North Face

October 23rd, 2008







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North Face

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Plot
Based on a true story, North Face is a suspenseful adventure film about a competition to climb the most dangerous rock face in the Alps...

Release Year: 2008

Rating: 7.3/10 (4,916 voted)

Critic's Score: 67/100

Director: Philipp Stölzl

Stars: Benno Fürmann, Florian Lukas, Johanna Wokalek

Storyline
Based on a true story, North Face is a suspenseful adventure film about a competition to climb the most dangerous rock face in the Alps. Set in 1936, as Nazi propaganda urges the nation's Alpinists to conquer the unclimbed north face of the Swiss massif - the Eiger - two reluctant German climbers begin their daring ascent.

Writers: Christoph Silber, Philipp Stölzl

Cast:
Benno Fürmann - Toni Kurz
Johanna Wokalek - Luise Fellner
Florian Lukas - Andi Hinterstoisser
Simon Schwarz - Willy Angerer
Georg Friedrich - Edi Rainer
Ulrich Tukur - Henry Arau
Erwin Steinhauer - Emil Landauer
Branko Samarovski - Albert von Allmen
Petra Morzé - Elisabeth Landauer
Hanspeter Müller - Hans Schlunegger (as Hanspeter Müller-Drossart)
Peter Zumstein - Adolf Rubi
Martin Schick - Christian Rubi
Erni Mangold - Grossmutter Kurz
Johannes Thanheiser - Grossvater Kurz
Arnd Schimkat - Hotelbesitzer



Details

Official Website: Official site | Official site [Japan] |

Release Date: 23 October 2008

Filming Locations: Austria

Opening Weekend: $23,050 (USA) (31 January 2010) (4 Screens)

Gross: $710,993 (USA) (13 June 2010)



Technical Specs

Runtime:



Did You Know?

Trivia:
As Luise Fellner and her boss, Herr Arau, arrive at the Eiger, the local guides are standing in front of the hotel advertising their services to the tourists. One of the guides notices a pair of climbers in the crowd. "Look who's coming," he says, "Bartolo Sandri and Mario Menti." A fellow guide mutters: "Another couple of fools. Come in a train and leave in a coffin." These two Italian climbers fell to their deaths from the north face June 21, 1938.

Goofs:
Errors made by characters (possibly deliberate errors by the filmmakers): At the beginning of the film, when Luisa watches the news in the cinema theater, the voice-over gets the first-names of the alpinists who died on the Eiger wrong. It says Max Mehringer and Karl Sedlmayr, but it's the opposite: KARL Mehringer and MAX Sedlmayr. This may have been intended to show the unreliability of the report.

Quotes:
[first lines]
[in German, quoting English subtitles]
Luise Fellner: [voiceover] When you're at the bottom - Toni once told me - at the foot of the wall, and you look up, you ask yourself: How can anyone climb that? Why would anyone even want to? But hours later when you're at the top looking down, you've forgotten everything. Except the one person you promised you would come back to.



User Review

Excellent, Epic, Tragic... Brilliant.

Rating: 10/10

The reaction this film got at the Pusan International Film Festival (PIFF) in Pusan, South Korea, was better than any of the other big movies there.

This movie gets a 10 out of 10 from me. It is a harsh story about Germany in the 30s as the Nazis were rising and wishing to prove to the world that they were the best. The tale is about two German men who take on a very difficult climb. The story is quite riveting, and human. Full of laughs, tragedy, and ... a little bit of a love story.

Although the movie starts a little slowly, it really picks up about one third the way in. The main characters (the two mountain climbers and the one female love interest) are all solid actors, well directed, and well casted. The director did a great job at capturing the climb. Everything was so convincingly shot, it makes you wonder if they actually filmed some of it on a real mountain. I suppose they must have used CGI, but it was used so sparingly and realistically that it must be commended. The contrast between the plight of the mountain climbers and that of the rich bystanders makes the movie so much more emotionally riveting. Some people in the audience cried.

This is a tragedy that must be seen. It captures humanity at its best and worst... and shows us that sometimes nature rules our lives, and that it is not forgiving.

Overall, I felt this movie was a small masterpiece. One that will probably not be seen by many. But for those who do, you will get a very special treat...

It was especially amazing to know that you, as the viewer, had more than a telescope to watch this climb with... unlike the bystanders in the movie, we were able to see more than just the ascent and the final moment. We saw the part that mattered the most: the climb.

10/10.. Solid





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