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Following a grueling five-week shift at an Alaskan oil refinery, workers led by sharpshooter John Ottway (Liam Neeson) are flying home for a much-needed vacation. A brutal storm causes their plane to crash in the frozen wilderness, and only eight men (Frank Grillo, Dermot Mulroney), including Ottway, survive. As they trek southward toward civilization and safety, Ottway and his companions must battle mortal injuries, the icy elements, and a pack of hungry wolves. (Icon Home Entertainment)

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Reviews (9)

D.Moore 

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English "They pay me to kill these animals so they don't kill you. Trust me, they're carnivores and they don't give a shit about berries and shrubs!" A great film that I'm in no way afraid to compare to the best in this genre. That is, with The Ghost and the Darkness or The Edge. It hasn't been this cold (without blaming the excessive air conditioning) and frightening in a movie theatre for a long time, and I'm thrilled. I certainly didn't expect that The Grey would be such a thoughtful film, that it would move me to emotion a few times in the end, or that it would be so full of thrilling action... And I couldn't even guess how great a compromise between these two positions the writers and director manage to create. Liam Neeson is flawless, the band of surviving miners are a very well written mix of characters (each of whom I cared about), scenes like the plane crash, waking up from dreams, night and day wolf attacks, individual deaths and the stunning finale (including the potluck scene) impressed me as much as the hero's non-awkward inner monologues, flashbacks and ubiquitous, here and there very funny bon mots laced with reflections on life, death and everything else. The only thing I could fault the film for, if I wanted to, would probably be the cliff scene. However, I don't want to. ()

Isherwood 

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English I went to see the new Carnahan film in anticipation of an action survival thriller where wolves will spectacularly feast on poor miners, with Liam Neeson as their unwilling waiter. To my genuine surprise, I got a functional horror film in all respects, in which the long-drawn-out howls send chills down my spine and the wolves are fed without any napkins or decent dining rules. In the second half, when one side starts losing strength and appetite grows on the other, it's no wonder that every step begins to physically ache. This is thanks not only to Carnahan's artistry but also to Streitenfeld's music, which definitely drives the concentrated depression out of it. And the end! The most interesting and most unpleasant surprise was about a year and a half ago. ()

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Malarkey 

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English I will gladly forgive this movie that it had some crazy pig behind the camera, who turned every action sequence into a crazy mishmash of cluttered and mostly unnecessarily spectacular something that had very little in common with a well-edited movie… Unnecessarily, because I actually got almost nothing out of the action. On the other hand, I have to say that I had a feeling as if this movie didn’t even want to interest with the action, but rather with the scenery and the locations as such. Liam Neeson showed off again as an awesome guy, worn out by one life fuck up after another, and it looks like the last one is going to take him down. Anyway, the fight is awesome, the atmosphere is absolutely amazing and Liam is simply divine. In the end, maybe those three simple reasons are what made me give the film four stars. ()

Kaka 

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English I didn't like all those dream scenes, they are inconsistent with the setting, and sometimes the too digital or too artificial wolves (like Gmork in The Neverending Story but at least he was scary). But I have no problem with it within this small survival subgenre. Well-layered characters, absence of pathos, excellent kill scenes, and above all, captivating atmosphere, mainly thanks to the brilliant sound design (the wolves in the forest, etc.). Some scenes (jumping over a chasm, or even the excellently and suggestively filmed airplane crash) are intense and have incredible balls, and the viewer feels like they are pushing their limits along with the main characters. Fortunately, they didn’t screw up the ending. ()

DaViD´82 

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English Demonized CGI wolves in a movie that can’t decide if it wants to be a snowy, melancholic existential affair about coming to terms with loss or an uncompromising movie about survival with rather over-the-top scenes saying something like “Liam Neeson is the new MacGyver/Bear Grylls/Chuck Norris". Both approaches work well alone, but they clash with each other too much in this picture. And that’s a shame. ()

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