It’s unsettling just how fascinating a sense of unease can be when that unease feels so uncomfortably familiar and timely. That’s exactly the feeling you get with The Long Walk. Adapted from one of Stephen King’s earliest novels — written under his Richard Bachman pseudonym and reportedly predating Christine — it tells the story of a dystopian contest where young men must keep walking, without pause, until only one remains.
J.T. Mollner, who impressed with the recent sleeper hit Strange Darling, delivers a screenplay attentive to character, while Francis Lawrence directs with a disciplined hand, keeping the tension tight for the most part, and the audience engaged as we follow the walkers and their struggle.
The premise is simple but brutal. Every year, young men “volunteer” for a contest in which only one will survive. Walk too slowly, and warnings pile up; three strikes, and elimination is final.
The film’s brutality is quiet but relentless — exhaustion, heat, and the ever-present threat of death create a constant tension. At the center is Ray Garraty (Coop Hoffman), likable and resolute, whose experience carries the story forward and grounds its emotional heart. As the march wears on, the true weight of the film emerges in the poignant human connections that form along the way. Friendships develop and are made all the more striking by exhaustion, fear, and the knowledge that only one walker will survive. These moments of warmth reveal the contestants as recognizably human, full of hopes and fears, with Ray’s bond with Peter McVries, walker number 23 (David Jonsson), standing out as a powerful anchor of friendship in a contest designed to crush it.
Mark Hamill appears sparingly as the Major, the contest’s grim enforcer, conveying the cruelty of the system and serving as a constant reminder that the true menace lies not just in the walk, but in the society that condones it.
The film keeps its focus deliberately narrow, favouring character over spectacle. The early stages hold steady tension, but as the walkers thin out, the march slows and the story never quite tightens to a sharp, gripping finale. Viewers expecting a broader view of the world—in the vein of The Running Man—might feel a little short-changed, but the intimate approach hits harder emotionally.
The Long Walk is a measured, restrained adaptation. Its power comes from its attention to character, endurance, and circumstance rather than spectacle. While it may not expand to the wider societal canvas some viewers might anticipate, the careful writing and timely themes make it a watchable and thoughtfully rendered meditation on mortality, friendship, and the structures that shape human behaviour.
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The Long Walk is in theaters now.