The Walk - Movie Review

  • 09 October 2015

Rating: 3.5 out of 5

After the Oscar-winning 2008 documentary Man on Wire told this story with such energy and suspense, it was only a matter of time until someone decided to make a full-on adventure movie. And it's no surprise that the filmmaker turned out to be Robert Zemeckis, known for putting the seemingly unfilmable on the screen, from Who Framed Roger Rabbit to Forrest Gump to The Polar Express. So even if the film feels oddly artificial, this is a rousing, thrilling movie overflowing with cheeky energy.

At the centre of the story is Philippe Petit, played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt with a twinkle in his eye and a faintly silly French accent that works perfectly. In Paris, Philippe is working as a street performer when he sees a drawing of the planned Twin Towers of New York's World Trade Center, and he immediately vows to put a wire between them and walk on it. Over the next few years, he recruits a team of accomplices, including his girlfriend Annie (Charlotte Le Bon) and his circus-performer mentor Rudy (Ben Kingsley). Then in Manhattan, they find some men (James Badge Dale and Steve Valentine) to help them on the inside. And in August 1974, just before the towers were finished, they set their elaborate plan in motion.

While other accounts of this story describe Petit's high-wire performance in words and grainy still photos, Zemeckis uses swooping camera movement and vertiginous angles to give the audience goosebumps as Petit elegantly walks back and forth more than 400 meters above the gawping crowd below. After the rousing caper that went on before, this sequence is exhilarating. And Gordon-Levitt plays it beautifully, channeling the man's mischievous passion into every step. This even helps the audience accept the silly narration segments, in which Petit describes the action while perched on the top of the Statue of Liberty with 1970s Manhattan in the background.

Yes, Zemeckis' technical wizardry feels like it's the central point of this film, which means that Petit's emotional reaction is never properly explored. Neither are any of the surrounding characters, who basically fade into the beautifully rendered backgrounds. Kingsley tries manfully to chomp on the scenery, but even he pales in significance next to the next eye-popping effects sequences, in which Zemeckis gleefully makes viewers' stomachs lurch at the staggering heights in Imax 3D. Thankfully in Petit himself, and in Gordon-Levitt's performance, the film has an engaging centre that carries us right through the story, leaving us both impressed and inspired.

Rich Cline

Watch the trailer for The Walk here:

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Image caption The Walk

Facts and Figures

Year: 2015

Genre: Action/Adventure

In Theaters: Sunday 14th April 2013

Production compaines: TriStar Pictures, Sony Pictures Entertainment, ImageMovers

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 3.5 / 5

IMDB: 8.3 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director: Robert Zemeckis

Producer: Robert Zemeckis, Steve Starkey, Jack Rapke, Tom Rothman

Screenwriter: Robert Zemeckis, Christopher Browne

Starring: Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Philippe Petit, Charlotte Le Bon as Annie Allix, Ben Schwartz as Albert, Steve Valentine as Barry Greenhouse, Mark Camacho as Guy Tozolli, Sergio Di Zio as Officer Genco, Kwasi Songui as Man with Plaid Sports Coat, Melantha Blackthorne as Parisian Flower Child, Benedict Samuel as Jean-Louis, Jason Blicker as Officer Daley, Larry Day as Texas Tourist, Karl Graboshas as Earbud Guy

Also starring: Clement Sibony, Robert Zemeckis, Steve Starkey, Jack Rapke