MovieChat Forums > The Walk (2015) Discussion > If WTC's Were Still Around, This Movie W...

If WTC's Were Still Around, This Movie Would've Been a Smash Hit


Just caught the film for the first time on Starz.

I'll admit, I'm biased, as Zemeckis is my all-time favorite film director. And once again, he delivered in a major way. Pulled me in, and I couldn't stop watching (despite having things to do, lol!) So I watched all of it, and loved it.

I recall hearing about the movie in early 2015, and couldn't wait for it to be in theatres. Once it was released though, it seemed like it was gone in a blink of an eye, and you didn't hear much about it. Almost as if it were a bomb, one of those dreadful movies that stay in the theatres for a week or go straight to home video.

Perplexed as to why such a solid film by an acclaimed director like Zemeckis didn't receive much balleyhoo or attention, a friend of mine pointed out his reason why, and I think he hit the nail on the head: The World Trade Centers. They're still sort of taboo, as far as Hollywood is concerned. Images of the World Trade Centers conjure up unpleasant memories for so many Americans, as it was such a dark day that will never be forgotten. And the WTC's were plastered all over the movie posters for this film, at bus stops in my town promoting it.

It still seems as if the WTC's are off-the-table, so to speak, in regard to Hollywood filmmaking; the biggest film I can recall about 9/11 was about Flight 93, which didn't involve the WTC's at all. That controversy still looms around the WTC's and WTC 7 from that dark day probably doesn't help matters, either, in regard to the WTC's being the elephant in the movie discussion room.

In regard to The Walk, the WTC's are front and center; they're sort of like what Wilson was to Hanks in Zemeckis' Cast Away; they become characters in the story, they become one with Phillipe in the film's final act. To see the WTC's in all their glory, fresh and new, is a site to behold. Zemeckis brings them to life, and his visual effects are once again unmatched and cutting-edge.

Had the attacks of 9/11 never occurred, and the towers still stood today, I have no little doubt The Walk probably would've been a big thing, a smash hit in the theatres. They probably would've held promos and premieres at the two towers, and who knows, maybe Phillipe would've even been granted a promotional "anniversary" walk to plug the film. But it wasn't to be. All that was left is their memory, and Zemeckis pays great tribute with his final shot of the film.

Thought it wasn't a smash-hit in theatres, it still remains an excellent film, another gem from Robert Zemeckis, one of our finest and most innovative movie directors.

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You definitely have a point there. I knew I wanted to watch it, yet I feared each shot of the towers would be like a punch in the gut. But with this movie Zemeckis accomplished something nearly as impossible as Phillipe's walk: he replaced all of those horrible, gruesome images seared into our brains with this luminous, ethereal tone poem: a love sonnet to the Towers. He restored them to us, only this time in a way that they can never be ravaged or lost again.

(There was also a Maggie Gyllenhaal movie called World Trade Center, I believe. Haven't seen it yet, but I like her, so I remember when it came out.)

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Well said.

It really was a great tribute to the lost towers. I also feared it would stir up emotions I didn't want to entertain, but it had the opposite effect for me as well (as opposed to the movie poster in and of itself, I could see how it could spook folks away).

I know we take CGI and special effects for granted these days, but I was still amazed at Zemeckis' attention to detail. When Phillipe put his chin against the tower at ground-level, we felt like they existed once again, that was one of many awesome shots.

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 Thank you. And happy 4th!

 < < < me watching the movie

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No one that I knew, including myself knew anything about the word World Trade Center until 9/11.

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You must be a youngster. Or not from the US.

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You're very sheltered since the towers were among the most famous buildings in the most famous city in the world.

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Had the attacks of 9/11 never occurred, and the towers still stood today, I have no little doubt The Walk probably would've been a big thing, a smash hit in the theatres.


I think the opposite. Much of the allure of this movie stems from the fact that the towers are gone. If the towers were still standing the movie would have received even less attention than it did.

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and to think the title of this topic has THE worst pun ever....

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I have to disagree. This stunt was pretty much a forgotten and lost event until the destruction of the WTC on 9/11. The sudden disappearance of these iconic towers prompted a lot of fascination and nostalgia about their history and this incredibly bizarre and magical story that happened on the cusp of their completion was in a way the perfect antidote to the incredible violence of their disappearance. Without 9/11 I doubt the documentary would have even been made in 2004 or whenever it was, and this dramatization owes its existence to that doc.

It's like, if the Titanic hadn't sunk the movie would have never been made.

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Interesting theory but most likely incorrect.
The film is just ok. That's its fatal flaw.
JG is ok as an actor, but he looks like a fake person with his absurd costuming and bad accent. It seems like a joke.

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