A group of teenage boys compete in an annual contest known as "The Long Walk," in which they must maintain a certain walking speed or get shot.A group of teenage boys compete in an annual contest known as "The Long Walk," in which they must maintain a certain walking speed or get shot.A group of teenage boys compete in an annual contest known as "The Long Walk," in which they must maintain a certain walking speed or get shot.
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Featured reviews
Read the book as a kid, and it never left me.
Stephen King - writing as Richard Bachman - didn't need monsters or explosions to terrify.
He gave us a hundred boys walking down an endless road, dying one by one under the weight of exhaustion, fear, and quiet madness.
It was slow, suffocating, and profoundly human. The horror wasn't in the gunfire - it was in the silence between steps.
And then came the 2025 "movie".
Absolute betrayal. Everything that made the book powerful - the tension, the intimacy, the claustrophobic pacing - is gone.
Filmmakers clearly didn't trust the story's simplicity, so they threw in noise, chaos, and overexposed emotion.
Turned King's psychological death march into yet another dystopian action flick with shaky cameras and empty dialogue.
Characters are cardboard cutouts delivering cliché lines between slow-motion shots.
Watching this movie felt like watching someone pave over a graveyard. Hollywood gloss and lazy direction that doesn't respect the story. It doesn't even seem to understand it.
Shallow and soulless Garbage.
Stephen King - writing as Richard Bachman - didn't need monsters or explosions to terrify.
He gave us a hundred boys walking down an endless road, dying one by one under the weight of exhaustion, fear, and quiet madness.
It was slow, suffocating, and profoundly human. The horror wasn't in the gunfire - it was in the silence between steps.
And then came the 2025 "movie".
Absolute betrayal. Everything that made the book powerful - the tension, the intimacy, the claustrophobic pacing - is gone.
Filmmakers clearly didn't trust the story's simplicity, so they threw in noise, chaos, and overexposed emotion.
Turned King's psychological death march into yet another dystopian action flick with shaky cameras and empty dialogue.
Characters are cardboard cutouts delivering cliché lines between slow-motion shots.
Watching this movie felt like watching someone pave over a graveyard. Hollywood gloss and lazy direction that doesn't respect the story. It doesn't even seem to understand it.
Shallow and soulless Garbage.
The idea itself works - no surprise, it's Stephen King, he knows how to build a premise. At first the movie even feels like it might pull it off: the suspense starts to grow, you feel the tension creeping in. But then it just... stalls. Instead of escalating, everything flattens, and by the halfway mark you can already predict how it's going to end. And it ends exactly that way. No surprise, no punch.
The characters don't help either. They're too sketchy, like placeholders rather than people. The movie tries to layer in some social commentary, but it's done through such obvious, stereotypical figures that it feels more forced than insightful. On top of that, the drama is laid on way too thick. Every "emotional" moment is broadcasted with neon signs: "Look! Here comes the sad part. Time to cry." It's manipulative rather than moving.
In the end, it's a good story wasted by a weak execution. The tension fizzles, the characters are cardboard, and the emotional beats feel staged. 5/10.
The characters don't help either. They're too sketchy, like placeholders rather than people. The movie tries to layer in some social commentary, but it's done through such obvious, stereotypical figures that it feels more forced than insightful. On top of that, the drama is laid on way too thick. Every "emotional" moment is broadcasted with neon signs: "Look! Here comes the sad part. Time to cry." It's manipulative rather than moving.
In the end, it's a good story wasted by a weak execution. The tension fizzles, the characters are cardboard, and the emotional beats feel staged. 5/10.
Wow, let me start by saying I didn't have a clue what I was walking into other than Stephen King being attached to this project. This movie is brutal, which is a shocking way to describe a movie that I thought is one of the best I have seen in a long time. My stomach was twisting and my leg developed a nervous twitch the deeper into the film I got. By the last quarter of the film, I had tears in my eyes and could hardly keep it together. So you are probably wondering, why? Well this movie cuts right to the heart of why any of us choose to get up each morning and walk around all day, even when life is throwing everything bad at us. It's because it's what you do when you are alive, you walk, and you walk because you have purpose. And we walk in spite of the fact we all know that one day we won't be able to walk anymore because our time will be up. Some decide when to quit their walk, some have their bodies or minds decide for them, and many continue their walk because of those they love picking them up and helping them move forward. And some just walk because that's all they know to do, survive. I won't say anymore, other than watch this film and prepare yourself for a hard but necessary watch. Bravo to all those involved with this film and story.
The Long Walk is one of my favorite books and I have been dreaming of a movie adaptation. I felt it was promising for the first 30 minutes, mostly due to wonderfully brutal cinematography. However, as soon as the drama ramped up, actors started to overact and the whole script all of a sudden derailed into Hollywood cliche land. I felt like the movie pretty much cut out all the parts of the book I loved the most and butchered the final scenes into something completely different than the subtle but powerful book ending intended to convey.
It was an ok movie, too much missed potential as they could have done so much more. More talking than action. There was no moments that really hit you and it felt kind of repetitive and you could see how the story would go from the beginning. A lot of things were out of nowhere, ofcourse people die but some of them the way they go out just has no substance, and there's no real twist that takes place. You know how most movies have a crisis in the middle that needs to be overcome? This movie doesn't have that. The ending was super annoying also and contradicts what was preached throughout the movie. I watched this based on the 7*+ ratings, but in my opinion it doesn't match up to any 7* movie I've ever seen, hence the rating.
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Did you know
- TriviaOn August 30, 2025, Lionsgate held a special screening where the invited audience was required to walk on treadmills at the regulation 3 mph for the duration of the film, under threat of being thrown out if they slowed down.
- GoofsPeter's large facial scar changes intensity throughout the film, even completely disappearing in some scenes.
- Quotes
Hank Olson #46: I DID IT ALL WRONG!
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Big Thing: THE LONG WALK (2025) | NON-SPOILER REVIEW! (2025)
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- La larga marcha
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $20,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $35,163,573
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $11,703,621
- Sep 14, 2025
- Gross worldwide
- $62,871,590
- Runtime
- 1h 48m(108 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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