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The true story of the rescue of twelve boys and their soccer coach from a flooded, impenetrable cave system in Thailand. (United Artists)

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Reviews (9)

Gilmour93 

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English "I can't promise anything. But it will give the boys a chance." When the Sleeping Lady released the prisoners from her tearful depths in the summer of 2018, it wasn’t a question of if, but when someone would seize the story from the pen of the acclaimed author named Life. It was grasped by the seasoned Ron Howard, who reconstructed the rescue with restrained realism, thrillingly (especially when transporting ketamine shipments) and with a sense of pathos simpler than if it had been about a thirteen written on an Apollo module. Stanton and Volanthen surely didn’t anticipate how top character actors of their time would portray them, but it is precisely the morose realist Mortensen and the eternally positive Farrell who bring the necessary layer to this extraordinary rescue mission with their presence. ()

Marigold 

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English Frost/Nixon was no accident. When the formula (not Formula) suits Howard, he is able to evoke extraordinary emotion and, in this case and by his standards, pull dry-eyed out realism out of that formula. Strangely, he doesn’t violate the real story, which was brilliantly handled in the documentary The Rescue; on the contrary, he brings his film into harmony with it by likably incorporating the metaphysics of folk superstitions and the glorification of heroes whose partial autism becomes their greatest strength at a certain point. I found the motif of loneliness and isolation to be touching. In the end, the deepest cavern is Rick Stanton, played phenomenally by Viggo Mortensen. Give that man an Oscar already! ()

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POMO 

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English So minimalist in its emotional filmmaking tricks, and yet so riveting and powerful! For the entire two-and-a-half-hour runtime... Ron Howard capitalizes on the seriousness of the situation and builds on the detailed perception of the psychological state of those involved. The responsibility that weighs on them to an almost unbearable extent. And the breathtaking rescue process itself. This is a very different experience from reading about it in the newspaper. Viggo Mortensen is perfect and Colin Farrell is great. There is no manipulative music, pathos or movie heroism here. Thirteen Lives is “just” a precisely filmed account of the professionally done, extremely difficult and dangerous work of a few courageous men. It is a low-key film that will only grow over time. ()

DaViD´82 

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English Last year's The Rescue is more about uncertainty, risks, unknowns, motivations and characters. This, paradoxically for a documentary, makes it work better in terms of tension and emotion than the feature film. But it’s not about which one’s better, on the contrary, both films complement each other brilliantly and it’s worth watching both, even if you already know the what and the how. Not that Howard’s film suffers from a lack of tension. The aforementioned does not mean in the least that it is not a claustrophobic blast with perfect technical aspects. Fortunately, it doesn't slip into a Hollywood fairy tale, and there would be room for it, which, considering who is behind it, is a hell of an achievement in itself. ()

Kaka 

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English Everest in a cave, with completely different sets and definitely not a good film for claustrophobics. Procedural, suspenseful and very authentic. It doesn't look like Howard's typical work, but Thirteen Lives contains some of his typical elements and works with them very well, without a single sign of pathos or exaggerated emotions. Nerve-wrecking and another film based on true events that Ron Howard managed well. This time much less cinematic and much more documentary-like than some of the others, but it doesn't detract from the experience. ()

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