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Road to Perdition Poster

Road to Perdition

Pray for Michael Sullivan.
2002 | 117m | English

(296325 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 4 (history)

Director: Sam Mendes
Writer: David Self
Staring:
Details

Mike Sullivan works as a hit man for crime boss John Rooney. Sullivan views Rooney as a father figure, however after his son is witness to a killing, Mike Sullivan finds himself on the run in attempt to save the life of his son and at the same time looking for revenge on those who wronged him.
Release Date: Jul 12, 2002
Director: Sam Mendes
Writer: David Self
Genres: Drama, Crime, Thriller
Keywords hotel, illinois, hitman, farm, great depression, road trip, based on comic, revenge, organized crime, mafia, bank robbery, based on graphic novel, homework, learning to drive, spoiled son, scarred face, liberty half dollar, lake michigan, 1930s, cautionary, ambivalent, callous
Production Companies DreamWorks Pictures, 20th Century Fox, The Zanuck Company
Box Office Revenue: $181,001,478
Budget: $80,000,000
Updates Updated: Jul 30, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Tom Hanks Michael Sullivan
Tyler Hoechlin Michael Sullivan, Jr.
Paul Newman John Rooney
Jude Law Harlen Maguire
Daniel Craig Connor Rooney
Stanley Tucci Frank Nitti
Jennifer Jason Leigh Annie Sullivan
Liam Aiken Peter Sullivan
Dylan Baker Alexander Rance
Ciarán Hinds Finn McGovern
David Darlow Jack Kelly
Kevin Chamberlin Frank the Bouncer
Doug Spinuzza Calvino
Kurt Naebig Tenement Murderer
Duane Sharp Father Callaway
Michael Sassone Motel Manager
Roderick Peeples Nitti's Henchman
Keith Kupferer Nitti's Henchman
Lara Phillips Ruby the Waitress
Mina Badie Betty the Waitress
Heidi Jayne Netzley Prostitute
Lance Baker Crime Scene Policeman
Nicolas Cade Boy Michael Fights
John Judd Rooney's Business Associate
Kerry Rossall Rooney's Henchman
Ian Barford Rooney's Henchman
Rob Maxey Drug Store Owner
Maureen Gallagher Michael's Teacher
Diane Dorsey Aunt Sarah
Harry Groener Mr. McDougal
Peggy Roeder Farmer Virginia
James Greene Farmer Bill
Anthony LaPaglia Al Capone (uncredited)
Paul Turner Finn McGovern's Henchman
Craig Spidle Rooney's Henchman
Jack Callahan Rooney's Business Associate
Name Job
David Self Screenplay
Richard L. Johnson Art Direction
Nancy Haigh Set Decoration
Frank P. Calzavara Stunts
Paul Howarth Visual Effects Editor
Ted Haigh Assistant Art Director
Thomas Minton Assistant Art Director
Heather Pollock Set Costumer
Dan Schalk First Assistant Editor
Thomas Pasatieri Orchestrator
Celia Haining First Assistant Editor
Phillip Ellman Greensman
Robert Neilson Transportation Coordinator
Kerry Sanders Set Designer
Jann K. Engel Assistant Art Director
Paul Clemente Visual Effects Producer
Robert Q. Mathews Costume Supervisor
Bill Bernstein Music Editor
Harrison McEldowney Choreographer
Clyde E. Bryan First Assistant Camera
Anthony Joseph Fatigato Painter
Michael Clossin Stand In
Jane Blank Seamstress
William Patterson Art Department Assistant
Erica Frauman Post Production Supervisor
Bud Belyeu Picture Car Coordinator
Heather Sharpe Production Office Assistant
Michael J. Malone Unit Production Manager
Todd Homme Executive Music Producer
John J. Slove Jr. Propmaker
Martin L. Hudson Assistant Location Manager
Fred Folmer Best Boy Grip
Barbara Harris ADR Voice Casting
Max Allan Collins Graphic Novel
Kim Kahana Jr. Stunt Double
Michael Bender Production Secretary
Lea Morement Assistant Editor
Melanie Cassidy Location Assistant
Tom Gagnon Swing
Kyoko Kageyama Travel Coordinator
Richard Piers Rayner Graphic Novel
Krystine Lankenau Rotoscoping Artist
Scott Millan Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Dennis Hoffman Visual Effects Producer
Amanda Brand Unit Publicist
Marcy Grace Froehlich Assistant Costume Designer
Chris Cummings Art Department Coordinator
Kathryn Blondell Hairstylist
Patrick Caulfield Set Costumer
Mark Howard Choreographer
Susan Kowarsh Assistant Costume Designer
Brian Lunt Projection
Carrie Goodman Location Scout
James Hogan Transportation Captain
