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Man on Wire

 
Movies:

Man on Wire

  • Director: James Marsh
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Culture & Society
  • Movie Type: Biography, Law & Crime
  • Main Cast: Philippe Petit
  • Release Year: 2008
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 94 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

On August 7, 1974, a 24-year-old French high-wire artist named Philippe Petit committed one of the most astonishing performance stunts of the late 20th century: he strung a thin cable in between the two towers of the World Trade Center and not only walked across, from one building to another, but did a nerve-wracking series of knee-bends and acrobatic movements on the cable, some 1,350 feet above the ground, before turning himself in. This occurred to the consternation and chagrin of Port Authority policemen, who immediately arrested Petit for the act -- prompting many to dub Petit's stunt "the artistic crime of the century." James Marsh's documentary Man on Wire revisits and recounts this chain of events some 34 years after they occurred. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

Review

Back in the late '90s, a heartbreaking incident occurred involving a young American college student that made headlines in some local papers. In an attempt to win a "dare" with some of his friends, he made the hare-brained (and impetuous) decision to scale a radio tower atop a university building. The rungs were wet from rain, and he slipped off and fell to his immediate death -- a humiliating end, to be certain. The contrast between the circumstances surrounding that tragedy and those surrounding Frenchman Philippe Petit's now-famous August 1974 feat -- a 45-minute walk on a tightrope suspended between the tops of the two World Trade Center towers -- illustrates the central thesis of director James Marsh's magnificently entertaining new documentary about the Petit stunt, Man on Wire, which deservedly picked up two of the top prizes at Sundance in January.

Unlike the aforementioned student (and the ill-fated victims of many other dangerous stunts over the years) Petit perceived tightrope walking as his form of lifelong creative expression, and spent an unholy number of hours, weeks, months, and years perfecting his craft. Such actions saved him by making the Trade Center feat about a thousand times safer than it would have otherwise been. Everything leading up to Petit's Trade Center walk echoes his explicit comparison of himself to a master artist -- the preparatory details suggest the image of a sculptor gradually honing in on a creation from a formless block of clay. From there, the film expands the breadth and ambition of its ideas and begins to turn around the same profound theme as Ratatouille -- that every artist (performance or otherwise) requires the breadth of freedom necessary for self-expression, though that freedom will invariably pose risks to oneself. After all, what is any work of art except for the creator putting his or her deepest and innermost self "on the line" for the world to see, and thus risking humiliation?

Undergirding these ideas, Marsh paints a portrait of unbridled determination, courage, and raw intelligence in Petit that shows him implicitly damning all the naysayers by thinking everything through with an almost obscene level of thoroughness. The director intuitively affords so much attention and screen time to the scientific preparations behind Petit's coup that the film at times threatens to turn into a catalogue of detail. We learn that Petit made a photographic record of the prospective mounts to which his cable could be affixed on both towers; that he considered, gauged, and compensated for possible torque on the cable by anchoring it with diagonal mounts attached to the central line; that he and a friend devised a method of mounting the line between buildings by firing an arrow attached to the cable from one building to the other; and so on, and so forth.

The director approaches this material like a first-rate thriller, employing a largely chronological narrative structure that ratchets up the tension (despite the known outcome) as the film details Petit's efforts to pull a band of international assistants together, and as those men spend time onscreen reflecting on the crafty, incredible ways in which they thwarted Twin Towers security and the New York Port Authority in carrying out their "artistic crime." Marsh is abetted throughout by the thoroughly winning presence of middle-aged Petit, a natural showman, who turns up on-camera for interview commentary, and who imparts a wealth of emotion with his excited, impassioned recollections. In addition to suspense, the film also benefits enormously from the inclusion of offbeat humor throughout, such as the revelation that one of Petit's cohorts was a terminal pothead (who showed up for the preparations stoned), and the revelation that Petit celebrated his success on the wire with a series of actions that completely ignored the devotions of his longtime girlfriend -- he accompanied a groupie to a nearby hotel and indulged in uninhibited sex with her (an event recreated in hilarious black-and-white flashbacks). Equally funny are the authorities' irritated reactions to Petit's wire stunt, which Marsh wisely holds off-camera until about ten minutes into the photomontage depiction of the actual walk.

It may have been inevitable that Marsh needed to work in dramatic reenactments of the preparations with actors playing the perpetrators' younger selves, but the dividing line between the period footage of Petit and friends and the footage of the actors is invisible. The young actors bear such an astonishing resemblance to their real-life counterparts that it looks like Petit actually had people shooting sound footage of him over the years, while he planned the coup, conducted brainstorming sessions with his cohorts, mounted a "test" wire in his backyard, and perfected his walk.

Especially in the wake of 9/11, the film's lengthy Super-8 sequences of the World Trade Center towers in mid-construction (which blanket the first ten minutes of screen time) bring a poignant, elegiac quality to the material. The documentary benefits from this added level of emotional complexity, and it in no way detracts from the suspense or the humor in the sequences surrounding it.

