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The North

  • 2025
  • 2h 10m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
306
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,840
4,341
The North (2025)
Two old friends are walking 600 kilometers through the Scottish highlands, to reconnect with each other, nature and parts of themselves they lost.
Play trailer1:20
1 Video
19 Photos
AdventureDrama

Two old friends are walking 600 kilometers through the Scottish highlands, to reconnect with each other, nature and parts of themselves they lost.Two old friends are walking 600 kilometers through the Scottish highlands, to reconnect with each other, nature and parts of themselves they lost.Two old friends are walking 600 kilometers through the Scottish highlands, to reconnect with each other, nature and parts of themselves they lost.

  • Director
    • Bart Schrijver
  • Writer
    • Bart Schrijver
  • Stars
    • Bart Harder
    • Carles Pulido
    • Olly Bassi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    306
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,840
    4,341
    • Director
      • Bart Schrijver
    • Writer
      • Bart Schrijver
    • Stars
      • Bart Harder
      • Carles Pulido
      • Olly Bassi
    • 17User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:20
    Official Trailer

    Photos19

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    + 13
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    Top cast14

    Edit
    Bart Harder
    Bart Harder
    • Chris
    Carles Pulido
    • Lluis
    Olly Bassi
    Olly Bassi
    • Richard
    Gráinne Blumenthal
    • Emma
    Theo Fraser
    • Kid
    Luisa Hendry
    • Hiker 2
    David Honeyman
    • Hiker 1
    McQuiston John
    • Jack
    Chris Lawlor
    • Hiker 3
    Pep Planas
    • Father of Lluis
    Jacob Smyth
    • Stewart
    Matthijs van de Sande Bakhuyzen
    Matthijs van de Sande Bakhuyzen
    • Tom
    Sharon Verdegem
    • Sara
    Steve Walker
    • Fraser
    • Director
      • Bart Schrijver
    • Writer
      • Bart Schrijver
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    7.5306
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    Featured reviews

    9LauraK-565

    a new classic?

    Breathtaking and impressive film.

    Moving to be so close to a men's world. I feel invited as a viewer to walk their path and to share their friendship, also because these are nice guys. Thanks to the makers of this great film monument.

    It is an interesting and fascinating journey through the wild and great land in Northern Scotland, with many shades of color, climate and texture of the landscape. Also it turns to softness, It also majestically shows the sparkling colors through the sunlight, and the many shades of green and gray.

    And also, during this great walk a lot is happening with these two guys. It was a great joy to watch this impressive film. Thanks!
    10qmnwymwpt

    Gets you "out of your head" and reminds you on whats important in life

    Who hasnt had moments when their friends slip away and you try to reconnect with them only for you both to go through moments of "readjusting to eachother" before you find a new level of peace with eachother?

    This isnt just a hiking film at all - less so about hiking - its just about humans who need to reconnect with nature, themselves, grow as people and through friendships. I loved it, and its a film which you walk away from and then rethink for days to come. Planning a hike now, im inspired hahaha.
    8Rikvanderhelm

    The North hits hard and quietly

    Just saw The North in a cinema in Amsterdam, and I'm honestly still a bit speechless. I was incredibly moved by this film - not just by the breathtaking visuals and the raw beauty of the nature, but also by the powerful story of two men quietly wrestling with their emotions.

    What struck me most was how the film doesn't try to explain or define those emotions for you. And that's exactly what I recognize from hiking myself: sometimes nature stirs something deep inside you, and you don't even really know what it is. That part felt so true, so familiar - and seeing it reflected in these two men's journey was profoundly beautiful.

    The cinematography is stunning. It honestly makes me want to pack my bag and go hiking again tomorrow. I can't even begin to imagine how challenging it must've been to shoot this film while actually hiking such a demanding route. Massive respect to the filmmakers for pulling it off.

    One detail I thought was absolutely brilliant: you can clearly see that they really walked the entire route. You see the fatigue in their bodies at the end of a long day, the way their coordination gets slightly off, the way they handle their gear - it's clear these are experienced hikers. Though, to be fair... those backpacks were way too big! Please don't do that to the crew again next time 😅

    But seriously - an amazing achievement. I was deeply impressed. You gave me a fantastic evening and a fresh urge to get out and walk more. Bravo.
    9cornoltee-1

    A real hike feeling

    Thank you for making the North. You have captured the feeling of a multi-day trip together very well. In small gestures, words, glances the connection or even distance from each other or the environment I think is very nicely done. Very recognizable. Also compliments for the edit. The courage to really take the time for the shots. The final shot on the beach is beautiful. First a tear rolled left and then right accompanied by the rolling waves. Tip for watching; use headphones and turn up the volume. You will feel the wind, touch the water and feel the frustrations setting up a tent in the storm. Memorable.
    9rouillybenoit3c

    Feet on a relentless path, headspace in a cloud

    The highlands, right in between the clouds and the mountains. Two friends, and solitude all along the way...

    There was only one goal: reaching the northernmost cape of Scotland from Glasgow, 600 km on foot through the rough terrain, barren or wet wilderness, during extreme atmospheric conditions. Was it a dare, a bucket list or a dream? Chris (Bart Harder) and Lluis (Carles Pulido), former roommates, decided to set apart 30 days from their busy lives and accomplish this adventure together. We don't know who they are, where they come from, what they want to become... but we'll discover it, along with them, on the way to Cape Wrath.