Kathryn Madden Craft Service
Henry Schaub Standby Painter
James M. Davis Construction Foreman
Joseph Paoletti Transportation Co-Captain
Daniel B. Clancy Leadman
George Hartmann Driver
Jeff Passanante Construction Coordinator
Allen Hall Special Effects Coordinator
Chris Glomp Best Boy Electric
Kathryn Mindala Production Accountant
Stephen Andrzejewski Location Manager
David M. Roberts Boom Operator
Vince Cordero Rigging Gaffer
Bill Banyai Sound Engineer
Cortland Boyd Electrician
Rick Thomas Gaffer
Jason W. Jennings Sound Effects Editor
Jim Turner Production Controller
Jill S. Litwin Set Production Assistant
Aaron Richmond Editorial Production Assistant
James F. Roorda Rigging Grip
Phil Hetos Color Timer
Thomas Vicari Scoring Mixer
Dhana Gilbert Production Coordinator
Jeffrey Edward Baksinski 3D Supervisor
Christopher Glasgow Grip
Mike Schwake Dolly Grip
Guillaume DeLouche Assistant Property Master
Doug Harlocker Property Master
Larry McCaffrey Technical Advisor
Judith Bouley Additional Casting
Matthew Dettmann Foley Artist
Steve Battaglia Second Second Assistant Director
Steven R. Molen Production Executive
Bob Beemer Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Mark Pappas Foley Editor
Paige Augustine Set Dresser
Benjamin Nowicki Set Decorating Coordinator
Chris Tedesco Musician
Gabriela Ríos Assistant Production Coordinator
Carmen Flores De Tanis Assistant Sound Editor
Benjamin Beardwood Dialogue Editor
James D'Damery Jr. Second Assistant Accountant
Ross Dunkerley Assistant Chief Lighting Technician
Jamie Biehl Extras Casting Assistant
Aimee Lippert Assistant Makeup Artist
Gerald A. King Key Rigging Grip
Tiffany Smith Visual Effects Production Manager
Renee D. Czarapata Payroll Accountant
Chris Buzek Assistant Camera
Kelly Diehl Libra Head Technician
Matthew Haskins Camera Loader
Kelly R. Borisy Key Grip
Joe Dorn Supervising ADR Editor
Pamela Lynn Thomas Casting Assistant
Jennifer Jobst Key Costumer
Gary Burritt Negative Cutter
Harry Lu Armorer
Gary Lewis Dialogue Editor
Howard London ADR Mixer
George Budd Music Consultant
Sven E. Fahlgren Post Production Coordinator
Kurt Greufe First Assistant Accountant
Lane Burch Foley Mixer
Gretchen Gain Costumer
Suzanne Trucks Second Assistant Camera
Thomas Kittle Special Effects Technician
Sam Mendes Director
Thomas Newman Original Music Composer
Conrad L. Hall Director of Photography, In Memory Of
Jill Bilcock Editor
Debra Zane Casting
Dennis Gassner Production Design
Albert Wolsky Costume Design
Michael L. Fink Visual Effects Supervisor
Terri Taylor Casting Associate
Daniel C. Striepeke Makeup Artist
P. Scott Sakamoto Camera Operator
François Duhamel Still Photographer
Doug Coleman Second Unit Director, Stunt Coordinator
Joey Box Utility Stunts
Scott A. Hecker Sound Editor, Supervising Sound Editor
Tom Stern Chief Lighting Technician
Mickie Paskal Casting Consultant
Carla Meyer Dialect Coach
John Pritchett Production Sound Mixer
K.C. Hodenfield First Assistant Director
Jeff Okabayashi Second Assistant Director
Chris Castaldi Production Assistant
Name Title
Tara B. Cook Associate Producer
Cherylanne Martin Associate Producer
Joan Bradshaw Executive Producer
Dean Zanuck Producer
Sam Mendes Producer
Walter F. Parkes Executive Producer
Richard D. Zanuck Producer
Glenn Williamson Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Actor Tom Hanks Nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Actor Tom Hanks Nominated
SAG Awards Best Supporting Actor Martin Landau Nominated
SAG Awards Best Supporting Actress Liam Neeson Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 29 41 21
2024 5 34 54 23
2024 6 29 46 17
2024 7 35 58 21
2024 8 31 63 14
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2024 12 24 34 15
2025 1 24 39 18
2025 2 20 31 6
2025 3 7 23 1
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2025 8 4 5 3
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2025 10 4 5 4

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2025 5 303 623
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2024 12 864 929
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2024 8 818 896

