Intimate, terrifying and positively riveting.
Stranded (2008)
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Reviews Counted:34
Fresh:31
Rotten:3
Average Rating:7.8/10
Consensus: Stranded is a thoroughly uplifting account of the well-known tragedy, with touching testimony from remaining survivors.
Theatrical Release:Oct 22, 2008 Limited
Synopsis: In October 1972, a plane carrying a team of young rugby players from Montevideo, Uruguay, went down in a snow-covered valley in the Andes. The dramatic tale of the survivors' struggle to stay alive... In October 1972, a plane carrying a team of young rugby players from Montevideo, Uruguay, went down in a snow-covered valley in the Andes. The dramatic tale of the survivors' struggle to stay alive and be rescued, already told in a bestselling book and feature film, finds new depth and resonance in STRANDED: I'VE COME FROM A PLANE THAT CRASHED ON THE MOUNTAINS. Director Gonzalo Arijón, a childhood friend of some of the survivors, takes them back to the crash site, where they go into agonizing detail as they tell their remarkable, heartbreaking story, aided by re-creations of pivotal events. With no more food, they were forced to break one of humanity's primary taboos, using the bodies of their dead friends and relatives to have even a chance of remaining alive and being rescued in the Valley of Tears. Arijón talks to such brave survivors as Roberto Canessa, Gustavo Zerbino, Adolfo "Fito" Strauch, Antonio Vinzintin, and Carlos Paez as they reach deep within themselves, looking back on what they did with a fascinating perspective, a group of men in their fifties reexamining their struggle to survive when they they were around 19 and 20, with the rest of their lives in front of them as they ventured out of their country for the first time and encountered horrible tragedy. Florencia De Concillo-Perrin's score adds to the tension, and the film plays out like a gripping procedural, including interviews with people who were leading the rescue effort. Both frightening and exhilarating, STRANDED, which has won awards at film festivals all around the world, is an unforgettable documentary about an unforgettable story. [More]
Starring: Roberto Canessa, Daniel Fernandez, Roberto Francois, Carlos Paez
Starring: Roberto Canessa, Daniel Fernandez, Roberto Francois, Carlos Paez, Fernando Parrado, Adolfo Strauch, Eduardo Strauch, Antonio Vinzintin, Gustavo Zerbino
Director: Gonzalo Arijón
Director: Gonzalo Arijón
Producer: Marco Silvera
Composer: Florencia Di Concilio-Perrin
Studio: Zeitgeist Films
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Reviews for Stranded
Stranded is not about dying or the afterlife; it tells a story about both the precariousness and powerful pull of this life and about how difficult it is to pinpoint the deciding factor between life and death.
Ultimately, Stranded is about good people surviving with dignity and decency through the worst that can be imagined. Could there be a more appropriate film for the times we live in now?
Stranded, which combines testimony by those survivors with staged reenactments of their ordeal, is the opposite of sensational.
What makes Stranded reverberate are the piercing ironies that surface -- from one interviewee’s casual snacking as he discusses his ordeal, to the ritualistic, eateth-my-flesh, drinketh-my-blood connotations of the team’s moniker: the Old Christians.
Gonzalo Arijón’s documentary Stranded offers an incontrovertible argument for the necessity of team spirit in the face of catastrophe.
An impressive spiritual meditation on the values of community, self-sacrifice, unity with others, hope, loving cooperation that are necessary for human survival on this planet.
Stranded is the rare movie less complex and interesting than its press kit.
Film festival awards and media encomiums notwithstanding, 'Stranded' does not come to grips with what we think of as 'miracle.'
Arguably the definitive retelling of the disaster … What the survivors reveal about their experiences offers unique light on what it means to be human.
The thoughts and emotions the movie stirs up in the viewer makes it one of the more powerful documentaries of the year.
Somber and exhaustive, the film manages to avoid exploitation while still conveying the harrowing ordeal of its subjects.
Part of the achievement of Stranded comes in how it isn't merely interested in how these young men survived the crash of Flight 571; it's just as interested in how they survived what came after.
Stranded: I've Come From a Plane That Crashed in the Mountains is an oxymoron: a docu constructed from re-enactments, talking heads and no actual footage of the story it tells, but that still packs a knock-out punch.
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