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The Way Back Der Lange Weg

2010 American survival film by Peter Weir

The Fashion Back
The Way Back Poster.jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Peter Weir
Screenplay past Peter Weir
Keith Clarke
Based on The Long Walk
by Sławomir Rawicz
Produced past Peter Weir
Joni Levin
Duncan Henderson
Nigel Sinclair
Scott Rudin
Starring Jim Sturgess
Ed Harris
Saoirse Ronan
Colin Farrell
Cinematography Russell Boyd
Edited by Lee Smith
Music by Burkhard Dallwitz

Production
companies

National Geographic Films
Spitfire Pictures
Imagenation Abu Dhabi
Film Fund Grand duchy of luxembourg

Distributed past Newmarket Films
Sectional Film Distribution
Falling star Pictures

Release dates

  • September 3, 2010 (2010-09-03) (Telluride Film Festival)
  • December 29, 2010 (2010-12-29) (United States)

Running fourth dimension

133 minutes
Country United States
Languages English
Russian
Budget $30 million[1]
Box role $24.one million[1]

The Way Dorsum is a 2010 American survival pic directed by Peter Weir, from a screenplay by Weir and Keith Clarke. The film is inspired past The Long Walk (1956), the memoir by quondam Shine prisoner of war Sławomir Rawicz, who claimed to take escaped from a Soviet Gulag and walked 4,000 miles (half-dozen,400 km) to liberty in Earth State of war II. The film stars Jim Sturgess, Colin Farrell, Ed Harris, and Saoirse Ronan, with Alexandru Potocean, Sebastian Urzendowsky, Gustaf Skarsgård, Dragoș Bucur and Marking Potent.

The film was nominated for an Oscar for Best Makeup, simply lost to The Wolfman. The nomination was received by Gregory Funk, Edouard F. Henriques and Yolanda Toussieng.[2]

Plot [edit]

During World War Two, afterwards the Soviet invasion of Poland, young Polish ground forces officer Janusz Wieszczek (Jim Sturgess) is held equally a prisoner and interrogated by the NKVD. The Soviets, unable to get him to admit that he is a spy, take his married woman into custody as well and severely torture her; from her they extort a statement condemning him. He is sentenced to twenty years in a Gulag labour camp deep in Siberia.

In that location he meets those with whom he later plans an escape: Mr. Smith (Ed Harris), an American engineer; Khabarov (Mark Strong), an actor; Valka (Colin Farrell), a hardened Russian criminal; Tomasz (Alexandru Potocean), a Polish artist; Voss (Gustaf Skarsgård), a Latvian priest; Kazik (Sebastian Urzendowsky), a Pole suffering from dark blindness; and Zoran (Dragoș Bucur), a Yugoslav accountant. Khabarov secretly tells Janusz that he is planning to escape southward to Mongolia, passing Lake Baikal. Smith cautions Janusz that it is Khabarov's mode to discuss escape plans with newcomers, to maintain his morale, simply zippo will come of it. At times Janusz seems to hallucinate the front door of a country habitation and adjoining window ledge, which holds plants and a rock he attempts to attain for. Janusz follows through with the escape with Smith, Valka, Voss, Tomasz, Zoran and Kazik during a severe snowstorm that covers their tracks.

Kazik freezes to decease the second night of the trek, later on losing his style back to the campsite while looking for woods, and the group buries him. Afterward many days of travelling across the snows of Siberia, the group reaches Lake Baikal. There they meet Irena (Saoirse Ronan), a young Polish girl, who tells them that Russian soldiers murdered her parents and sent her to a collective farm nigh Warsaw, where they treated her cruelly, so she escaped. Smith realises the inaccuracies in her story, every bit Warsaw is occupied by the Germans; nevertheless, despite his misgivings that she'll slow them down and tax their meager food supply, he agrees with the group to allow her in. Smith eventually cautions her about the lie and says he will non tolerate any more, in response to which she admits that her parents were communists but the communist rulers killed them anyway and sent her to an orphanage.

