Films - THE GREY


The Grey 15

See all showtimes for all Kingston-upon-thames cinemas >>

An unruly group of oil-rig roughneck's plane crashes into the remote Alaskan wilderness. Battling mortal injuries and merciless weather, the survivors have only a few days to escape the icy elements - and a vicious pack of rogue wolves on the hunt - before their time runs out.

Liam Neeson is that rare breed of actor who grows more badass with age, who, at the cusp of 60, appears quite credible besting men 30 years younger - or anyone else foolish enough to provoke him. In The Grey - a gripping but ponderous man-versus-wild epic directed and co-written by Joe Carnahan (The A-Team) - his foe is no less formidable than Mother Nature, in all her fury. She has met her match.

Neeson plays Ottway, a man whose sole job on an Alaskan oil rig consists of gunning down the occasional wolf that makes a run at an oilworker. (Fences, apparently, being in short supply in the Arctic.) Ottway is a hard, stoic sort, and one gets the strong sense that he tended toward irascibility even before his wife departed (for reasons not made clear till late in the film), taking with her his remaining purpose for living. He gains a new one, appropriately enough, when his flight home crashes down in the Alaskan wilderness, killing all but a handful of its passengers. Ottway, his survival skills honed in a previous life, emerges as the only person capable of guiding them to salvation.

Carnahan surrounds Neeson with an ensemble of familiar types, the most notable of which are Talget (Dermot Mulroney), the family man, Henrick (Dallas Roberts), the conscience, and Diaz (Frank Grillo), the jerk. They encounter the predictable male team-building hurdles, puffing chests and locking horns, before Ottway asserts himself as the Alpha Male. Figuring they'll perish before salvation arrives, they agree to make the perilous trek to the nearest human habitat, braving any number of dangers, the most fearsome of which are the ravenous "rogue wolves" that roam the landscape. (The film, shot in British Columbia in conditions that were apparently every bit as brutal as they appear on-screen, certainly looks authentic - both beautiful and ominous.)

When they aren't battling the predatory lupine menace, the men have time - far too much time - to reflect upon their plight and its existential implications. The Grey would have been perfectly enjoyable as a straightforward survival epic, the "Liam punches wolves" movie promised by the trailer, but Carnahan is intent on imbuing the film with a philosophical poignancy wholly unsuitable for a film featuring lines like "We're in Fuck City, population five and dwindling," and "We're gonna cook this son of a bitch!" - the latter uttered at the capture of one of the wolves. As a film, Carnahan's macho metaphysics leave The Grey feeling a bit overcooked.

Hollywood.com rated this film 3 stars.

  • Cast:Liam Neeson, Dermot Mulroney, James Badge Dale, Joe Anderson, Frank Grillo, Dallas Roberts, Nonso Anozie, Ben Bray, Larissa Stadnichuk, James Bitonti
  • Director:Joe Carnahan
  • Writer:Joe Carnahan
  • Duration:117
  • Official Site:http://thegreythemovie.com/
  • Release:In Cinemas Now
  • Genre:Action/Adventure, Drama
  • Distributor:Open Road Films
Post a comment

Remember you are personally responsible for what you post on this site and must abide by our site terms. Do not post anything that is false, abusive or malicious. If you wish to complain, please use the ‘report this post’ link.

Local Information

Enter your postcode, town or place name

House prices »   Schools »   Crime »   Hospitals »

click2find




About cookies

We want you to enjoy your visit to our website. That's why we use cookies to enhance your experience. By staying on our website you agree to our use of cookies. Find out more about the cookies we use.

I agree