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The Way (2010 film)

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Wikipedia article




'The Way' is a 2010 American-Spanish drama film directed, produced and written by Emilio Estevez and starring Martin Sheen, Deborah Kara Unger, James Nesbitt, and Yorick van Wageningen. In it, Martin Sheen's character walks the Camino de Santiago, a traditional pilgrimage route in France and Spain.

Plot



Dr. Thomas Avery is an American ophthalmologist who goes to France following the death of his estranged adult son, Daniel, killed in the Pyrenees during a storm while walking the 'Camino de Santiago' (the Way of St. James), a Christian pilgrimage route to the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, Spain. Tom's purpose is initially to retrieve his son's body. However, in a combination of grief and homage to his son, Tom decides to walk the ancient spiritual trail where his son died, taking Daniel's ashes with him.

While walking the 'Camino', Tom meets other people, all looking for greater meaning in their lives. He reluctantly falls in with three other pilgrims in particular. Joost is an overweight man from Amsterdam who says he is walking the route to lose weight to get ready for his brother's wedding and also so that his wife will desire him again. He is a friendly extrovert who is the first to start walking with Tom. Sarah is a Canadian fleeing an abusive husband, who says she is walking the pilgrimage to quit smoking. Jack is an Irish travel writer who when younger had desires to be a great author like William Butler Yeats or James Joyce but never wrote the novel he dreamed of. He is the last to join the quartet and has been suffering from "writer's block". As the pilgrims travel the 'Camino', they occasionally meet and talk with other pilgrimstwo Frenchmen, a young Italian and Father Frank, an elderly priest from New York. Tom occasionally has visions of Daniel alive and smiling among other people. Tom starts out the journey being cold to his fellow pilgrims, but over the course of their journey he eventually opens up to them.

On the pilgrimage, the group experiences challenges, such as when a young Romani steals Tom's backpack containing his son's ashes. Although the thief escapes, his father drags him back to Tom to return the pack, with embarrassed apologies and an offer in compensation to attend a Romani street party in the evening.

After the group arrives at Santiago de Compostela, Tom is ultimately accompanied to Muxa by the other three members. There, he scatters the remainder of Daniel's ashes in the Atlantic Ocean.

With Daniel's backpack on his back, Tom is shown happy setting out on another journey, this time in Morocco.

Cast



*Martin Sheen as Thomas Avery

*Deborah Kara Unger as Sarah Marie Sinclair

*James Nesbitt as Jack Emerson Stanton

*Yorick van Wageningen as Joost Michael de Witt

*Emilio Estevez as Daniel Avery

*Tchky Karyo as Captain Henri Sbastien

Production



Development

The film was inspired by Emilio Estevez's son, Taylor. The inspiration for the project happened in 2003. Taylor, at the time 19 years old, and Sheen, whose TV series 'The West Wing' was on hiatus, traveled the pilgrimage route. Taylor, who served as an associate producer on the film, had driven the length of the 'Camino' with his grandfather. On the way, he met the woman who would become his wife; thus, the 'Camino' held special meaning for him. After the trip, a series of discussions started between Sheen and his son for a movie about the 'Camino de Santiago'. Sheen originally suggested it be a low-budget documentary, but Estevez was not interested in such a small project, wanting instead a bigger experience.

Estevez also found inspiration in his vineyard, Casa Dumetz, where he wrote much of the dialogue for the film. Exploring the themes of loss, community, and faith, he saw parallels with the characters of the film 'The Wizard of Oz' (1939). The script took six months to get a first draft.

The story is also based on selected stories from Jack Hitt's book 'Off the Road: A Modern-Day Walk Down the Pilgrim's Route into Spain' (1994).

Filming

Filming started on 21 September 2009 and took 40 days. The production company and actors walked between 300 and 350 kilometers during filming. Estevez had a very small crew and shot with available light; night-time sequences were filmed by candle and firelight. Considering the 'Camino' is special to local people on the route, the filmmakers felt great pressure to get the details right.

According to a Christian Broadcasting Network interview, a key scene almost did not happen. With church leadership opposed to allowing the crew to shoot inside the famous cathedral in Santiago de Compostela, Estevez says he took a leap of faith and asked everyone on set to pray for access. "And it worked", claimed Sheen. The crew was given permission just 48 hours before they were scheduled to shoot the scenes, which they felt were critical to the film.

Casting

Sheen originally suggested Michael Douglas or Mel Gibson for the lead role, but Estevez had written the main character's role specifically for his father. Aside from the main actors, those seen on-screen are real pilgrims from all over the world. One episode in the film involves a group of actual Romani people from Burgos.

Release



'The Way' was marketed largely via a word-of-mouth campaign. "We dont have a lot of money to do a big $40 million P. & A.", Estevez said, talking about his marketing print-and-advertising budget.

'The Way' premiered in September 2010 at the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival"[http://www.tiff.net/filmsandschedules/tiff/2010/way The Way] ". Toronto International Film Festival. Retrieved on August 29, 2010. and was commercially released in Spain first, with its Spanish premiere on November 10, 2010. The Maltese premiere on February 28, 2011 benefited a tiny Maltese organization, the Pope John XXIII Peace Lab of al Far, which provides shelter to asylum seekers. The shelter, established in 1971, had not sought the funding.

The film was released in the United Kingdom in May 2011 and in the United States in October 2011. Estevez and Sheen took a promotional bus tour in promotion of the film across the United States and through some parts of Canada. The film was released on DVD in February 2012.

The film was not theatrically released in France until September 2013.

Reception



Box office

The film took in $110,418 in its U.S. opening weekend; as of February 2012, it had made $4,430,765 (or $4,430,650) domestically (with its widest release in 283 U.S. theaters), and $7,451,541 internationally.

Ultimately, the theatrical performance reached a gross of $11,882,191and the home market performance an additional gross of $8,127,751, thus the film reached a total gross of $20,009,942.

Critical reception

The film has received a "Certified Fresh" rating of 83% on the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes based on a sample of 100 reviews, with an average score of 6.6/10. The consensus description is: "It may be a little too deliberately paced for more impatient viewers, but 'The Way' is a worthy effort from writer/director Emilio Estevez, balancing heartfelt emotion with clear-eyed drama that resists cheap sentiment." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 64 out of 100 based on 28 critics indicating "generally favorable reviews".

Peter Travers of 'Rolling Stone' magazine gave the film three out of four stars, while Andrew Schenker of 'Slant Magazine' gave it 1 out of 4 stars. Eric Kohn of Indiewire gave the film a "B+" rating, commenting that "Estevez's narrative is dominated by master shots of the landscape capturing Tom and his pals wandering through the wilderness and small villages, exploring ancient cathedrals and local traditions." Kirk Honeycutt of 'The Hollywood Reporter' wrote a mixed review, stating: "Emilio Estevez's 'The Way' is an earnest film, its heart always in the right place, but it's severely under dramatized." Sheri Linden of 'Los Angeles Times' noted that 'The Way' is more low-key, cohesive, and personal than Estevez's preceding film 'Bobby'.

Actor Zac Efron saw the film in 2011 and named it his favorite film of 2011.

References




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