Film Threat by Rob Rector
Settings aside, Infinite Storm is Watt’s show, and she is thoroughly invested.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Małgorzata Szumowska
Cast
Naomi Watts,
Billy Howle,
Denis O'Hare,
Parker Sawyers
Genre
Drama,
Thriller
As an experienced climber ascends Mount Washington, she turns back before she reaches the summit as a huge blizzard approaches. On her way down, she encounters a lone, stranded man, and takes it upon herself to get them both down the mountain before nightfall arrives and they succumb to the storm.
Film Threat by Rob Rector
Settings aside, Infinite Storm is Watt’s show, and she is thoroughly invested.
Chicago Sun-Times by Richard Roeper
At times almost too unbearably intense to watch but ultimately rewarding and with an uplifting twist, “Infinite Storm” is based on the amazing, true-life story of one Pam Bales, who in 2010 set out on an excursion to the top of Mount Washington, the highest peak in the Northeastern United States, which is famous for its unpredictable weather and exhilarating but dangerous paths.
RogerEbert.com by Matt Zoller Seitz
If this movie and her previous project signal a shift in Watts' career that will be dominated by survival tales that put her at the center of a movie and showcase her doing things that give most viewers a pulled tendon just sitting there in the audience, so much the better.
The New York Times by Manohla Dargis
With this role, Watts is reminding us that she can hold the screen by herself and without saying a word tell you everything you need to know about a character — and all the while looking fantastic.
Los Angeles Times by Gary Goldstein
This is a daring and memorable depiction of trauma, compassion and resilience.
Screen Rant by Rachel LaBonte
Enhanced by an all-in performance from Watts and impressive behind-the-camera work, Infinite Storm is a ride that's both engrossing and emotional.
Movie Nation by Roger Moore
Watts’ stoic, sturdy performance and the film’s affecting and formula-busting third act make this Infinite Storm well worth weathering.
TheWrap by Robert Abele
The movie’s secret sauce is humanity through action, what Watts’ Pam in all her heart, knowledge, grit, solitude, caring, irritation, and worry shows us when she’s in her element: what losing and finding looks like in real time.
Variety by Dennis Harvey
If it falls a bit short as human drama, however, Szumowska’s latest — a 180-degree turn from her last, the excellent Polish allegorical tale “Never Gonna Snow Again” — is fully satisfying as an appreciation of Nature as magnificent adversary.
The A.V. Club by Brent Simon
What sustains a viewer’s interest in Infinite Storm is Watts’ controlled performance, and the film’s direction.
Austin Chronicle by Marjorie Baumgarten
The imagery by cinematographer Michal Englert is stupendous, but the dialogue and plot by actor-turned-screenwriter Joshua Rollins, who also has a small role in the film, are a bit too minimal. Infinite Storm always shows the perils we face but never explains them.
Washington Post by Michael O'Sullivan
The film’s inertness is unexpected, and a tad disappointing, considering that first-time screenwriter Joshua Rollins has unearthed some genuinely fascinating details about Bales’s backstory that were not in either published account of the rescue.
San Francisco Chronicle by G. Allen Johnson
Polish director Malgorzata Szumowska (“The Other Lamb”) directs for the big screen, with eye-pleasing mountain visuals (the Slovenian Alps subs for Mount Washington) and a well-executed adventure. But when the setting is in civilization, the drama grinds to a halt.
Slant Magazine by Wes Greene
Not only does Infinite Storm lack for a complete vision, it’s all too comfortable in settling for mawkishness.
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