The New York Times by Daniel M. Gold
Free to Run prefers nothing more than an easy jog down memory lane.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Switzerland, France, Belgium · 2016
1h 30m
Director Pierre Morath
Starring Philippe Torreton
Genre Documentary
Please login to add films to your watchlist.
Free to Run views long-distance running through the lens of social revolution. Before running was the democratic, inclusive sport it is today, it was an exclusive club dominated by elite male runners, hostile to women and other outsiders. This documentary tells the story of the iconic runners that transformed the sport.
The New York Times by Daniel M. Gold
Free to Run prefers nothing more than an easy jog down memory lane.
The doc's caginess is a weakness that results from an inherently nostalgic sense of reverie.
Village Voice by Serena Donadoni
The philosophical underpinnings of Swiss director Pierre Morath's well-paced documentary about the evolution of long-distance running evoke the motto of neighboring France: liberté, égalite, fraternité.
Los Angeles Times by Sheri Linden
Some legs of the journey are detours, and the film can feel overlong and diffuse, but as a capsule history it offers revelatory insights, particularly in its emphasis on the role of distance running in the women’s movement.
In space no one can hear you scream.
A newlywed fears she is cursed to transform into a wild panther if she consummates her marriage.
The wizarding world prepares for war as the malicious Gellert Grindelwald gathers his army.
a young man retraces the life and tragic death of the world's most famous artist, Vincent van Gogh.
One man's tranformational journey to find the Amazon's strangest creature.
Martial law is declared when a mysterious viral outbreak pushes Korea into a state of emergency.
A failed stand-up comedian is driven insane, turning to a life of crime in chaos in Gotham City.