Genre: Drama
Director: Danny Boyle
Cast: James Franco, Kate Mara, Amber Tamblyn,
Treat Williams, John Lawrence, Kate Burton,
Clémence Poésy
RunTime: 1 hr 34 mins
Released By: 20th Century Fox
Rating: NC-16 (Gory Scene and Coarse Language)
Official Website: http://www.foxsearchlight.com/127hours/
Opening Day: 17 February 2011
Synopsis:
127 HOURS is the new film from Danny Boyle, the Academy Award® winning director of 2008's Best Picture, SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE. 127 HOURS is the true story of mountain climber Aron Ralston's (James Franco) remarkable adventure to save himself after a falling boulder crashes on his arm and traps him in an isolated slot canyon in Utah. Throughout his journey, Ralston recalls friends, lovers (Clémence Poésy), family, and the two hikers (Amber Tamblyn and Kate Mara) he met before his accident. Over the next five days Ralston battles the elements and his own demons to finally discover he has the courage and the wherewithal to extricate himself by any means necessary, descend a 65 foot wall and hike over eight miles before he is finally rescued. Told with a dynamic narrative structure, 127 HOURS is a visceral, thrilling story that will take an audience on a never before experienced journey and prove what we can do when we choose life.
Movie Review:
The
hype for "127 Hours" goes that early audiences needed
barf-bags and medical attention during the film's more viscerally
involving sequence but perhaps the most gut-wrenching response
to the film comes from its central question: What would you
do to survive? Yes, the "Saw" franchise has been
crassly querying audiences about that for almost a decade
now but with Danny Boyle, it all adds some class to the proceedings
that surround the true story of adventurer Aron Rosten's (James
Franco) memoir “Between a Rock and a Hard Place,"
about his ordeal in the gorgeous and isolated Blue John Canyon,
Utah where he was trapped in crevice with his right arm stuck
between a boulder and a rock.
As
much as a tactile film-making experience as you will be likely
to see anywhere, Boyle's style complements Aron's personality
as man who wants to feel and experience the world one stone
at a time. Like survival horror done with the verve and narrative
flair of a visualist like Boyle who can tap into the manic
psyche of those who want and need more from their given reality,
"127 Hours" presents a heightened emotional drive
that comes from a truly human place of survival that digs
into the nature of life. It can be said that in those few
days, with half a bottle of water and a modicum of food reserves,
Aron might have very well discovered something profound about
life itself. Like Sean Penn's "Into the Wild," that
deals with yet another true-life adventurer Christopher McCandless'
trek into the Alaskan wilderness that led him to his doom,
Boyle and fellow screenwriter Simon Beaufoy digs into life
before the fact as well as an amalgamation of different ways
to document the scenario. In McCandless' story, he leaves
journals behind while Aron films a series of face-to-face
confessionals with his video camera when he finally understands
that he might not make it -- when optimism begins to fade.
There remains a good sense of psychology coming from the deprivation
that Aron endures, the plight of a multitude of regrets and
of a life lived -- when it is said that it flashes before
our eyes -- and the awareness of desires becoming salient
as well as the mirages of hope glimmering like a particularly
poignant shot through the crevice, through the canyon and
into Aron's car where he left some food reserves
Boyle's
highly tuned aesthetics becomes powerfully rendered by James
Franco's terrifically gutsy performance that embodies the
written character down to a tee, he turns from a cocksure
adrenaline-junkie to a humbled survivor in a compact 79 minute
baptism of fire. While Boyle's visual flourishes could be
seen as gratuitous or indulgent, it gets carried through my
A.R. Rahman's music-video techno score signifies the rush
of its protagonist and the absurdity of life's twists and
turns and never falters. Boyle's endeavours help the harshness
of the material go down easier, and leaves audiences on a
grace note of courage and hope.
Movie Rating:
(Tactile and at once graceful, "127 Hours"
is a bundle of fears, anxieties, epiphanies and hope)
Review by Justin Deimen
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