Posts Tagged ‘danny boyle’

Let’s Take A Look At The Movie 127 Hours.

Man is very  inconsequential to nature. It’s a lesson the world teaches us from time to time, making it known that we aren’t necessarily the ruling class on the planet. It’s a lesson a young hiker, Aron Ralson, learned over the course of five days in May of 2003 when his right arm was pinned between a boulder and a rock wall. The struggle, pain, and ultimately, will to survive (which entails so much more pain) Ralston went through is now the basis of Danny Boyle’s new film, 127 Hours.

127 Hours is both a harrowing testament to Ralston and his overpowering continence that allowed him to walk away from that predicament not exactly unchanged. It’s also a vital look at the nature of things, the world as we know it or maybe don’t know it so well, and those instances where it might turn on us blindly no matter how much we might respect it. Above all else, 127 Hours is the closest to a flawlessly executed film to come across all year.

James Franco plays Ralston, an adventurer of all the far corners of the planet. Ralston is tired of the hustle and bustle of life, wants to drive past the mass marketing on every street corner to something a bit simpler. In May of 2003, he ventured to the desert near Moab, Utah. There, in Blue John Canyon, he found himself trapped. A boulder had come dislodged, both it and Ralston fell, and at the bottom of the canyon, the boulder came down on his arm. Ralston was trapped, unable to budge the heavy rock or himself no matter what he tried. That was the beginning of the five days, 127 hours, when Ralston had to overcome lack of water, lack of food, and exhaustion before resorting to drastic measures in order to free himself.

Boyle, never a director who finds himself in the spot of repeating himself, once again pulls of an incredibly accomplished piece of filmmaking. Put into the hands of someone who wanted to just make a straight forward narrative of Ralston’s tale of persistence, 127 Hours would still have been a commendable film based solely on its harrowing narrative. Boyle isn’t satisfied with convention nor does he ever take the path you might expect, cliche or not. From the basic structure of the film in which we never leave Ralston’s side to the way Boyle handles the hallucinations Ralston experienced due to his thirst and lack of sleep to even the way the film’s title presents itself, 127 Hours surprises and engages you with every fervid moment.

Those hallucinations in particular could have come across as hokey or ersatz. Boyle utilizes them to tell us more about Ralston, who he was as a child, what his family dynamic was like, and even who he could be if given the opportunity to live past this moment in his life. They grow increasingly emotional, as well, until they almost become Ralston’s life blood, his one connection still present to the world outside this canyon. They are also what probably forced Ralston to take those drastic measures to continue his life in this world.

That moment is extremely intense. The whole film rides a level of tension even before Ralston becomes trapped. Boyle shoots the environment Ralston has ventured to with as much respect as possible, pulling the beauty and might of the world off in each and every frame of film. The moment Ralston becomes trapped is shot passingly, comes in an instant that neither Ralston nor the viewer could have prevented. The ensuing five-day struggle to hold onto life and sanity is equally shot with a fervor that grasps your interest, never allowing the confined of the locale appear boring or minimalist. However, once Ralston determines he is going to live, once he takes out dull knife and begins the process of removing his own arm in order to free himself, literally like a fox in a trap, all else stops. Boyle doesn’t pull away from the bloody ordeal, something many viewers might not be able to watch, but that’s okay. There’s an understanding there that maybe not everyone will be able to sit and watch Ralston do this to himself, but the attention to detail given in what he does is both undeniable and necessary.

Of course, that moment, as well as 90% of the rest of the film, could have been left to boredom and dulling rubric were it not for the staggering portrayal of Ralston that James Franco has provided. His range of emotions fully on display, Franco is fearless here, never coming across as wanting to hold back on any of the emotions Ralston went through over the course of those five days. Franco pauses in the most ideal of moments, particularly in the scene where Ralston, video camera on hand, makes a tape for his family and friends to see in the case he doesn’t survive. It’s one of dozens of emotionally charged moments in 127 Hours, and it hits home everything this man went through in a few glances this highly gifted actor gives to the camera.

Be the first to comment - What do you think?

Posted by admin    Date: Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Categories: Uncategorized

Tags: , , , , ,

Telluride Interview: The Real-Life Aron Ralston of ‘127 Hours’

Aron Ralston

One of the most incredible and unforgettable experiences of the Telluride Film Festival was meeting and talking with Aron Ralston, the mountaineer whose real-life story is the basis of Danny Boyle’s riveting new thriller 127 Hours, which has lots of buzz coming out of the fest. I first met him at a party Fox Searchlight held one evening and the following morning, Peter Sciretta from SlashFilm and I interviewed him on video. When you see the film (watch the trailer) you’ll know why there’s just something so amazing about meeting the guy that actually went through all of that and it’s even more inspirational to hear from him personally.

Watch our video interview with the real-life Aron Ralston of Danny Boyle’s 127 Hours:

As a recap for anyone who doesn’t know, Ralston’s right hand was smashed under a boulder while hiking in Utah in 2003, and after surviving pinned there for over five days, he had to amputate his own arm to escape alive. If watching that interview doesn’t make you want to see 127 Hours, then I don’t think there’s anything else I can say or do to convince you. I was admittedly overly critical in my initial reaction to the film over the weekend, but after speaking with Ralston and Danny Boyle, as well as discussing the film further with Peter and other critics in town, I’ve warmed up to it and I can’t wait to see it again, as I expect to love it a lot more.

Fox Searchlight will be bringing Danny Boyle’s 127 Hours to limited theaters starting this November.

Be the first to comment - What do you think?

Posted by admin    Date: Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Categories: Uncategorized

Tags: , ,

James Franco Cast in Danny Boyle’s Newest Film ‘127 Hours’

James Franco

Could this be what that “General Hospital” appearance was all about? Just kidding. Production Weekly is reporting on Twitter that James Franco has been cast in Danny Boyle’s new film titled 127 Hours, which tells the story of a mountain climber in Utah who had to amputate his own arm when it got pinned beneath a boulder. We’ve heard plenty of early details about 127 Hours recently, primarily because it’s Boyle’s highly anticipated follow-up to the Oscar winning Slumdog Millionaire. Originally it was Ryan Gosling who was rumored for the role, but it looks like Franco landed it in the end. Shooting will start in early March in Utah.

Similar to the one-man stuck-in-a-coffin film Buried with Ryan Reynolds, 127 Hours is supposed be another one-man-show about mountaineer Aron Ralston. The title refers to the number of hours that Ralston was pinned (it calculates out to about 5 days) before he decided to cut off his own arm and escape before he died at that spot in the mountains. This will be a challenge for Franco to pull off, but with the exuberant Danny Boyle behind the lens giving him direction, I’ve got a feeling we have a true awards contender in the works. Franco has the acting chops to pull it off, it’s just a matter of making it happen. Can Franco pull it off?

Be the first to comment - What do you think?

Posted by admin    Date: Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Categories: Uncategorized

Tags: , , , , ,