Review: 'The Long Walk' is a brutally stripped-down 'Hunger Games,' with a squad of strong young actors in an authoritarian dystopia
Bleak, brutal and brilliant, director Francis Lawrence’s “The Long Walk” is the authoritarian allegory these times require — a tale of bread and circuses in an oppressive regime and the lengths some people will go, literally, to fight back.
Based on a story Stephen King wrote under his pen name, Richard Bachman, “The Long Walk” imagines a near-future American wasteland, 19 years after a war that ended with a fascist government running the country. At the head is The Major (Mark Hamill), a gruff old soldier who rules by fear and violence.
As a distraction, he oversees an annual contest in which young men from each of the 50 states, chosen by lottery, compete to walk nonstop longer than the others, keeping a steady pace of 3 mph. If one young man should stop or slow down for 10 seconds, he is given a warning. Ten more seconds, a second warning. Ten more seconds, and “you get your ticket” — a bullet in the head. The last man standing wins riches and a wish to do anything he wants.
The scenario is like a more dystopian, less stage-managed version of “The Hunger Games,” except Lawrence (who’s directed all but the first movie in that franchise) is holding back very little of the story’s viciousness. When we see the elimination of the first competitor (“Jojo Rabbit’s” Roman Griffin Davis), we’re convinced this movie is going dark early and often.
The main action is among the three dozen or so young walkers, and screenwriter JT Mollnar does an admirable job giving many of them moments to stand out. A solid supporting cast of young actors — including Ben Wang (“Karate Kid: Legends”), Charlie Plummer (“Spontaneous”), Tut Nyuot and Garrett Wareing among them — make the walking scenes pulsate with barely concealed terror.
At the heart of “The Long Walk” are Cooper Hoffman (“Licorice Pizza”) as Ray, who has a particular reason to be the last walker alive, and David Jonsson (“Alien: Romulus”) as Peter, for whom positivity has become a survival skill. Their twinned performances play well opposite Hamill’s intensely nasty Major, and find the soul within the savagery of a tyrannical America that we can only hope we won’t see outside the movie theater.
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‘The Long Walk’
★★★★
Opens Friday, September 12, in theaters everywhere. Rated R for strong bloody violence, grisly images, suicide, pervasive language, and sexual references. Running time: 108 minutes.