Roll Red Roll Poster

Roll Red Roll 2019

★ 6.962 votes80 min📅 2019-03-22

"When social media, “boy will be boys,” and vigilante justice collide, Steubenville, Ohio will never be the same."

Directed by Nancy Schwartzman, *Roll Red Roll* (2019) is a gripping documentary that unpacks the harrowing 2012 Steubenville, Ohio rape case—a tragedy that sent shockwaves through America's heartland.

Director: Nancy Schwartzman

Cast

Mark Cole
Self
Anthony Craig
Anthony Craig
Self
Rachel Dissell
Self
Alexandria Goddard
Self
Marianne Hemmeter
Self
Walter Madison
Self
Trent Mays
Self
Shawn McGhee
Self
Mike McVey
Self
Madeleine Nelson
Self

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Roll Red Roll (2019) about?

This documentary revisits the 2012 Steubenville, Ohio rape case, exposing how a high school football team's culture of entitlement, social media frenzy, and community denial enabled a brutal assault. It's a searing investigation into the mechanisms of cover-up and the cost of justice.

Who directed Roll Red Roll?

Nancy Schwartzman directed *Roll Red Roll*, bringing her decade-long experience in documentary storytelling to this urgent, socially relevant film.

Who stars in Roll Red Roll?

Key figures in the doc include investigative journalists like Rachel Dissell, blogger Alexandria Goddard, prosecutor Marianne Hemmeter, and local resident Mark Cole.

Is Roll Red Roll (2019) worth watching?

As a documentary, *Roll Red Roll* excels in its clarity and impact, offering a rare glimpse into the consequences of systemic failure. While not a feel-good watch, its importance as a cultural critique makes it essential viewing for those studying social justice or true crime.

How long is Roll Red Roll?

The documentary runs for 80 minutes.

🎥 Trailer

About Roll Red Roll (2019) — The Steubenville Rape Case and the Culture That Failed Its Victim

Directed by Nancy Schwartzman, *Roll Red Roll* (2019) is a gripping documentary that unpacks the harrowing 2012 Steubenville, Ohio rape case—a tragedy that sent shockwaves through America's heartland. At its core, the film dissects how a toxic blend of high school football culture, peer silence, and social media fueled a night of violence that left a young woman victimized and an entire community grappling with denial. Through raw interviews and chilling archival footage, Schwartzman crafts an unflinching portrait of complicity, where machismo, digital rumors, and misplaced loyalty collided to bury the truth. The atmosphere is tense, claustrophobic, and morally complex, forcing viewers to confront uncomfortable questions about accountability in small-town America.

Told with journalistic precision and emotional depth, *Roll Red Roll* transcends a true-crime retelling, becoming a cautionary tale about the dangers of unchecked power and the ripple effects of injustice. With a runtime of just 80 minutes, the documentary packs a punch, leaving audiences to ponder how far society has—or hasn't—come since Steubenville became a national symbol of cultural failure.