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Based on the real-life event, when a gold and copper mine collapses, it traps 33 miners underground for 69 days.
Director: Patricia Riggen
Writers: Mikko Alanne (screenplay),
Craig Borten (screenplay)
Stars: Cote de Pablo,
Juan Pablo Raba,
James Brolin |
Storyline
Based on the real-life event, when a gold and copper mine collapses, it traps 33 miners underground for 69 days.
Movie Trailer:Movie Reviews
Five
years ago the eyes of the entire South American population were placed
on a relatively unknown small mining town in Chile. When the San Jose
mine collapsed in Copiapo, 33 miners were trapped under more than 2000
feet, and the news travelled fast. It isn't uncommon to hear about these
tragic mining accidents, but what stood out here was that the family
members never lost hope and established camp near the site to force
authorities to not give up and continue the rescue efforts. After two
and a half weeks of uncertainty and against all odds, the rescuers
managed to contact the refuge in the mine where all 33 miners reported
to be alive and well. That was just the beginning of a long and
exhaustive rescue effort that would last more than two months, and that
every media channel covered 24 hours a day. The story is recent and we
all saw it take place live on our TV sets, so the real question I had
for Patricia Riggen's film was whether or not she could make this
captivating enough to hold our interest despite the familiarity of the
story. Surprisingly she succeeded. The film is deeply flawed and for
commercial purposes it had an international cast that spoke in English
with a forced Chilean accent. I hate movies that do this (if you want to
tell the story in English then just have the actors speak in plain
English; you're not more convincing because you do it with an accent),
but despite that pet peeve of mine, the film managed to draw me in
emotionally and I found it to be a beautiful and honest tribute. I can
understand those who criticize the movie because it isn't perfect, but
there were several emotional scenes where I literally had goose bumps
all over my arms, and that is always an indicator for me that the movie
is accomplishing its purpose.
One of the main characters in this
film, the miner who kept the group together under those critical
conditions, was Mario Sepulveda (Antonio Banderas). He never lost hope
and promised the rest of his friends that he would keep them alive. His
wife, Escarlette (Naomi Scott), was one of the supporters who decided to
set camp outside the site to force authorities to continue their rescue
efforts. The other main supporter was Maria Segovia (Juliette Binoche)
who refused to believe that her brother, Dario (Juan Pablo Raba) was
dead. Along with other family members and with the help of the media
they put pressure on the government to save their lives. The Mining
Minister, Laurence Golborne (Rodrigo Santoro), and mining expert, Andre
Sougarret (Gabriel Byrne), were given the difficult task to come up with
a plan to rescue these miners who were buried deep underground.
Meanwhile under the heart of the mountain, Mario was in charge of
keeping the group spirit alive and avoiding they end up driving each
other crazy due to the lack of food and water. He lifted Alex's (Mario
Casas) spirit when he was falling into despair reminding him that his
pregnant wife Jessica (Cote de Pablo) was waiting for him, he also
protected the only Bolivian in the crew, Carlos Mamani (Tenoch Huerta),
who was pushed aside by everyone else for being a foreigner, and he also
encouraged Don Lucho (Lou Diamond Phillips), who felt had failed the
team because he knew the security conditions were bad. Rigged delivers
both sides of the story: the 33 miners struggling to survive from the
inside and the family members and the rescue team fighting to save them
from the outside.
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