Wednesday, May 2, 2012

THE GREY

After getting back to his beloved daughter who had disappeared, Liam Neeson fighting for her identity is lost in the cold plains of Europe. Well, when the self-identity has been in the grip, what's missing from Liam Neeson back? The more important question, whether Neeson is still able to return to Europe after two bad events that happened to her? With the help of old colleagues, Joe Carnahan, who has worked with The A-Team, Neeson has finally decided to "move-on". No more lost, no longer excursions to Europe, and is no longer in touch with Luc Besson. Ridley Scott's charm seems more tempting. What's more, this time setting brought to a place that is far more extreme, Alaska. For the script, Joe Carnahan adaptation of a short story written by Ian Mackenzie Jeffers, entitled "Ghost Walker". Given Alaska, coupled with a plane crash, wolves and wild beasts nan blizzards, The Grey promised a totally different premise with Taken and Unknown. Feels more real terror.


John Ottway (Liam Neeson) works on Alaska oil drilling to protect the team from the threat of wolves. On his last day, when he was ready to go home, along with dozens of aircraft climbed another worker fell hit the ground hard. Only seven people survived. And the terror was about to begin. As if not enough to chill that pierced to the bone, Ottway and allies, cronies got another threat, savage wolves. . Waiting for help from rescue teams as a dream in broad daylight let alone the fact that heavy terrain, snow storms that never stopped crashing, and social status of the survivors. The only way to save yourself is to stay away from the wreckage and search for life in the forest. However, the main problem, they do not know where the nest of a wolf pack. Miscalculation can be fatal. Moreover the number of herd one by one the wane when the wolves attacked by hypothermia and increasingly raged.

A pleasant surprise to learn that The Grey is far more delicious to eat rather than Taken and Unknown. The story is somewhat reminiscent of the Alive is lifted from a true story, it's just that The Grey does not go that far. In the early minutes, the story is likely not interesting to observe. When watching this movie, I know almost nothing about the plot, because it did not even peek at the reviews and trailers. So when I saw John Ottway a troubled, with the visibility of his wife, often a sudden, I had felt what will happen next is just a repetition of the Liam Neeson movie next. When Joe Carnahan led the audience into the plane, when the tension is slowly starting to be built. Carnahan way resemble the crash scene was horrific, many times more traumatic than Final Destination. As someone who has a phobia of planes flying, this is definitely not a pleasant picture. I was panicked, and ultimately decided not to look at the screen for several seconds.


Alaska entered the malignant nature, The Grey turned into a movie that should be avoided by people with heart disease. Too many scenes are accompanied by music boom that surprising. Threaten wolf whenever and wherever, indiscriminately. Over the film, not hard to guess exactly how to end the Joe Carnahan film. Cleverness in keeping with the intensity of neat is that the key factor why The Grey more interesting to follow every minute of it. There is no impression obsolete or simply reconstruct a mere moment Carnahan presented a scene which seems to be a homage to the cliffhanger. Keep gregetan. Grey did not watch The exercise is like the middle of the heart. As what has been done by the insidious to me the other day, The Grey was able to make me limp after watching it in theaters. Not a movie with a riveting storyline is, but The Grey able to carry out their duties nicely in terms of satisfying the audience from beginning to end the relentless tension and neatly arranged.

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