The Way (review)

Martin Sheen in The Way

Is it possible to make a movie about religious faith -- why it works for some people, why it doesn’t for others -- that explicates the matter in ways that anyone can appreciate, even if they don’t agree with it? Can a movie about spirituality be inclusive rather than devisive? Yes: hell, yes. Writer-director Emilio Estevez (Bobby) has pulled it off with his very powerful and deeply moving The Way... and I say that as someone who is not at all religious, as someone who is actively disdainful of religion. Martin Sheen (Love Happens) is a mourning father who travels from California to France to collect the body of his adventurous son (Estevez himself, in a few brief yet touching flashbacks and grief-visions), who died in an accident at the beginning of the Camino de Santiago, an ancient 500-mile hike-slash-pilgrimage through rural France and into Spain. To honor his son, Sheen’s Tom decides to do the trek himself, and along the way befriends other unlikely pilgrims (including Deborah Kara Unger [White Noise], James Nesbitt [Five Minutes of Heaven], and Yorick van Wageningen [The Chronicles of Riddick]) with their own exceptional reasons for the journey. It’s as if Estevez has updated The Canterbury Tales for the 21st century and made an on-the-road movie for our existentially confused times, in which grief and understanding and acceptance aren’t always about losing a loved one but about figuring out what is worth hanging on to, metaphysically speaking, and what is worth letting go of. Miraculously -- pun intended -- Estevez has captured a sense of spirituality as a universal human experience that is as robustly physical and carnal as it is cerebral, and one that does not necessarily have to have anything to do with the supernatural. I love this movie unreservedly, and recommend it wholeheartedly.

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posted:
Thu Oct 13 11, 4:05PM

categories:
reviews
> 2011 theatrical releases




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North America release date:
Oct 7 2011

U.K. release date:
May 13 2011

Flick Filosopher Real Rating:
rated S for graphic spirituality without graphic religiosity

MPAA: rated PG-13 for some thematic elements, drug use and smoking

BBFC: rated 12A (contains soft drug use and references)

viewed at a private screening with an audience of critics

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Region 1 release date:
Feb 21 2012
Amazon U.S.
Amazon Canada

Region 2 release date:
Oct 31 2011
Amazon U.K.


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Way
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