The film's only real lapses are twofold: it goes on a bit too long, lagging somewhat at the midway point, and when we actually reach Petit's much-anticipated derring-do atop the Twin Towers, Marsh fails to incorporate an actual film of his walk, resorting (as mentioned) to still photographs. It may be true that such footage doesn't exist -- that the actual walk was impossible to catch on camera (back in 1974) given the clandestine circumstances of the preparation and planning, and the height of the buildings. (The tale made city-wide and national headlines and drew massive crowds -- didn't news cameras, arriving at the Trade Center, at least attempt to capture some of it?) If not, that's a serious handicap for Marsh to work around, though we do get incredibly entertaining film clips of Petit pulling his high-wire stunt at Notre Dame Cathedral and the Sydney Harbor Bridge. Anyway, on some level, one could argue that the absence of an actual filmed record of the Twin Towers walk further ensconces the feat itself in an aura of myth and legend -- the sorts of myths and legends that explicit onscreen depiction can easily destroy. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Philippe Petit
Jean-Louis Blondeau; Annie Allix; Jim Moore; Mark Lewis; Jean-Francois Heckel; Barry Greenhouse; David Foreman; Alan Welner

Credit

Adine Duron - Casting, Maureen A. Ryan - Co-producer, Victoria Gregory - Co-producer, Kathryn Nixon - Costume Designer, Curtis Smith - First Assistant Director, James Marsh - Director, Jinx Godfrey - Editor, James Marsh - Executive Producer, Nick Fraser - Executive Producer, Jonathon Hewes - Executive Producer, Lenny Crooks - Executive Producer, Andrea Meditch - Executive Producer, Michael Nyman - Composer (Music Score), J. Ralph - Composer (Music Score), Sharon Lomofsky - Production Designer, Kathy O'Donnell - Production Designer, Igor Martinovic - Cinematographer, Simon Chinn - Producer, George Foulgham - Sound/Sound Designer, Steven Robinson - Sound/Sound Designer, Giancarlo Dellapina - Sound Recordist, Simon Clarke - Visual Effects Supervisor, Lisa McMahon - Supervising Sound Editor, Claire Ellis - Supervising Sound Editor, Nikia Nelson - Set Decorator, Philippe Petit - Book Author

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Man on Wire

Theatrical release poster
Directed by James Marsh
Produced by Simon Chinn - Wall to Wall
Starring Philippe Petit
Music by Josh Ralph (title theme)
Michael Nyman
Cinematography Igor Martinovic
Editing by Jinx Godfrey
Distributed by Magnolia Pictures (US) Icon (UK) Madman (Australia) Diaphana (France)
Release date(s) Sundance Film Festival:
January 22, 2008
United States:
July 15, 2008
Australia:
October 16, 2008[1]
Running time 90 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English, French

Man on Wire is a 2008 documentary film directed by James Marsh. The film chronicles Philippe Petit's 1974 high-wire walk between the Twin Towers of New York's World Trade Center. It is based on Philippe Petit's book, To Reach the Clouds, recently released in paperback with the new title Man on Wire. The title of the movie is taken from the police report that led to the arrest (and later release) of Petit, whose performance had lasted for almost one hour. The film is crafted like a heist film, presenting rare footage of the preparations for the event and still photographs of the walk, alongside reenactments (with Paul McGill as the young Petit) and present-day interviews with the participants.

It competed in the World Cinema Documentary Competition[2] at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival, where it won the Grand Jury Prize: World Cinema Documentary and the World Cinema Audience Award: Documentary.[3] In February 2009, the film won the BAFTA for Outstanding British Film, the Independent Spirit Awards and the Academy Award for Best Documentary.

Contents

Production

The film's producer Simon Chinn first encountered Philippe Petit in April 2005 on BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs, after which he decided to pursue him for the film rights to his book, To Reach the Clouds. After months of discussion, Petit agreed, with the condition that he would play an active, collaborative part in the making of the film.

In an interview conducted during Man on Wire's run at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival, director James Marsh explained that he was drawn to the story in part because it immediately struck him as "a heist movie." Marsh also commented that as a New Yorker himself, he saw the film as something to give back to the city. He said he hopes to hear people say that they will now always think of Petit and his performance when recalling the World Trade Center's twin towers.[4]

Responding to questioning as to why the towers' destruction 27 years later was not mentioned in the film, Marsh explained that Philippe Petit's act was "incredibly beautiful" and that it "would be unfair and wrong to infect his story with any mention, discussion or imagery of the Towers being destroyed."[5]

Reception

Man on Wire has won the prestigious Special Jury Award and Audience Award at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival[6], the International Audience Award at the Los Angeles Film Festival and the Standard Life Audience Award at the Edinburgh International Film Festival[7]. The film has also won the Jury Prize and Audience Award in the World Cinema: Documentary competition at the Sundance Film Festival. Man on Wire is the sixth film to pick up both top awards at Sundance, and the first from outside the US.[8] In February 2009, the film won the BAFTA for Outstanding British Film[9], and Best Documentary Film in the Australian Film Critics Association Awards. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 81st annual Oscars.[10]

Film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 100% of the 141 reviews they have collected have been positive. It is currently the best reviewed movie on the website. The film also received a golden tomato for best documentary of 2008.[11]

Top ten lists

The film appeared on many critics' top ten lists of the best films of 2008.[12] Movie City News shows that the film appeared in 76 different top ten lists, out of 286 different critics lists surveyed, the joint 7th "most mentions" on a top ten list of the films released in 2008.[13]

Soundtrack

Much of the film's soundtrack is derived from the 2006 album, The Composer's Cut Series Vol. II: Nyman/Greenaway Revisited.