    After a blind phone conversation from the past (as if recorded on an answering machine) of two students planning a farewell party, like a usual "Tuesday night" of drinking at the pub, the film cleverly flashes forward right away to a decade later. All we know about them through this phone call overture is that they used to be best friends, and they rekindle in their thirties, for this trip. After this succinct introduction, the film is entirely contained within the trail itself. Two trails in fact: the West Highland Way & the Cape Wrath Trail. This is a hiking film, an immersive hiking feature.

    Strapped in to their camper's backpacks with nearly 30kg, like two interchangeable hikers, they hop on the trail on a light foot. On a handshake and a smile, they embark on a journey both uncertain and full of promises. They are well prepared but their preparation itself is evacuated. Their backpacks are fully-equipped but feel aerial like a hot balloon. They are fit for the challenge but will their physical condition endure? Their friendship goes beyond words, being there transcends any chit-chat verbalisation. From carbon-copy of each other, small gestures, tiny peculiarities, various issues, and their own habits will shape their differences, amongst their similarities, both on the trail and in their respective personal lives.

    In the Caucasus mountains of Georgia, Julia Loktev filmed Alex (Gael García Bernal) and Nica (Hani Furstenberg) on a hiking trip in The Loneliest Planet (2011), an occasion to test the amorous bond limits from a newly engaged couple, between passion and arguments. But Bart Schrijver, with The North, eschews any possible love melodrama to focus entirely on the human experience of what it is to hike alone under all sorts of weather. Replacing the love interest by a tacit friendship, he re-centers the action around the mundane activities, the minutiae of survival off the grid. A slow-burn crescendo of the smallest unspoken habits turning to personal revelations of their personality and synergy.

    Economy of means, hyperrealism, long takes, slowness, we are in genuine Contemplative Cinema territory. By slowness, I mean "slow life", at the pace of a shoe off-road, with the luxury to contemplate the scenic view of the magestic Highlands. Truncated beginning and ending led astray, the whole event unfolds between two goalposts planted on the path. Two geodesic endpoints on the globe, like two stages of their lives that could wrap up or restart all over again. Suppression of the plot, as the act of walking itself is the propellant of this minimalist journey. The landscape, which changes every direction they look, is a third character of the film, a trusted and mischievous companion.

    The accumulation of unique sequences, one after the other, like one foot in front of the other, forges alone a whole journey without transitions but the changing landscape, without plot drive but the continuation of the trail, without dramatic score but the murmurs of Nature.

    There are 4 contemplative films where a solitary duo walking through and through is the main leitmotif, if not filling the entire feature length. It's like watching Gerry and Gerry trekking through the desert (without equipment) in Gus Van Sant's eponymous film. But Gerry (2002) is a mystical trip, stretched beyond human limits. Sharunas Bartas's Freedom (2000) also features a small group of people escaping through a long sandy desert, struggling in silence to reach liberty at the other end... The gait of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza in Albert Serra's Quixotic (2006) is less impatient, the film focuses on nomadic meandering and idleness. But the nape shots of people walking down a path, against the wind, is never as long and uninterrupted as in Béla Tarr's Satantango (1994).

    The North is Schrijver's second hiking feature. The filmmaker already directed, 3 years ago, Sophie, a woman hiking alone 500km throughout the Arctic Norway, with Human Nature (2022). The two films have some obvious similarities. The cotton-like flowers blowing in the wind of the tundra. The peanut-butter tortillas. The bothering phone calls from work. Sophie is first annoyed by people's concerns around her, then by people's kindness. In this debut film, Schrijver starts from the Netherlands with Sophie's family and friends, nonetheless it is more contemplative due to the lonesome laconical protagonist who avoids people as much as possible. Hiking is defined as "something you can't explain, you have to live it", an experience impossible to share with your own friends, and barely mentionable to other hikers...

    Sometimes Chris way in front. Sometimes Lluis well ahead. These two friends are not inseparable, they walk each at their own pace. They can also leave each other and walk alone for a stretch of the trail... The film always follows the walker, and the missing one eventually catches up some sequences later... They cross paths with occasional strangers on the way. They meet singular people with their own story, which is shared for a short while before they disappear again, forever. The instant profound camaraderie of hikers lost together in the middle of nowhere.

    The whole adventure of this production is chronicled in a companion piece, the behind-the-scenes documentary: True North (2025). If The North only features walking, walking and walking. Pitching a tent, and heating some food at times. (The magnifying aspects of an idealized hiking feat). True North tells the other story, more pragmatic and down to earth, everything The North graciously omits, like in fond memories. The complaints about midges, sore muscles, dampness, kilometers, acclivity, hunger, anger, weather... For The North all this remains onscreen but unspoken, as Chris and Lluis internalize this struggle to let shine through the non-verbal commitment of their bodies to the course.

    In The North, there is a touching false-ending for cinephiles, on Cape Wrath's beach, that will remind them of Truffaut's Les quatre-cent coups (1959, The 400 Blows).

    What if there is no end to this trail?

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The Director Bart Schrijver walked the West Highland Way and The Cape Wrath Trail first by himself before making the film.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 31, 2025 (Netherlands)
    • Country of origin
      • Netherlands
    • Official site
      • Official website
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
      • Dutch
    • Filming locations
      • Scotland, UK
    • Production company
      • Tuesday Studio
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • €75,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 2h 10m(130 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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