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A Lonely Place to Die
Description
A group of five mountaineers are hiking and climbing in the Scottish Highlands when they discover an eight year old girl buried amongst the peaks: buried alive. Terrified, de-hydrated and unable to speak a word of English, she is the victim of an elaborate kidnapping plot.
A group of five mountaineers are hiking and climbing in the Scottish Highlands when they discover an eight year old girl buried amongst the peaks: buried alive. Terrified, de-hydrated and unable to speak a word of English, she is the victim of an elaborate kidnapping plot.
Actors:
Matthew Zajac,
Alan Wyn Hughes,
Gillian MacGregor,
Jamie Edgell,
Karel Roden,
Alan Steele,
Melissa George
Matthew Zajac
Alan Wyn Hughes
12 July 1985, Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales, UK
Gillian MacGregor
7 May 1982, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Jamie Edgell
Karel Roden
18 May 1962, Ceské Budejovice, Czechoslovakia [now Czech Republic]
Alan Steele
Melissa George
6 August 1976, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Director:
Julian Gilbey
Julian Gilbey
Country:
United Kingdom
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September 15, 2011
A solid effort that should entertain viewers, In A Lonely Place To Die owes more to the character-driven suspense of The River Wild than the overblown action of Cliffhanger, and it's great to see a British attempt at the genre.November 02, 2011
... a small find ... Plucking ideas from 'Deliverance,' 'The Most Dangerous Game' and half a dozen North Face adventures -- the Gilbeys have fashioned one of the year's more unnerving thrillersApril 09, 2012
Despite the many faults with the story (particularly the logic), there's good action and the film moves well once it gets started. Lots of running, climbing and dodging bullets. You could do worse.September 14, 2011
Amped-up camera work - including vertigo inducing POV shots - are thrown in to create the illusion of a film that is much more kinetic and fast-paced than it really is, but it counts for zip when the rest of the film is so inert.March 07, 2012
I never expect much from a small-studio or low-budget thriller because they're usually disappointing. But "A Lonely Place to Die" is a cut above them, with only minor logic plot points getting in the way.November 07, 2011
Probably one of the most engrossing films in a truly lackluster year...November 10, 2011
Part high-altitude adventure movie, part kidnapping caper film, "A Lonely Place to Die" is more exciting than smart, though that's not the worst thing you can say about a movie.September 19, 2011
Five c**ts go up a mountain. Far too many come down.February 03, 2012
It's simply too good to label it a misfire, but the film starts from the gate with such a confident, breathless level of suspense that it's a shame that it can't be maintained.September 18, 2011
This is high-end cinema, let down only by the lack of any obvious subtext to earth all its on-the-edge thrills.September 07, 2011
The film's relentless momentum, coupled with Ali Asad's breathtaking location photography, distract us from the often two-dimensional supporting characters.November 17, 2011
It's a deeply satisfying entertainment filled with energy and made with savvy and cinematic wit. And it marks Gilbey as a director to keep an eye on.