Plot
Uruguayan rugby team stranded in the snow swept Andes are forced to use desperate measures to survive after a plane crash.
Release Year: 1993
Rating: 6.9/10 (20,531 voted)
Director:
Frank Marshall
Stars: Ethan Hawke, Vincent Spano, Josh Hamilton
Storyline The amazing, true story of a Uruguayan rugby team's plane that crashed in the middle of the Andes mountains, and their immense will to survive and pull through alive, forced to do anything and everything they could to stay alive on meager rations and through the freezing cold. The only thing the team has riding on after losing so many of their good friends and family members is the slim chance of making it through alive and their faithfulness to God.
Writers: Piers Paul Read, John Patrick Shanley
Cast: Ethan Hawke
-
Nando Parrado
Vincent Spano
-
Antonio Balbi
Josh Hamilton
-
Roberto Canessa
Bruce Ramsay
-
Carlitos Páez
John Newton
-
Antonio 'Tintín' Vizintín
(as John Haymes Newton)
David Kriegel
-
Gustavo Zerbino
Kevin Breznahan
-
Roy Harley
Sam Behrens
-
Javier Methol
Illeana Douglas
-
Lilliana Methol
Jack Noseworthy
-
Bobby François
Christian J. Meoli
-
Federico Aranda
Jake Carpenter
-
Alberto Artuna
Michael DeLorenzo
-
Rafael Cano
(as Michael De Lorenzo)
José Zúñiga
-
Fraga, the Mechanic
Danny Nucci
-
Hugo Díaz
Taglines:
The triumph of the human spirit.
Release Date: 15 January 1993
Filming Locations: British Columbia, Canada
Box Office Details
Budget: $32,000,000
(estimated)
Gross: $36,733,909
(USA)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
The crash sequence took nine days to film. As the set was mounted on a huge gimbel, most of the cast were taking motion sickness pills as they spent a large amount of time being tossed about.
Goofs:
Factual errors:
In reality, the plane tail was ripped off by the torn-off right wing which had clipped a mountain peak before. In the movie, it's the tail clipping a mountain peak and then being ripped off.
Quotes: Nando:
I'm proud to be a man on a day like this.
User Review
The best that could have been done.
Rating:
Critics often fault Alive with petty complaints: Gee, wasn't the avalanche
a
convenient plot device? Why didn't the plane have signal flares? How come
the survivors were all those pretty boys? Why don't we see the dramatic
search? In doing so, they're faulting reality: The avalanche really did
happen when and how it was portrayed. The wreckage really did lack signal
flares. The plane really was chartered by a bunch of ruggedly handsome
young
men -- what else do you expect from a rugby team? And yes, the search was
dramatic (the moment when Roberta Cannessa's father learned that his son
is
alive is one of those stranger-than-fiction moments), but it was enough of
a
task to compress the survivors' story into a feature film. The search
would
have comprised another film entirely on its own.
How do you compress nearly three months of terror and tedium into less
than
two hours while still holding the attention of the audience? It's a
daunting
task, and Alive manages quite nicely. With technical consulting provided
by
crash survivor Nando Parrado, Alive captures the look and mood of the
crash
site, and sketches in the relationships among the passengers of the
ill-fated flight.
It leaves many strange questions hanging (Where, in this plane full of
mostly unmarried adults, does Nando come up with two tiny red sneakers?)
and
those questions are best answered by reading the book. And watch Alive
again. Things become clearer with multiple viewings.
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