NZIFF 2020 – The Long Walk REVIEW
Summary
NZIFF 2020 – The Long Walk REVIEW
Director – Mattie Do
Starring – Yannawoutthi Chanthalungsy (old man), Por Silatsa (boy), Noutnapha Soydara (girl), Vilouna Phetmany (Lina)
It’s got everything: ghosts, horror, drama, sci-fi and exotic forest setting. But is The Long Walk any good, asks GARY STEEL?
I’ve learned not to take film festival programme descriptions seriously over the years, but the write-up for The Long Walk made it sound utterly irresistible: “Somehow both thoughtful and thrilling, Laotian-American filmmaker Mattie Do’s ghostly time-travel tale unravels into unexpected places, blending intimate drama with tense horror and sci-fi genre elements.”
Wow! That blurb contains all the ingredients of a fantastic filmic experience. Everyone wants “thoughtful” and “thrilling” on the same page, and then there’s the prospect of a film based in an exotic location but with engaging “intimate drama” and – not to be outdone! – ghosts, sci-fi and horror as well!
I just had to watch it. But in reality, The Long Walk is more like The Longest Slow Crawl. I mean, I had to do yoga exercises on the floor just to keep me awake, and I hate yoga.
Parts of that hyperbole-laden description are true enough. It does have an exotic location and the lush rural feel pervades the film and gives it an aura of its own. There are touches of horror and the supernatural and every now and then we’re reminded through deftly rendered CGI that it’s set sometime in the sci-fi future.
But a lot of the time I couldn’t really figure what the fuck was going on and – the clincher – I couldn’t really be bothered making the effort to find out. The Long Walk stars Yannawoutthi Chanthalungsy as a vaping medicine man/spirit talker with a basement full of secrets. A demented woman goes missing from the local village. He finds the mutilated body. Did he do that? And if so, why?
Meanwhile, a young boy whose family is starving and mother is dying of cancer has found the dead body of a young woman whose ghost follows him around.
At nearly two hours it feels overlong and there are too many meaningful shots of the characters and not a lot happening.
I’m giving it a slightly better than average rating because, as they say, it’s all about location, location, location. Also, for all its flaws I’m sure that more intelligent viewers than myself will dig out more meaning from its confounding layers.
* The Long Walk is available to stream online from July 31 to August 6.
Check out Witchdoctor’s New Zealand International Film Festival reviews:
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