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Sunday, 29 January 2012

Review of The Grey


My first thought after seeing the trailer and the gray "This is like taking + in America with Marty Stouffer lively little mixed in the desert" - an adventure film involving a wide Liam Neeson killing of wolves.

On the other hand, is gray to stay alive. However, for Grazatna to fight for survival, regardless of the circumstances look bleak.

Gray is the story of the publication right fight - after the plane crash and seven survivors stranded in the wild in Alaska. Men struggle to keep warm in the cold and protect a group of wolves that threaten them. For those scoring at home, and I was lost, and low temperatures, without food, injuries, and being chased by a group of wild wolves.

Liam Neeson Ottway Ottway not only what a character and Liam Neeson and can be done. It was quiet. He was the leader. It's difficult. He is adept at killing. The rest of the letters fall into the normal range for survival of the film: There is a strong man, who questioned the leader, the man happy, intelligent, and men of the family.

Surprising that none of the characters sink the movie cliché. From the moment the plane crash, not sure what will happen to whom. Each scene provides a special level of tension. If it's a cry in the distance, or an attack on the wolf and is a mixture of fear and despair on their faces. Where the film lacks in what you care about the secondary characters, who are successful in making the fear of them.

Most of this fear comes from the front and gray to a deadly new animal - Wolf, Alaska. Wolves attack relentlessly with zero survivors provocation. A simple walk to the wood back to life by providing a dash of snow. Even in the moments where you see the characters sitting, not sure if these same men for overall survival, or even just heat and light snack at night for wolves. There are levels of uncertainty that exists in every scene, even the scenes that seem peaceful.

One of the most interesting elements of each of you look gray against a person in death. It looks great in what lengths people or so will survive, especially when each and every one of them has a reason to live or die. Beautiful symmetry that is captured in two stunning scenes where the characters make decisions based on whether we live or die.

And the gray is to stay alive amazing stunts that will keep you on the edge of their seats. Nice capture is one of the most intense movies I've seen in years. Does the U.S. love with the Liam Neeson continue.

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