11/14/2015

Lone Survivor (2013) - Wahlberg and Berg's stout Navy SEAL war movie



+ Best War Movie of the Year

Mark Wahlberg portrays a tough, real-life Navy Seal in Peter Berg's Lone Survivor



A Navy SEAL team in Afghanistan are sent on a risky mission behind enemy lines to kill a Taliban leader. But the opposition is greater than anticipated, the terrain is exceedingly difficult, and the communication gets severed.

Writer-director Peter Berg (The Kingdom (2007)) makes a gritty, effective movie out of this horrific true story, based on the 2007 novel by Marcus Luttrell (Service: A Navy SEAL at Work (2012)) and Patrick Robinson (Intercept (2010)). The war record that otherwise might be of the kind that would change young men's minds about joining the forces and risking their lives for dubious purposes in faraway, poor parts of the world, becomes a film that immortalizes these men as strong, good, tragic heroes, which doubtlessly impresses new youths to join the ranks. Lone Survivor boasts visceral fight and falling scenes to support its very simple story, (one of a small group of men's fight, death and struggle to survive.) It is a piece of American patriotic war-lore, manipulative and simple but well-made, earnest and without qualms.
Lone Survivor sports a strong cast that heightens it: Emile Hirsch (Into the Wild (2007)), Eric Bana (Black Hawk Down (2001)), Ben Foster (Kill Your Darlings (2013)), Taylor Kitsch (True Detective (2015), TV-series), - and Mark Wahlberg (The Happening (2008)) are all very good here.

Related posts:

Peter Berg: 2013 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED VI]

2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED V]
2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED IV]
2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED III]
2013 in films - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II]
Battleship (2012) - 200+ mil. $ worth of brainless destruction


Watch the trailer for the film here

Cost: 49 mil. $
Box office: 149.3 mil. $
= Box office success
[The rights to the book were sold to Universal in 2007 in a bidding war for more than 2 mil. $. The film was then made largely without studio interference, with key cast members working for scale and producers even putting a mil. $ each into the production. The cast underwent training for the movie; Berg even visited the families of the deceased SEALs and became embedded with SEALs in Iraq for a month, (the first civilian to have been allowed this); and Luttrell and other SEAL's were advisers on the film. Lone Survivor was shot in New Mexico September - November 2012 and received a 25 % tax credit. Several stunt performers were injured during the making of the fall scenes. The movie was screened for several American football teams, gaining word-of-mouth, before its limited release. It opened wide in January at #1 to a 38.2 mil. $ opening weekend domestically, the second-largest January opening ever, behind Cloverfield (2008). It grossed 125 mil. $ in North America (83.7 % of the total gross), with Australia (3.5 mil. $/2.3 %) and the UK (3.4 mil. $/2.3 %) being the 2nd and 3rd biggest markets. The film was nominated for Oscars for Best Sound Editing and Best Sound Mixing, losing both to Gravity (2013). Lone Survivor is certified fresh at 75 % with a 6.6 critical average on Rotten Tomatoes.]

What do you think of Lone Survivor?

No comments:

Post a Comment