Runtime: 117 minutes
Directed by: Mark Pellington
Starring: Jeff Bridges, Tim Robbins, Joan Cusack, Hope Davis, Robert Gossett
From: Screen Gems
This is another movie where I can deliver an interesting backstory related to it. In this case, around a quarter-century ago, a college roommate saw that the movie was on either HBO or Cinemax (our university’s dorms offered both on the cable package) so the channel-surfing stopped as Arlington Road was something he had seen before. Unfortunately, we only saw the final 20 to 25 minutes; despite being intrigued by what little I saw, because I am me it took literal decades for a full viewing.
A movie starring Jeff Bridges, Tim Robbins, & Joan Cusack is worthy of checking out, I say. Cusack is someone I should have seen more of by now, anyhow. Bridges is a paranoid college history professor who suspects that his neighbors are terrorists. What an interesting movie to watch in 2026 with all the talk of right-wing militias, distrust of the federal government, the FBI screwing up, bombings, and what have you.
It's an interesting film where Robbins has a suspicious past but is Bridges (who doesn’t trust the government; his wife was an FBI agent who died in a raid gone bad) making a mountain out of a molehill and is Robbins a changed man, or is Bridges right? In hindsight, I don’t mind waiting until I saw some 70’s paranoid conspiracy thrillers to view this late 90’s version of one. The movie isn’t as engaging or thrilling as something like All the President’s Men or The Conversation; that does not mean Arlington Road isn’t pretty good.
There’s electrifying scenes, a quality final act, good performances from the leads-including Hope Davis as the graduate student turned girlfriend-how awkward that is did get mentioned. The film is refreshingly like one from the 70’s-what reminded me of that era the most of course won’t be elaborated upon, because spoilers. The score from Angelo Badalamenti is a further asset. This isn’t without contrivances if you scrutinize the plot too hard. If you can avoid that…
It shouldn’t have taken a quarter-century but I’m relieved this loop has finally been closed.