The Shawshank Redemption (1994)

Is your TV guide thin on details?
DigiGuide is loaded with information and detail - much to the disgust of our competitors.
Click here to start enjoying more detail

Missed another great programme?
DigiGuide can save your sanity by sending you SMS messages when your favourites programmes are on.
Click here to start SMS'ing now

Written by Stephen King, Frank Darabont

Directed by Frank Darabont

Running Time: 160 minutes (approx)

Production Year: 1994

Rating: 15 Certificate

Production Country: USA

Filmed in Colour

At a time when many literary critics were complaining that if writer Stephen King produced his laundry list he'd still get it published for a record advance, and film critics were secure in the knowledge that the writer's works could be safely assigned to the horror/ thriller genre, King's novella Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption provided a quite different analysis of humanity in extremis. The film of the book, now just known as The Shawshank Redemption, was rewarded with seven Academy Award nominatons: Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Editing, Best Original Score and Best Sound.

In this period drama spanning 1946 to 1967, Andy Dufresne (Tim Robbins, pictured, left), a soft-spoken, respected Maine banker, is convicted of the murders of his unfaithful wife and her lover. He receives a double-life sentence and is shipped off to Shawshank State Prison, Maine's toughest maximum security penitentiary. Despised at first by the other inmates because of his introverted manner, he slowly forges an unlikely friendship with the prison "fixer" Red (Morgan Freeman, pictured, right) and his gang. Red is a useful man to know as he runs a nice little sideline in procuring cigarettes, brandy, in fact anything for a price.

Robbins only wants a poster of Rita Hayworth and a mini geology hammer to pursue his love of stone carving. However, in prison life he has to deal with rape, beatings and a sadistic regime that serves only to break the inmates with no concern for humanity or justice. Despite this, Robbins determines to survive on his accountancy wits. Initially promising to help out a warder with his inheritance tax if the work gang he is on is given a bottle of beer apiece, Robbins gradually comes to a position of power in the prison as the accountant for corrupt prison warden Sammuel Norton's (Bob Gunton) illegal money-making schemes.

Throughout their time in prison, both men hold out hopes for parole. However, because Dufresne is so useful to Norton and because the parole board will not believe that Red is sufficiently penitent for his crimes, neither man is seriously considered by the parole board and they forge a strong friendship based on mutual, quiet respect. Red concentrates on his role of "fixer" while Dufresne uses his position with the governor to establish a prison library in which he concentrates on educating the younger prisoners. When one of those prisoners (Gil Bellows) joins the class and claims that he can prove Dufresne's innocence, there is hope that he will be allowed to appeal to the courts to gain his freedom. Norton will have none of it though, and Dufresne determines to gain a momentous revenge on the sadistic warden.

Cast

Image for Tim RobbinsTim RobbinsAndy Dufresne
Image for Morgan FreemanMorgan FreemanEllis Boyd "Red" Redding
Image for Bob GuntonBob GuntonWarden Norton
Image for William SadlerWilliam SadlerHeywood
Image for Clancy BrownClancy BrownCap. Byron T. Hadley
Gil BellowsTommy
Mark RolstonBogs Diamond
James WhitmoreBrooks Hatlen
Jeffrey DeMunn1946 D.A.
Larry BrandenburgSkeet
Neil GiuntoliJigger
Brian LibbyFloyd
David ProvalSnooze
Joseph RagnoErnie
Image for Jude CiccolellaJude CiccolellaGuard Mert

Still looking for more?

 Click here to search the web for The Shawshank Redemption

Add a comment

(required)
(required but not displayed)
Your e-mail is also used for adding an Avatar image to your comment using the free and very cool Gravatar.com
 
(your personal web site)

Please note we can not guarantee that programme makers will read your comment as we have no direct relationship with them, so requests for application forms will almost certainly be ignored (try searching Google instead). This is merely an opportunity to register opinions, questions or comments about a programme's content.