127 Hours

Every second counts.

Sinopse

The true story of mountain climber Aron Ralston's remarkable adventure to save himself after a fallen boulder crashes on his arm and traps him in an isolated canyon in Utah.

  • 7.1
  • 2010
  • Released
  • 1h 34m

Reviews

Geronimo1967
@Geronimo19675 months ago

You see, I always knew that physical exercise was a gangrenous game, and so had little sympathy with Aron Ralston (James Franco) when he dons a rucksack and heads off into the rocky desert for an hike. Along the way he takes some photographs, meets a couple of young ladies for a swim in a beautifully pristine blue grotto and then slips and falls down a crevasse where his arm becomes wedged by a fa

T
@TRUkaeover 1 year ago

watch it at like 11yo.. ngl I had some scoobie-doo nightmare for a while (iykyk) but I otherwise enjoyed the movie a lot ! was scarred it would be the same stuff over and over but the in depth flashbacks doesn't allow this

Ruuz
@Ruuzalmost 6 years ago

I can certainly appreciate the lengths that those involved in _127 Hours_ went to. Being that the movie is 90% bottle-episode, wherein the lead doesn't even have the luxury of something as simple as being allowed to pace about, it's not unfair to say that _127 Hours_ doesn't have a whole lot going on. To try and inject a bit of life into it, director Danny Boyle throws in a number of unique filmin

T
@Thomaxzover 8 years ago

It was the borring movie I ever watch. And I will not recomend anyone go see this.

DoryDarko
@DoryDarkoalmost 9 years ago

127 Hours depicts the true story of a guy named Aron Ralston, who went canyoneering in Utah in April 2003. Through a pretty serious event of misfortune, he gets trapped in a canyon by a boulder that pulverises his arm against the canyon wall; literally between a rock and a hard place. And, the desperate measures he resorts to in order to free himself. From a Hollywood perspective, this sounds like

T
@tantyalmost 12 years ago

Franco provides a nice performance but the movie is not that hooking and Boyle repeats his visual techniques once and again.

Made by  Geisiel Melo  with