Nachdem sie gewaltsam aus ihrer Heimat vertrieben wurden, fasst ein Ehepaar den verzweifelten Entschluss, entlang der Küste Südwestenglands zu wandern, in der Hoffnung, in der Natur Trost un... Alles lesenNachdem sie gewaltsam aus ihrer Heimat vertrieben wurden, fasst ein Ehepaar den verzweifelten Entschluss, entlang der Küste Südwestenglands zu wandern, in der Hoffnung, in der Natur Trost und ein Gefühl der Akzeptanz zu finden.Nachdem sie gewaltsam aus ihrer Heimat vertrieben wurden, fasst ein Ehepaar den verzweifelten Entschluss, entlang der Küste Südwestenglands zu wandern, in der Hoffnung, in der Natur Trost und ein Gefühl der Akzeptanz zu finden.
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Thoroughly enjoyed the movie, because of the nature shots, intimate scènes between Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs and I just wanted to stay in that world a little longer. They are showing their real faces, wrinkles and spots and all, and I loved them for it.
I've read the book and I feel they followed it quite strictly. Seeing the movie gave me that extra time I would have liked after I finished the book.
The way the movie is written, it solves for 'endless walking scenes' by shocking you to life every 10m or so. Either by an event, the light, or music, or something. That was well thought through, so it's not just forever walking till boredom. At all.
The connection between Anderson and Isaacs feels genuine.
It's hopeful, adventurous, reinvigorating, and touches upon loss and homelessness in a not all-consuming way.
I've read the book and I feel they followed it quite strictly. Seeing the movie gave me that extra time I would have liked after I finished the book.
The way the movie is written, it solves for 'endless walking scenes' by shocking you to life every 10m or so. Either by an event, the light, or music, or something. That was well thought through, so it's not just forever walking till boredom. At all.
The connection between Anderson and Isaacs feels genuine.
It's hopeful, adventurous, reinvigorating, and touches upon loss and homelessness in a not all-consuming way.
Based on the true story of Moth (Jason Isaacs) and Ray (Gillian Anderson) Winn, who after losing their house in an unspecified court procedure, discover that Moth has an incurable illness. Homeless, they decide to walk from Minehead to Land's End. After many difficulties and adventures they arrive, but with a brand new existential mindset based around 'home' being not their old farmhouse, but wherever they happen to be.
It's a lovely story written from Ray's 600 pages of notes she wrote during their journey, and in a nutshell sends a message of never give up, always keep hope, recognise what you have instead of what you haven't.
Isaacs plays an excellent part, Anderson is good, but lacks the depth of acting needed to make the role great. There's some beautiful countryside and great editing and all in all I give it a solid 7.
It's a lovely story written from Ray's 600 pages of notes she wrote during their journey, and in a nutshell sends a message of never give up, always keep hope, recognise what you have instead of what you haven't.
Isaacs plays an excellent part, Anderson is good, but lacks the depth of acting needed to make the role great. There's some beautiful countryside and great editing and all in all I give it a solid 7.
The only redeeming feature of this film for me was the scenery, as I am familiar with this area and have visited much of the coastline. I found the story itself rather slow and pointless. I haven't read the book but know others who have. Perhaps this is one of those books that doesn't transform well into film.
I thought the sound and diction were very poor, and couldn't make out around 25% of Jason Isaacs's mumbled speech. It should be possible for experienced actors to speak with a regional accent (in this case Staffordshire) without mumbling.
Both my wife (who has read the book) and I left the cinema feeling quite underwhelmed.
I thought the sound and diction were very poor, and couldn't make out around 25% of Jason Isaacs's mumbled speech. It should be possible for experienced actors to speak with a regional accent (in this case Staffordshire) without mumbling.
Both my wife (who has read the book) and I left the cinema feeling quite underwhelmed.
I knew nothing of the source material memoir (never even knew it existed), so that didn't color my experience. As a man in his early 60s, what I saw was an authentic relationship of a middle-aged couple embarking on a journey to put a crisis behind them, still deeply in love despite it all and there for each other, support each other and rest in one another. The screenplay might have felt meandering at times, but that's because it's not the three-act "Hero's Journey" we're used to. Moth and Ray are literally trying to find their way after their life is upended, and the characters they meet along that path are various aspects of life. If you're willing to let things unfold, highly recommended.
A tough watch for anyone who enjoys cinema or literature, THE SALT PATH is the big screen adaptation of Raynor Winn's memoir chronicling the walking holiday around the Cornish coast she took with her husband. I've had the misfortune to read Winn's heavily fictionalised book, and this screen version is even further from reality, heavily dramatised to the degree that another reviewer describing the events depicted as 'authentic' made me laugh out loud. Anderson and Isaacs are both reliable performers - although the former's Staffordshire accent is an unwise choice - but this is an extremely tedious watch, not particularly funny or engaging, with only the natural scenery to recommend it. Even worse, I saw this in the cinema, so there was no getting away, and it takes forever to end as well. A nightmare!
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- WissenswertesBeing partly filmed on the north Devon coast in Ilfracombe
- PatzerIn one scene, the couple are sitting in front of their tent watching a dozen or so remarkably tame rabbits. They are the wrong species of rabbit to be wild in the UK.
- Alternative VersionenThe UK release was cut, the distributor chose to reduce the number of uses of strong language in order to obtain a 12A classification. An uncut 15 classification was available.
- SoundtracksWould I Sing
Written by Tim Hollier
Performed by Tim Hollier
Published by Skysail Publishing
By arrangement of Nightjar Music
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- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 18.781.146 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 55 Min.(115 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1
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