Thursday, 15 October 2015

THE WALK

When an entire script is built around a single final incident, the entire film making process becomes a tight rope walk! In many ways The Walk is much like a heist movie, except no one is being robbed here, but all things in the movie lead up to the final coup, which is what the protagonist likes to call the act that he committed. That is pretty much what the movie is all about. The director make no attempt to hide where the story is going, everything is laid out right at the start. You are told that this is going to happen; just sit back and watch how it happens. Now that will work only when the final event is worth the wait even when you know what it is! Is it worth the wait? Absolutely! It is possibly one of the craziest things ever attempted. If there is anything even crazier, a movie has to be made about it.
Starting in the idyllic locales of France, The Walk traces the journey of Philippe Petit as he goes from
Paris to New York in search of the ultimate high wire! Yes, the movie traces his growth from the wonder eyed kid who just wanted to get onto wires tied higher and higher and higher. Of course, it is not something anyone can do or perfect without being taught the vitals of the trade and that is where comes Papa Rudy, played quite masterfully by Ben Kingsley! The exchanges between the master and prodigy are some of the best passages in the build up to the final act. How the master breaks the ego of his pupil, how he imparts him the small nuggets that will one day make him steady on the highest wire ever, and how they finally realize that they have perhaps built a bond that is greater than master and pupil!
The other element that adds charm to the build up the coup is of course the relationship between Philippe and Annie. We are not sure what it is, whether the really are in love, or are they just admirers of each other’s craft, and the way it ends does leave us a bit flummoxed. But it adds color and charm while it is there. The other factor that keeps the movie going without a boring phase are the accomplices who join along the way, the best perhaps being the mathematics teacher who is terrified of heights! Also, the guy who wants to be involved in anything that is ‘high’ is hilarious. Every accomplice brings a different shade which holds the script together until the final act takes over.
Once the final act begins, it is just the two towers, the wire and the man on it. The process of getting
the wire up too is told in quite a taut manner, with the final few minutes of the set up, and the ‘unknown visitor’ being the best parts. And then in his own words, ‘he shifts his weight and becomes a wire walker’. The next 20 minutes or so, watch it in theaters because they are absolutely arresting. There might be moments in the movie where you wonder how a movie about a coup can be so deprived of excitement. The answer is that Robert Zemekis knew that he had enough ammunition in the final act to make up for anything that you felt was missing in the preceding time.
The set-up of the high wire, the actual execution of the coup of getting up on the tower without authorization might look a bit watered down, a bit plain. But, one thinks that is how it was intended, to be kept real and not unnecessarily dramatic. The background score remains true to this feel.
We are taken through the movie through the memories, eyes and voice of Philippe Petit played with infectious enthusiasm by Joseph Gordon-Levitt. It is his mischievous demeanor that makes us believe that he really means to pull off this outrageous stunt. Of course he has his outbursts, he has his doubts, but he never takes a backward step. And if he is fire, Annie is the ice and Charlotte Le Bon brings all her calmness on screen.  The only thing one felt could have been different about the movie is the constant voice over that is being given by Philippe who is narrating his story to us. Yes, there are points where his explanations let us grasp things that are not too obvious, but he really doesn’t need to tell us how he feels on top of the high wire because we can see the spectacle for ourselves.
That is what The Walk is all about, a calmly and surely built stage on which a mind blowing spectacle plays out for a short time. Take this Walk!

Watch it for the arresting finale!
3.5/5

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