When the group reaches an unpatrolled edge between the Soviet Union and Mongolia, Valka, who idolizes Joseph Stalin and does not know what he would practice elsewhere, decides to stay. The rest continue to Ulaanbaatar, but soon they come across images of Stalin, Khorloogiin Choibalsan and a red star. Janusz realises that Mongolia is under communist control and since Red china is at state of war with Japan, tells the group they should take refuge in British Bharat. As they go on south beyond the Gobi Desert, lack of h2o, sandstorms, sunburn, blisters and sunstroke weaken the group. They find a well, which provides temporary relief. Even so, presently after departing, they are hit past a sandstorm and lose the majority of their water supply. Realizing they could never observe the well again, they group carries on. Irena collapses several times and presently dies. A few days later Tomasz collapses and dies. Smith is on the verge of death, but after existence motivated by Janusz, Zoran and Voss, decides to rejoin the group and the severely dehydrated four find a much-needed water source. Soon later, they achieve Mainland china by passing through the Great Wall.

As they reach the Himalayas, all of them on the verge of death, they are rescued past a Tibetan monk who takes them to a Buddhist monastery where they regain their strength. Smith decides to become to Lhasa with the help of one of the monk'due south contacts, who volition smuggle him out through China. Once in that location, he anticipates he volition be able to connect with the US military, his return to America ensured. The remaining 3 keep to expedition through the Himalayas and shortly reach India and get assistance from villagers. The Indian government helps them reach their home peacefully.

At the end of the film, Janusz keeps walking effectually the world until 1989, when the communist regime in Poland is ousted from power. The concluding scene of the film shows Janusz, 50 years after being taken captive, once again envisioning the door and reaching for the rock; this time he takes a key subconscious beneath the rock to open the door and reconcile with his wife.

Bandage [edit]

  • Jim Sturgess as Janusz Wieszczek, a young Shine inmate made a prisoner of war during the Soviet invasion of Poland
  • Ed Harris as Mr. Smith, an American inmate and former engineer
  • Saoirse Ronan as Irena Zielińska, an orphaned teenage Polish girl trying to escape from the Soviet Union, who meets upwards with the fugitives nigh Lake Baikal
  • Colin Farrell equally Valka, a tough Russian inmate and gambler whose most prized possession is a knife he calls "Wolf"
  • Dragoș Bucur equally Zoran, a Yugoslavian inmate who used to be an accountant and is considered a funny man
  • Alexandru Potocean every bit Tomasz Horodinsky, a Polish inmate and former pastry chef who dreams of condign an artist
  • Gustaf Skarsgård equally Andrejs Voss, a Latvian inmate and former priest
  • Sebastian Urzendowsky as Kazik, a young Polish inmate suffering from dark blindness
  • Mark Strong as Andrei Timofeyevich Khabarov, a Russian inmate and role player who was imprisoned when the play he was in was deemed destructive by Soviet regime

Product [edit]

Groundwork [edit]

The movie is loosely based on The Long Walk (1956), Sławomir Rawicz'south memoir depicting his alleged escape from a Siberian Gulag and subsequent 4,000-mile walk to freedom in Republic of india. The book sold over 500,000 copies and is credited with inspiring many explorers. In 2006 the BBC unearthed records (including some written past Rawicz himself) which showed that, rather than having escaped from the gulag, he had in fact been released by the USSR in 1942.[3] [iv] Nevertheless, at that place is some circumstantial evidence that some sort of trek to freedom occurred, via the route outlined in the book and moving-picture show. Captain Rupert Mayne, a British intelligence officer in Calcutta in 1942, interviewed three emaciated men, who claimed to have escaped from Siberia. Mayne ever believed their story was the same as that of The Long Walk. So the possibility remains that someone – fifty-fifty if not Rawicz – achieved this extraordinary feat.[5] Though the director Peter Weir continues to claim that the so-called long walk happened, he himself now describes The Way Back as "substantially a fictional film".[3] [vi] [vii]

Laurence Harvey and Herbert Wilcox announced plans to make a film from The Long Walk in 1957.[8]

Filming [edit]

Principal photography took place in Republic of bulgaria, Kingdom of morocco and India.[ix]

Reception [edit]

The Way Back received more often than not positive reviews. Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports a 74% approval rating based on 139 reviews, with an average rating of half-dozen.88/10. The critics consensus is: "It isn't as emotionally involving as it should be, but this Peter Weir epic offers sweeping ambition and strong performances to go with its thousand visual spectacle."[x] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted boilerplate score of 66 out of 100 based on 33 critics, indicating "more often than not favorable reviews".[eleven] Empire awarded the moving-picture show three out of 5 stars and wrote, "Information technology'southward skillful, merely from this director nosotros accept come to expect swell."[12] The Guardian awarded it three out of 5 and wrote, "Weir has put together a good film – oddly, though, considering its scale, information technology feels like a rather small i."[13] The Telegraph called the film "A journey that feels atrocious and heroic and unfathomable – and one you'll desire to sentry again."[xiv]

