Stills From Peter Weir’s The Way Back

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I’ve got no doubt that Peter Weir is one of the greatest of great filmmakers working today and every one of his too-rare films is a real event for me. While I’m waiting for his next picture The Way Back every little scrap of information is valuable, so I’m doing cartwheels at the first set of stills. You can see them all after the break.

Here’s the movie’s official synopsis, which really should have been worded in a less blurby-cheesy fashion:

Six-time Academy Award Nominee Peter Weir Directing. Based on the novel The Long Walk by Slavomir Rawicz. Award Winning A-List cast; Jim Sturgess, Ed Harris, Colin Farrell, Saoirse Ronan.

When they escape a Siberian labor camp in 1940 seven courageous multi-national prisoners discover the true meaning of friendship as their epic journey takes them across thousands of miles of hostile terrain en-route to India and their freedom.

The true meaning of friendship? Ick.

Here’s the seven stills in no particular order. I found them at Quiet Earth.

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Weir has said making the movie was “an irresistible chance to film a story that is as much about survival as escape, all set against a series of vast primeval landscapes stretching from Siberia to India.” He’s very strong on these ingredients, and has made a great many works on human’s interactions with their landscape and geography, from Picnic at Hanging Rock and The Last Wave through the Mosquito Coast. I’d definitely include The Truman Show on that list too, even though the landscape is artificial and controlled.

Should The Way Back release in 2010 - which I imagine it will, though there’s no date set yet - this will be seven years since Master & Commander. This marks the longest gap between feature films in Weir’s entire career. Some of this time was lost on developing an adaptation of Shantaram that he was then separated from over ‘creative differences’, only for the whole picture to slide into the shadows.

I hope there’s not so many blind alleys and flaming hoops for him next time.

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  • Chris in Fort Worth
    I've loved Weir since Fearless, which stands as a triumph in my mind, and am a big fan of Master & Commander. Just saw Picnic at Hanging Rock and although I was unprepared for the ambiguous ending, the tone and richness of the film were intoxicating (quite similar to Walkabout). Very much looking forward to this movie.
  • Octoberist
    I will always love Master and Commander..
  • AlphaEditor
    Nice to see that there are other people who appreciate Peter Weir as being an amazing filmmaker. :]
  • [A]
    "The true meaning of friendship? Ick." -- says the official Michael Bay fansite/blog of the year/whatever. Oh well..
  • HaroldsMaude
    The "Great Escape" and the "Magnificent Seven" never needed that line.
  • cekma
    THIS BOOK IS AMAZING! I love Weir hope it's great. I believe Rawicz never wanted it turned into a film though.
  • BrendonConnelly
    He obviously signed something that made the movie possible somewhere along the line.
  • Justin Jump
    Re: the true meaning of friendship, come on. They need to type stuff like that to sell it.

    It's Peter Weir, he'll come through.
  • i think i might have seen the whole movie already after watching the trailer.
  • what trailer?
  • alkali
    A film that is ultimately about the nature of friendship really has to earn it, but Peter Weir is the kind of director who could do it. I greatly admire his film Fearless (which still does not have a decent DVD transfer).
  • BrendonConnelly
    I know! Where is the worthy disc of Fearless?
  • Steve_Kasan
    Peter Weir is a great talent. He is part of a handfull of directors I will go out of my way and bare the elements to watch his pictures.
    Him, Mallick, Fincher, and De Palma. Everyone else can wait. This is definately on my list.
  • Jim Sturgess Online (JSO) has a full review of the film here: http://jimsturgessonline.com/?p=2171

    Here's JSO's exclusive interview with Jim where he talks about filming condidtions and working with Weir, Harris, and Farrell: http://jimsturgessonline.com/?page_id=2559

    An excerpt:
    There really didn’t seem to be a day where we weren’t pushed to our limits!!! We spent long hours in the freezing snow, barely able to feel our toes and fingers. I don’t think anyone will ever truly appreciate just how cold some days were as it’s hard to ’see’ the cold on a cinema screen…but trust me it was freezing!!! We would spend our days dreaming of getting to Morocco where it would be warm and sunny, but when we finally got out of the Bulgarian mountains and into the desert it was just sooo unbearably hot that it was even worse! We also had to carry all our winter clothes with us through the desert so we were wrapped up in all this clothing or having to carry it on our backs. We would think about the people, who might have actually gone through this, everyday! It was an extraordinary feeling of just keeping going, and every day I knew that there was nowhere else in the world that I would rather be. I feel I saw some of the most beautiful sites and sunsets that the world has to offer, so as much as it was hard it was extremely exhilarating.
  • brou
    Also note that the french website announces a french release in 2010 for october 20.
  • brou
    Another still is available on the french website "allociné" here : http://www.allocine.fr/film/fichefilm-140000/ph...
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