  1. Fish Beach - Michael Nyman (from Drowning by Numbers)
  2. History Of The Insipid - Michael Nyman (from The Libertine)
  3. Albatross - Fleetwood Mac
  4. Dreams Of A Journey - Michael Nyman (from The Piano)
  5. Time Lapse - Michael Nyman (from A Zed & Two Noughts)
  6. The Disposition Of Linen - Michael Nyman (from The Draughtsman's Contract)
  7. A Fifth of Beethoven - Walter Murphy
  8. Chasing Sheep Is Best Left To Shepherds - Michael Nyman (from The Draughtsman's Contract)
  9. An Eye For Optical Theory - Michael Nyman (from The Draughtsman's Contract)
  10. The Lark Ascending - English Northern Philharmonia (composed by Ralph Vaughan Williams)
  11. A Ramble In St. James's Park - Michael Nyman (from The Libertine)
  12. Passage de L'Egalité - Michael Nyman (from La Traversée de Paris)
  13. In The Hall Of The Mountain King - Philadelphia Orchestra (composed by Edvard Grieg)
  14. Drowning By Number 2 - Michael Nyman (from Drowning by Numbers)
  15. Trysting Fields/Sheep 'n' Tides - Michael Nyman (from Drowning by Numbers)
  16. Memorial - Michael Nyman
  17. Leaving Home (Opening Titles) - Josh Ralph
  18. Leaving Home Sunday Exploration (End Credits) - Josh Ralph
  19. Gnossienne No. 1 - Gheorghe Constantinescu (composed by Erik Satie)
  20. Gymnopédie No. 1 - Anne Queffélec (composed by Erik Satie)

See also

References

  1. ^ Man on Wire Australian release date
  2. ^ "2008 Sundance Film Festival Announces Films in Competition" (PDF). 2007-11-28. http://www.sundance.org/festival/press_industry/releases/pdf/2008_SFF_Announces_Films_In_Competition.pdf. Retrieved 2008-01-07. 
  3. ^ "2008 Sundance Film Festival Announces Awards" (PDF). 2008-01-26. http://sundance.org/festival/press_industry/releases/pdf/2008-01-26-Awards.pdf. 
  4. ^ Jerney Makoa (July 24, 2008). "On The Circuit: Man on Wire | Zoom In - News, Events, Training and Community for Creatives". http://www.zoom-in.com/sundance/podcasts/on_the_circuit_man_on_wire. Retrieved 2008-07-25. 
  5. ^ Neil Smith (August 2, 2008). "BBC NEWS: Wire walk film omits 9/11 tragedy". http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/7498364.stm. Retrieved 2008-08-03. 
  6. ^ "Full Frame Documentary Film Festival Announces Festival Award Winners ", fullframefest.org.
  7. ^ "Man on Wire Wins Again ", walltowall.co.uk.
  8. ^ "Wall to Wall Takes Two at Sundance Film Festival"
  9. ^ "Film Winners in 2009". bafta.org. BAFTA. http://www.bafta.org/awards/film/film-nominations-in-2009,657,BA.html. Retrieved 8 February, 2009. 
  10. ^ "Nominees for the 81st Academy Awards". http://www.oscars.org/awards/81academyawards/nominees.html. Retrieved 12 February, 2009. 
  11. ^ "Man on Wire at Rotten Tomatoes". http://au.rottentomatoes.com/m/man_on_wire/. Retrieved 16 August 2008. 
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab "Metacritic: 2008 Film Critic Top Ten Lists". Metacritic. http://www.metacritic.com/film/awards/2008/toptens.shtml. Retrieved January 11, 2009. 
  13. ^ David Poland (2008). "The 2008 Movie City News Top Ten Awards". http://moviecitynews.com/awards/2009/top_ten/00scoreboard.htm. Retrieved 2009-01-25. 

External links

Awards
Preceded by
Vores lykkes fjender (Enemies of Happiness)
Grand Jury Prize: World Cinema Documentary
2008
Succeeded by
n/a
Preceded by
In the Shadow of the Moon
World Cinema Audience Award: Documentary
2008
Succeeded by
n/a
Preceded by
Taxi to the Dark Side
Academy Award for Documentary Feature
2008
Succeeded by
n/a

 
 

 

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Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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