"Ruth Rendell Mysteries" Road Rage: Part One (TV Episode 1998) Poster

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8/10
Excellent all round
MartPol25 August 2000
A highly interesting and effective spin on the very modern theme of environmental protest, Road Rage sees Inspector Wexford up against an apparently terrorist organisation who have kidnapped his wife. George Baker is excellent as the dignified but emotionally-crumbling detective, and the mini-series is directed with the kind of calm panache so typical of ITV's big-budget detective dramas.

Highly recommended viewing.
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7/10
By pass this episode at your peril
xmasdaybaby196614 March 2021
Good to see Wexford and co back but this 2 parter is a bit of a slog. One of the major characters is changed and promptly has a big role while Vine whom was changed last time out barely features Dora has her best role yet.
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1/10
Shockingly bad, especially for Britain
rch42722 April 2010
First, a qualifier: I'm an Anglophile and a fan of mysteries. This episode is clearly based upon the Newbury Bypass controversy, and on that matter, I was sympathetic towards the eco-activists. Having said that, "Road Rage" is by far the most maddening, idiotic, outright laughable British mystery I have ever seen, and ever hope to see.

Take every British caricature -- the teddy bear of a cop with a heart of gold, who only wants a nice cuppa tea, the smoldering sidekick who curses the restrictions the law places upon him when dealing with perps, the stony superintendent who refuses to see reason, the matronly wife who dispenses wise advice, et al. Add to that the distraught German father, the working-class taxi driver, the smarmy innkeeper, the peace-loving hippies with their digeridoos and dreadlocks -- every character sourced from Central Casting, and told to "turn it up to eleven", while in the background the orchestra sobs to cue the audience to *deeply feel that emotion*!

The plot is convoluted instead of complex, and broken up by maddeningly slow and pointless stretches. Eco-activists are battling with road-clearing crews, eco-terrorists are resorting to violence, and a serial killer is preying on vulnerable people. And the police are baffled! (Why are the police in British mysteries *always* baffled?) When Inspector Wexford's wife mysteriously disappears, does he track down every lead? Does he search every back alley and interview every suspicious person? No -- he wrings his hands, telephones his children, and sits, waiting for some news of what might have happened to her to reach him. A cop! Un-be-freakin'-lievable.

The most laughable character is surely "King of the Woods" ("That's my legal name," he sneers) -- a tin-pot eco-dictator who spends most of his screen time casting brooding looks around, trying on masks and delivering cryptic yet pompous pronouncements -- some in rhyme. But the most annoying character is one of his followers, a fat hippie chick who alternately sings hippie hymns to the earth, and shrieks inconsolably. I kept hoping for something terrible to happen to her. Instead, everyone just keeps offering each other "a nice cuppa tea". Strewth!

There was a story worth telling in the Newbury Bypass. "Road Rage" uses that pretext in the most superficial way imaginable, and does everything possible to thwart itself through ridiculous plot turns and stultifyingly stupid dialogue ("You toffee-nosed bitch! You've got nothing on me!") and emotional handwringing. Seriously: at least half of this show is taken up with people being emotionally overwrought, telling each other how emotionally overwrought they are, or repeating the emotionally overwrought things that we've watched them go through.

I've never read Ms. Rendell's books, but I can say that "Road Rage" is even worse than I've described it. If it had been made in the US, it would've been laughed out of Hollywood. Actually, it never would've been made in the US; for all of the crap we turn out for big and small screens, we still have slightly higher standards that *this* crap.
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4/10
Road Rage: Part One
Prismark1018 December 2021
The story was written by George Baker himself and inspired somewhat by the environmental protests regarding the Newbury Bypass.

In the background of a road being built through a forest. Wexford and Burden have a facile debate regarding new roads and the environment.

When the body of a dead teenage girl is found in the forest, a murder investigation is under way. Her German father is distraught and an owner of a cab company is a person of interest.

Events take a sinister turn when Wexford's wife disappears. She was due to go and see her new grandchild. Soon other people have disappeared, all due to catch the same train.

They are all being held hostage and it is linked with the environmental protestors.

Having only previously watched the first Inspector Wexford story. I noted that it was heavily padded.

Road Rage is no exception, it is rather cumbersome and a tad hammy with the protestors.

I also found it hard to believe that Wexford will just sit at home when his wife is missing.
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