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

Damnation Alleyway. When his son witnesses him enacting a hit, mob enforcer Michael Sullivan finds that the man whom he likened to a father has ordered a hit on him and his family. Too late to save his wife and youngest child, Sullivan goes on the run with his eldest boy and plots revenge along t ... he way. How refreshing to find a gangster movie in the modern age, more so, how refreshing to find a gangster movie set in the early 1930s and not involving foul mouthed Mafioso types. Directed by Sam Mendes and starring Tom Hanks, Paul Newman, Daniel Craig and Jude Law, Road To Perdition is an adaptation of the Graphic Novel that was brought to us by Max Allan Collins & Richard Piers Rayner. The film deals with themes of violence and its consequences and fathers and sons, set to a watery back drop during the Great Depression. It's also a pulse pinging treat of visual magnificence thanks to cinematographer Conrad L. Hall (his last film before he passed away). Comparisons with great gangster film's of the past are inevitable, but Mendes' film has more in common with something like "Eastwood's Unforgiven" and "John Ford's The Searchers", the journey of the lead protagonist is fraught and telling, and motivated by circumstance. Yet the trick for first time viewers that Road To Perdition has up its sleeve, is that we don't know how it will work out for Hanks' Sullivan. It makes for a riveting experience with many transcendent rewards along the way. As regards the cast, Hanks is a touch miscast, but his play off relationship with the quite terrific Newman gives the film some solid ground from which to launch the sombre story. Daniel Craig does a nifty line in weasel and Law convinces as a mouldy toothed hired killer who enjoys taking photographs of his victims. Pic has almost philosophical mediations on good and bad, and it's elegiacally drawn by Mendes. The melancholic mood is enhanced by Thomas Newman's musical score, where he reworks his "Shawshank Redemption" score for narrative tightness. The film thrives as a poetic and atmospheric piece. The story might be basic, but it manages to rise above that because it be a superbly directed and well acted picture. One that just happens to be beautiful in spite of the bleakness that lingers on the main protagonist and the journey he undertakes. 8/10

May 16, 2024
mooney240
4.0

**Overall : With so much going for it, The Road to Perdition is surprisingly disappointing.** After hearing Road to Perdition referred to as a classic multiple times, I was interested. Then seeing that it boasted a cast of Tom Hanks, Daniel Craig, and Stanley Tucci and that Sam Mendes directed it ... , I was even more intrigued. Finally, after seeing the trailer and its promise of some cool action scenes, I was excited to watch this movie! But sadly, The Road to Perdition greatly disappointed. I will be honest and say that this isn’t a typical movie I enjoy, but the film was long and very slow. The action scenes were few and far between, with almost every second of action showcased in the trailers. The ending didn’t surprise and left me even more frustrated as I watched the entire film. Not a fan.

Sep 03, 2022
narrator56
7.0

One should bear in mind that this is basically a mafia movie. I say that because it is presented almost as a dramatic coming of age story, which implies a different sort of story altogether. I mean, there is the coming of age element to it, but it is a brutal, violent film true to its mafia roots. F ... or example, father and son feature strongly throughout, with details, backgrounds and character development. Mom and the brother are more like undeveloped pawns in the story. The settings and photography are excellent, nearly worth watching the movie all by itself. I am not sure Tom Hanks is quite up to his usual high standard here, but it may be exactly what the director was looking for. I must day that once father and son stopped at a house for assistance, I knew how the movie would end, being a mini-morality tale and all, but I write novels in my spare time, so I am used to thinking about ending variations. The film would not make any of my top 10 lists, but I am glad to have watched this focused, atmospheric slice of noir.

Nov 16, 2023
Geronimo1967
7.0

Tom Hanks is "Mike" - enforcer for the "Rooney" family headed up by patriarch "John" (Paul Newman) with his wayward son "Connor" (Daniel Craig). When an interrogation goes fatally wrong, the father is furious with the son, who then attempts to have "Mike" and his entire family murdered. He manages t ... o save himself and his teenage son "Mike Jnr." (Tyler Hoechlin) but his wife and his other young son are killed - so he determines on revenge. This is probably my favourite film from Sam Mendes and it is certainly my favourite featuring Hanks. Though a bit slow off the mark, the tension builds well as the fleeing pair develop their bond whilst fleecing the mob, exacting their revenge and the youngster learns to drive. There are a few undercooked efforts, however - not least Jude Law's almost comic-book "Maguire" and Newman features but sparingly, but in the main the characters develop and grow and the father son relationship matures engagingly until a last fifteen minutes that I felt rather disappointing. The writing is a shade pedestrian, and the narrative a bit too predictable, but it looks great: the attention to detail, the cars, the costumes and the whole style of the film give it an authenticity that I really enjoyed.

Sep 02, 2023