SummaryWhen they escape a Siberian labor camp in 1940 seven courageous multi-national prisoners discover the true meaning of friendship as their epic journey takes them across thousands of miles of hostile terrain en-route to India and their freedom. (Exclusive Media Group)
SummaryWhen they escape a Siberian labor camp in 1940 seven courageous multi-national prisoners discover the true meaning of friendship as their epic journey takes them across thousands of miles of hostile terrain en-route to India and their freedom. (Exclusive Media Group)
This is one of those movies that I will remember forever. A true story about a group of people that escape a Siberian prison camp in 1941 and walk 4000 miles to freedom in India. The locations are beautiful, the acting was brilliant (particularly from Collin Farrel with his crazy Russian murderer character), the comedy is hilarious when it's there and the story is awe-inspiring. I can tell you now that I appreciate the life I have a lot more after seeing what these men (and one girl) had to go through. This is definitely the best survival/adventure movie I have ever seen, and as of now one of at least my top 5 favorite movies of all time. The way the director portrayed two death scenes in particular was... this may sound strange, but, beautiful. That final scene right at the end almost had me in tears.
Everything in this movie is just **** is very difficult to find a good movie based on survival and this one is in the top 3 so far as per **** characters are outstanding,the cinematography is at its best,locations were excellent.There is not a single flaw that I can point out.
As Russell Boyd's remarkable cinematography emphasizes the dwarfing grandeur of the surrounding topography, Weir shows how the corresponding smallness of individuals is compensated for by the grandeur of their aspiration.
The Way Back, with its epic story and spectacularly bleak setting, invites comparisons with "Laurence of Arabia" and "Dr. Zhivago." It's awash in vast, unforgiving terrain. So it got the setting right, but not necessarily the substance.
This arduous travelogue focuses on the macro (stunning, David Lean-like landscapes) and the micro (countless closeups of blistered flesh) to the virtual exclusion of compelling characters.
What would you do to survive? Would you become an animal that will do anything to survive or would there still be some humanity left in you? Would you rely on good will of other people or would you just look after yourself? Would you be ruthless, merciless, without any sympathy to other beings or would you show mercy, offer shelter, give food even if you know that it will lead to your death? This is a film that brings out these questions and let's you answer them for yourself. A gripping film with good acting and in my opinion one of better film that have came out this year.
Really enjoyed it.. Great adventure and very entertaining great performance by great actors. Great pictures and bluray version looks great! highly recommended!
Peter Weir's The Way Back is just the legendary Australian directors second film in the 21st Century and, like the rest of his work, it highlights his ability to make his films as slow as they are dramatic. In the case of The Way Back, it is certainly slow. This slow pace really does hold it back as, though it allows Weir to show the pace at which the journey of the protagonist occurs, it does not make it overly watchable. This was one where I was undoubtedly mentally clawing for my phone and wondering what else I could think about. It was that slow. That said, it is certainly an epic journey with incredible visuals as Weir wrings drama out of their situation in an epic tale of survival and forgiveness that may get too schmaltzy at the end for my tastes, but is certainly an interesting WWII film nonetheless.
Depicting the journey from the gulag in Siberia to India undertaken by a group of Soviet prisoners and a girl who they meet along the way, The Way Back is a true story of epic proportions. The main players here are Janusz (Jim Sturgess), Mr. Smith (Ed Harris), Irena (Saoirse Ronan), and Valka (Colin Farrell). Convicted as a spy after his wife stated he was a spy and tortured as a result of her husband's unwillingness to sign a sworn statement affirming this, Janusz is a man who must forgive himself for putting his wife in that position. Mr. Smith is an American who moved to Russia and must now forgive himself for doing so, as it cost the life of his son. Irena is a girl who is all alone after her Polish parents became communists and were still arrested, leaving her and her brother in an orphanage, from which she ran away. Finally, Valka is a criminal who is escaping a debt in the prison that would see him beheaded, but is a Russian to the core. These four people, along with a few other interchangeable people, intend to travel from Russia to India, passing through Mongolia, Tibet, and the Himalayas, in the process. A harrowing journey, it is one that will test every resolve they have.
While the human core should be the focus of the film, it is only really the case for a few characters in the film with the remaining escapees relegated to obscurity. The film develops its main characters very nicely, but refuses to do the same for their fellow travelers. People die in this journey, yet are still hardly memorable. The faces and names fall into the back of your mind as the film operates like Survivor as it dwindles down the people who you will forget about anyways and focus in on those you actually care about at the end. Considering these are real people, it is unfortunate to see men who went through the exact same journey get relegated to bit players just because it was not their initial idea to escape or because they did not have somebody left behind in their lives that they had to forgive. This somewhat lends itself to the overly schmaltzy ending in which we see that forgiveness take place for the main characters. It is overly sentimental and seems to lose sight of what made the film work so well beforehand: its emphasis on survival.
It is this emphasis that really makes the film work as we see the desperation, the need for water, and the need for food overcome everybody. As they enter Mongolia, we see their horror when they realize just how much further they have to go to get to safety. Yes, they are out of Russia, but their journey is just beginning. It is a mentally taxing journey that, when it seems over, it is never over. Weir does an excellent job capturing this emotional strain, exemplified by when they actually do reach India. Until then, the journey was arduous and full of moments where it seemed to be over only to pick back up again, that Weir is able to make this moment seem surreal. How can it be over? Are they actually safe? Weir, up to the end of this film, had succeeded in making this journey seem so unending that when it finally ends, it feels like it is just beginning again.
Arming the film with excellent cinematography that captures the beauty of the terrain that they walk from extreme cold to extreme heat, The Way Back is a beautifully shot. Blending this nicely with the horrors on display as these escapees try to go from Russia to India on foot, the film is packed with tension as we see them all struggle to survive. Yet, the film's characters are extremely lacking for those the film does not consider important enough to develop. That said, the few it does develop provide enough of an emotional core to latch onto, even if the film is absolutely terrifyingly slow.
Beautiful visuals and a great cast but the connections aren't well developed or even fully explored between the characters and the audience or between the characters themselves. Saoirse Ronan adds an element of life to the group that was badly needed but never manages to pull the group together in a way that I could find satisfying. Difficult scenes like the escape from the Siberian camp were done entirely too briskly in favor of more long, drawn out travel scenes which still don't use the time to effectively connect you to the cast. Worth watching but clearly a film that could have been much more.
Siberia. Mongolia. India. What these places have in common in "The Way Back" is the footsteps of a small group of people who have a matchless desire to go home. The latest film by Peter Weir, director of "The Truman Show", follows the extensive and exhausting journey of convicts who are imprisoned not just by guards and fences, but by lands that have been conquered by communism.
Escaping the Siberian gulag was the easy part; a 4,000-mile walk awaits them. During this journey, our eyes are treated with some magnificent imagery. The snowy mountains and scorching deserts are exhibited through great cinematography by Russell Boyd. It's weird how these paintings of nature are also what could drive our "Walkers" to death. "The Way Back" causes mixed emotions in its irony that the things that could bring so much pleasure to our eyes are the same things that torment the film's heroes.
Read more here: ****/the-way-back/
Production Company
Exclusive Films,
National Geographic Films,
Imagenation Abu Dhabi FZ,
Allied Filmmakers,
Monolith Films,
On the Road,
Point Blank Productions,
Polski Instytut Sztuki Filmowej