The Grey, surviving in the face of nature

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Director Joe Carnahan created a visceral experience with The Grey that will stick in the psyche of viewers for days to come.

Liam Neeson gave perhaps his best performance as Ottway, a man burdened by darkness who nonetheless unleashes his primal strength to survive in the Alaskan wilderness after his plane crashes in a remote, wild region of Alaska, along with a group of oil prospectors, whom he leads to survive.

Boiling down to basic instincts in the face of nature's fury, Carnahan's film examines humanity stripped to its essence and the inner reserves that surface when all else is lost.

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From a tight script co-written with Ian Mackenzie Jeffers, Carnahan elicited both literal and existential chills through cutting blizzards shot by cinematographer Masanobu Takayanagi.

Yet amidst the brutal violence inflicted by both man and beast, a strange respect formed. Neeson conveys Ottway's seizing but indomitable fierce spirit to live as long as fate allows.

The climactic confrontation between man and wolf stuns both combatants with its primal power and dignity. A survival film that transcends the pulp thriller to become something much deeper.

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The Grey struck a chord, raising existential questions about mortality, the capacity for savagery amidst the loss of quiet civility, and the search for purpose in nature's darkest storms. A modern classic that endures.

The Grey was a huge success, grossing $67.3 million on a budget of $25 million, proving that its genre-blending premise was of great interest.



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2 comments
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One of my favorites with the great Liam Neeson; also, it is one of the best survival movies of this 21st century and one of the best survival movies ever. Another of those great ones from this century is All Is Lost (2013) with Robert Redford.

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That's right, there's another survival story I reviewed that takes place in Antarctica that I forget its name.