Four years after his impressive ensemble biopic Bobby screened at the Festival, actor-director Emilio Estevez returns with another ambitious drama that also features his father, Martin Sheen. The Way is a touching film about the testy yet unbreakable bond between father and son, as well as the supportive, familial connections that can form among strangers.
Tom (Sheen), an American ophthalmologist, is informed that his son (Estevez) has been killed in a freak accident on a pilgrimage along the Camino de Santiago, also known as The Way of Saint James, in the northwest of Spain. Upon arriving in France to collect his son’s remains and return to the United States, Tom is hit with a profound sense of sadness and quickly changes his plans. Equipped with his deceased son’s guidebook and backpack, he embarks on the 800km pilgrimage from the Pyrenees to Santiago de Compostela in an attempt to honour his son’s memory by finishing what he had started.
Along the way, Tom encounters several eccentric travellers, each with their varied motivations: a gregarious Dutchman (Yorick van Wageningen) wants to lose weight, a Canadian woman (Deborah Kara Unger) hopes to quit her addiction to cigarettes, an Irish author (James Nesbitt) struggling to write a travel book. Their apparent weaknesses frustrate the stoic and determined Tom, yet the farther they travel together the more they come to form a surrogate family unit and support each other through their various tribulations.
Set against gorgeous vistas of France and Spain, The Way, like all great road trip movies, depicts how travelling through an unknown land can lead to greater self-knowledge and understanding. A moving and potent character study buoyed by a great soundtrack and an immensely likable cast, The Way is a journey of self-discovery that follows four very different people as they learn to better love themselves and each other. –TIFF
There's more to like here than to dislike. I appreciate the film's sentiment, Martin Sheen, that it was filmed on location. The Way has piqued my interest in pilgrimages in general and specifically in the El Camino Santiago. On the negative, it's a little bit mawkish and the Canadian and Irish characters grated on me a little bit (less the acting than the characterizations). Worth watching. 3.5 stars
This is the kind of movie you watch when you're trapped on a plane for hours with nothing better to do. But regardless of at what elevation it's watched, this movie just falls flat before it goes anywhere. Who is this son character that died? Who is his eye doctor curmudgeonly changeless father? Why do we care? There are some really beautiful scenes to take in, but nothing of merit to keep you engaged throughout.
A character study of the first order well entrusted to the acting styles of Martin Sheen, Deborah Kara Unger and Yorick van Wageningen. Estevez as a director sometimes gives in to the maudlin,heart pulling aspects of the story but wisely leaves the actors the room to get to the heart of the story. Surprisingly not the traveloque vistas one comes to expect from films like this and actually seems like opportunity lost.
So much better than I anticipated. The movie develops its story and the relationships in the story naturally and unhurriedly – any rushing of these relationships would have betrayed the nature of the… read review
I’ve been anticipating The Way for about two and a half years for the wrong reason – I wanted to see Emilio Estevez back on the screen. The last formal film he appeared in was Rated X with his brother… read review