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The Salt Path

  • 2024
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
3.4K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
552
211
Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs in The Salt Path (2024)
A couple lose their home and later discover the husband has been diagnosed with a terminal illness as they embark on a year long coastal trek.
Play trailer2:23
1 Video
12 Photos
DocudramaPsychological DramaTragedyDrama

A couple lose their home and later discover the husband has been diagnosed with a terminal illness as they embark on a year long coastal trek.A couple lose their home and later discover the husband has been diagnosed with a terminal illness as they embark on a year long coastal trek.A couple lose their home and later discover the husband has been diagnosed with a terminal illness as they embark on a year long coastal trek.

  • Director
    • Marianne Elliott
  • Writers
    • Rebecca Lenkiewicz
    • Raynor Winn
  • Stars
    • Gillian Anderson
    • Jason Isaacs
    • Denis Lill
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    3.4K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    552
    211
    • Director
      • Marianne Elliott
    • Writers
      • Rebecca Lenkiewicz
      • Raynor Winn
    • Stars
      • Gillian Anderson
      • Jason Isaacs
      • Denis Lill
    • 60User reviews
    • 38Critic reviews
    • 49Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:23
    Official Trailer

    Photos11

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    Top cast39

    Edit
    Gillian Anderson
    Gillian Anderson
    • Raynor Winn
    Jason Isaacs
    Jason Isaacs
    • Moth Winn
    Denis Lill
    Denis Lill
    • Dog Walker
    Rebecca Ineson
    Rebecca Ineson
    • Rowan Winn
    Tucker St. Ivany
    Tucker St. Ivany
    • Tom Winn
    Olivia Edwards
    Olivia Edwards
    • Tea Room Waitress
    Paul Morel
    • Man in Tea Room
    Angus Wright
    Angus Wright
    • Doctor Shaw
    Jimmy Gorniak
    • Walker 1
    Georgia Henshaw
    • Housing Officer
    Tamlyn Henderson
    Tamlyn Henderson
    • Pub Landlord
    Hermione Norris
    Hermione Norris
    • Polly
    Pippa Hinchley
    Pippa Hinchley
    • Ice Cream Seller
    James Lance
    James Lance
    • Grant
    Amy Griffiths
    Amy Griffiths
    • Grant's Wife, Tessa
    Megan Placito
    • Bea
    Sasha Frost
    Sasha Frost
    • Grant's Guest
    Jason Gerdes
    • Walker 2
    • Director
      • Marianne Elliott
    • Writers
      • Rebecca Lenkiewicz
      • Raynor Winn
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews60

    6.83.3K
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    Featured reviews

    2nathanmobbsnm

    Poor Narrative and Very Poor Disability Representation

    As the partner of someone with a severe neurological disability, this movie is a hilarious slap-in-the-face of a "Just walk it off!" that we could not help but laugh at. It doesn't get more literal. I'm sure my partner would if she could! Maybe she should follow suit and just stop taking her meds!

    Half an hour in, we couldn't help but think in the cinema "Are we actually enjoying this?" At home, we would have switched it off. I was hoping for something closer to Into The Wild. This is not it. It does not "become" something half way through.

    My partner's father walked this path for her for charity and he found the book equally tedious, whiny, and offensive to what the path can actually mean.

    The painfully slow reveal of the movie's main driver never fully materialises, leaving you frustrated at the length of the movie.

    The overexposed shots of the landscape soured the otherwise wonderful soundscapes, which are particularly good in the theatre. There - that's a star gained!

    Overall, this is not the one!
    7GI-Chow

    Hollywood this ain't

    I was lucky enough to see the film at the Picturehouse Central, Piccadilly Circus, with a Q&A afterwards where the writer Raynor Winn, director Marianne Elliott and screenwriter Rebecca Lenkiewicz were joined by actor Jason Isaacs who played Raynor's real life husband Moth.

    I'm going to stick my neck out here and maybe even provoke a bit of negativity by saying that isn't a great film.

    Don't get me wrong, I anticipate it getting a very solid if not outstanding imdb rating around the 6.7 mark but purely as a film this isn't up there with a work of fiction like say The Shawshank Redemption or even a film based on a true story like The Pursuit of Happyness.

    But if you stopped reading there you'd miss a lot about this film and whether you should watch it - because for all of its shortcomings I think a lot of people will enjoy this film and I'd go so far as to say love this film.

    So the Salt Path is a film based on the book by the same name by Raynor Winn about a wild camping coastal walk she and her husband undertook following a sudden downturn in their financial fortunes meaning they effectively became homeless late in middle age losing all the material wealth they had worked for in life up to that point. Don't worry by the way, there are no spoilers here and nothing I say will go much beyond what you'd glean from the trailer and film promotion interviews.

