the superior of the two by far. “The Road” is tediously one-dimensional and unrelentingly somber. Plus the dynamics of the father & son are boring with the annoying boy almost singlehandedly ruining the movie. They needed to find a girl or a woman to shake things up – anything to dispel the grey monotony. The film runs 1 hour, 51 minutes, and was shot mostly in western Pennsylvania & West Virginia (the towering bridge), plus Oregon and Spirit Lake near Mount St. Helens, Washington (the log-jammed lake). GRADE: C+

  • The Movie Mob profile picture
    The Movie Mob6/10
    View on TMDb

    **The Road paints a grim and genuine picture of the dangers and greed of a world surviving the collapse of society and hope.** The Road is a realistic and super depressing depiction of a post-apocalyptic world. Viggo Mortensen’s portrayal of an unyielding father doing whatever he can to keep his son alive and prepare him for survival is gripping and powerful. This movie made me want to hold my kids close, hug them tight, and thank the Lord we don’t live in that situation. Because of the gritty and gloomy atmosphere and subject matter of the film, it is not a movie I can say I enjoyed, but it was incredibly well done and well acted. The ending seemed pretty hopeful and easy compared to the rest of the film, which was disappointing and comforting as it felt unearned but also eased my concern for the characters' future. I will not revisit The Road, but I’m glad I have seen it.

  • CinemaSerf profile picture
    CinemaSerf7/10
    View on TMDb

    Yikes, but this is bleak! Many years after some disaster has struck down American civilisation, we meet a man (Viggo Mortensen) and his curious young son (Kodi Smit-McPhee) who are trying to make it from the wooded hinterland to the coast in the hope that things might be better, and hopefully warmer, there. At least the ocean ought to add a bit of blue to their remarkably dull surroundings. They do have guns, but only two bullets which he is saving for emergencies should they encounter any of the other survivors from this apocalypse who might just decide that either or both of them are fare game. There is plenty of water, but a distinct paucity of food and so this is a continuing struggle to feed themselves and to stay alive. The young lad has never known any other kind of life so rather stoically, initially at least, follows as instructed. Dad, on the other hand, has memories - and those of his wife (Charlize Theron) provide him with the occasional succour as he realises, as do we, that things are not looking great for this pair - or, indeed, for humanity in general. There’s an engaging dynamic here between the two travellers; the photography goes some way to creating the cold and barren environment through which they wander and the very nature of story ensures that we are not constantly awash with excess dialogue as their journey speaks for itself. There’s a touching, if brief, contribution from Robert Duvall that proves surprisingly effective as the pair come more to terms with their situation, too. It’s a slow burn, this film, but that’s a good thing as we find ourselves increasingly immersed in something that I felt inevitable, chilly and unpredictable. I haven’t read the book, but this uses it’s imagery to tell a poignant story and is well worth two hours that can’t be that far distant from the original text.

Hand-picked from TMDb similar and recommended lists for The Road. Each link opens a full WatchMind page with synopsis, trailer, community reviews, and official store links—so you can compare tone and audience overlap before you pick what to watch next.

About WatchMind AI

WatchMind AI (WatchMind) recommends movies and TV using AI-assisted algorithms — taste profiles, semantic matching, and embedding similarity process your browsing, queue saves, ratings, and engagement into personalised picks: For You rails, daily suggestions, mood feeds, and match scores. Trailers, TMDb review excerpts, and licensed where-to-watch links support each pick. We do not host or stream full films or episodes.

Browse movies, TV series, and curated feeds such as Story Hunt. Title pages include synopses, cast, where-to-watch data from TMDb, and structured data for search engines. Personalised rails and your profile use optional Google sign-in (name, email, and account ID only to identify you — see the homepage section "What we collect and why"). The catalogue remains readable without an account.

Privacy Policy · Terms of Service. Catalogue metadata from TMDb. Sitemap: https://smartwhattowatch.com/sitemap.xml.