Music [edit]

The soundtrack to The Way Dorsum was released on Jan xviii, 2010.[fifteen]

No. Title Creative person Length
i. "Interrogation" Burkhard Dallwitz 3:36
ii. "New Arrivals" Burkhard Dallwitz 1:xvi
3. "Plans for Escape" Burkhard Dallwitz 1:58
4. "A Dauntless Man" Burkhard Dallwitz ane:00
five. "Escape" Burkhard Dallwitz two:48
half dozen. "Lake Baikal" Burkhard Dallwitz 3:35
vii. "Freedom?" Burkhard Dallwitz 3:02
8. "Mirages Don't Have Birds" Burkhard Dallwitz two:34
nine. "The Abandoned Temple" Burkhard Dallwitz 1:17
10. "H2o!" Burkhard Dallwitz iii:36
11. "Tibet" Burkhard Dallwitz five:26
12. "Republic of india" Burkhard Dallwitz 1:58
13. "Keep on Walking" Burkhard Dallwitz 2:42
14. "Closing Credits" Burkhard Dallwitz 7:39
Full length: 42:27

See as well [edit]

  • The Desperate Ones, 1967 film about a gulag escape by ii Polish brothers
  • Equally Far every bit My Anxiety Will Carry Me, 2001 movie most a German World State of war Two pw escaping from a Siberian Gulag to the Iranian border
  • Gulag, 1985 film depicting a gulag escape and arduous journey to freedom

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "The Manner Dorsum (2011)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2012-02-27 .
  2. ^ "The 83rd Academy Awards (2011) Nominees and Winners". Academy of Motion Film Arts and Sciences . Retrieved March eighteen, 2022.
  3. ^ a b "How The Long Walk became The Fashion Back". BBC . Retrieved 2010-12-05 .
  4. ^ Levinson, Hugh (2006-10-30). "Walking the Talk?". BBC. Retrieved 7 August 2011.
  5. ^ "Walking the talk?". xxx October 2006 – via news.bbc.co.great britain.
  6. ^ Peter Weir 16 February 2011 Australian Broadcasting Corporation interview, part 1 on YouTube Retrieved 2011-02-19.
  7. ^ Peter Weir Feb 16, 2011 Australian Dissemination Corporation interview, part two on YouTube Retrieved 2011-02-19.
  8. ^ Schallert, Edwin (July 15, 1957). "Harvey Will Produce 'Long Walk;' Hayden Pinnacle Star in 'Hard equally Nails'". Los Angeles Times. p. C9.
  9. ^ "The Way Back (2010): Filming & Product". IMDb.
  10. ^ "The Way Back (2011)". Fandango. Retrieved 2020-01-23 .
  11. ^ "The Way Dorsum Reviews". Metacritic . Retrieved 2019-11-14 .
  12. ^ "Empire'due south The Fashion Back Picture show Review". Empireonline.com. Retrieved 2012-02-27 .
  13. ^ Bradshaw, Peter (2010-12-24). "The Fashion Back – review". The Guardian. London.
  14. ^ Sandhu, Sukhdev (2010-12-23). "The Manner Back, review". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  15. ^ "The Way Back Soundtrack". TheOST. 2010. Retrieved January 6, 2014.

Farther reading [edit]

  • Willis, Linda (2010). Looking for Mr. Smith: The Quest for the Truth Backside The Long Walk, the Greatest Survival Story Ever Told. Skyhorse Publishing.
  • Strandberg, Mikael et al. "The Long Walk Articles". {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link) This is an excellent collection of manufactures relating to the motion-picture show The Mode Back, the book upon which it was based The Long Walk, Linda Willis' Looking For Mr. Smith, and related materials.
  • StRIX (Peter Fleming) (12 July 1956). "The Long Bow". The Spectator. p. 13. An interesting contemporary discussion of Rawicz's book by a noted explorer.
  • Shalamov, Varlam (1980). Kolyma Tales. Penguin Books.

External links [edit]

  • The Style Dorsum walk path at Google Maps
  • The Way Back at IMDb
  • The Way Dorsum at Rotten Tomatoes
  • The Way Dorsum at Box Office Mojo
  • The Way Dorsum at AllMovie
  • The Way Back at Metacritic Edit this at Wikidata

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Way_Back_(2010_film)

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