    So the film is essentially a journey, metaphorically but also literally a long walk in South West England starting in Somerset and intercut with flashbacks. It's not a glamorous Hollywood Thelma and Louise style road trip in an open top car but a rather more reserved and parochial simple backpacking walk along the admittedly equally dramatic and beautiful scenery of the England coastline.

    In fact with Moth - yes that's moth like in butterfly - the husband, he has an illness so it's not even a straightforward walk with him often clearly struggling and his wife Raynor, the writer of the book the film is based on, literally physically supporting him.

    Now the character names are rather curious but this is a true story so they aren't made up. Moth is reminiscent of the moth that flies too close to the flame and winn is like winner which is ironic given the couple's change of fortunes, the nature of which is gradually revealed to us in flashbacks over the course of their journey.

    In the Q&A after the screening reference was made to the film being a three hander with husband and wife of course but nature as the third hand - and there certainly are some beautiful shots of the natural world which provide a variously calming and dramatic backdrop to the physical, mental and emotional challenges faced by the protagonists. Jason Isaacs made the point however that there are other characters in the film and how they perceive and treat the couple is equally telling of humans and society in general and the sometimes flawed judgements we inevitably make.

    But I did like this film, I even loved it in parts but by that I don't mean a particular narrative sequence or particular cinematic elements of the medium.

    I didn't love it particularly for the story which is engaging though not molded to conform to the traditional Aristotelian dramatic three act or epic hero's journey form.

    Neither for the acting which by Gillian and Jason especially is solid, believable and heartwarming.

    Nor for the directing which gives us the shots and performances needed to tell the story.

    Now Director Marianne Elliott comes from a theatre background and this is her first foray into film. In the Q&A she revealed she wanted her first film to have an older strong female protagonist and be cinematic, playing to the medium's strengths - in fact she chose the screenwriter Rebecca Lenkiewicz for her ability to tell a story without words and the cinematography effortlessly shifts from intimate closeups of the couple to sweeping vista drone shots.

    The editing in turn intrigues and satisfies to keep us engaged, the music is moving and the costume and make up well executed - I've never seen Anderson look so convincingly haggard in scenes and the bravery to show herself in that way reminded me of the similarly exceptionally beautiful Nicole Kidman in Destroyer.

    But again none of these aspects are why I loved The Salt Path. So if not for story, acting, directing, cinematography, editing, music, costume or makeup then what?

    Well, like Oppenheimer, which despite the awards and plaudits, is a very flawed film, this is an important story.

    It's a story of the love and resilience of our protagonists but equally ther relationship with the natural world and its power to inspire and heal us - a magical and mystical power that is all the more astonishing by being around us and familiar to us every single day of our lives.

    The sense in the film of the love between husband and wife is palpable and the characters themselves are intriguing. We are left wondering what they did in their lives up to where we meet them. Jason Isaac's character, Moth, is an affable polymath who can as easily turn his hand to a spot of DIY as literary analysis of epic poetry.

    Now the film never brought me to tears even though the trailer almost did - not least because of the transcendent life affirming score by Chris Roe. And it didn't fill me with inspiration for what humans are capable of in the face of adversity. Neither did it thrill me with twists, turns and clever plot devices.

    But what it did do is leave me with a feeling.

    The feeling of a real sense of the love between the husband and wife protagonists. A feeling of optimism about our most intimate human relationships - by which I mean our relationships with each other but also our relationship with the natural world we are all part of.

    I said this isn't a great film. And I stand by that. There are films that employ the many strengths of the medium better. But it's a film I enjoyed and in many ways loved. I came away from it feeling love - both for the storyteller and the truth behind the story itself.

    So not a great film in the traditional sense. But a lovely film! And I wish it every success.
    3Leofwine_draca

    As inauthentic as it gets

    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!
    7Boristhemoggy

    Beautiful and uplifting film

    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.
    9toskakieft

    Beautiful scenery, touching, intimate, makes me want to hike and experience this myself

    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.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Being partly filmed on the north Devon coast in Ilfracombe
    • Goofs
      In 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.
    • Alternate versions
      The 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.
    • Soundtracks
      Would I Sing
      Written by Tim Hollier

      Performed by Tim Hollier

      Published by Skysail Publishing

      By arrangement of Nightjar Music

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 30, 2025 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • 鹽路上有你
    • Production companies
      • BBC Film
      • Elliott & Harper
      • Lipsync Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $18,781,146
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 55m(115 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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