Konterr
Brilliant and touching
Tayyab Torres
Strong acting helps the film overcome an uncertain premise and create characters that hold our attention absolutely.
Francene Odetta
It's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.
wbukato
I was able to watch the movie last Friday on Polish TV, four years after the movie had been made and nine years after the tragedy. And I was disgusted. The movie was a disaster, and if it is an accurate report, the rescue had been a disaster too. The rescue should have started with an attempt to make sure if there were any survivors. Not by simply saying "nobody could have survived this", but by using IR detectors, trained dogs, highly-sensitive microphones - there are numerous options. And what we can see is rescuers listening for survivors' voices by ear! and otherwise just standing or walking in the way of other rescuers. Now that's a well-organized action for me! And when the sole survivor is finally found, instead of dropping everything else and removing what has been piled on top of Stuart Diver, they talk and talk and talk. Indeed - three-fourths of the whole movie is talking. If that's the way rescue is brought in Australia, I surely don't want to go there at all. One more thing: If in the mountains you build a house of reinforced concrete with such poor foundations that melting snow can bring the whole structure down, then you really ask for trouble.
The Tallman
This is an amazing film, and it really captures the feeling of what happened on that day in 1997. The film focuses on the rescue workers and their tireless struggle to help save any life that may have survived. A great Australian cast, and Craig MacLachlan is perfect for the role of Stuart Diver. A must see for anyone who remembers the Thredbo snowslide, and a good dramatic watch for those who don't.
annpo
There wasn't anything new that could be done with a disaster story. It's a dramatisation of an actual event after all. But it was extraordinary to "see" the story behind what we all read in the newspapers and heard in TV broadcasts.The direction was good, the story told well and acted very well. It was good to see Craig McLachlan in something again, and Nadine Garner.Well worth a look.
uds3
Premiered last night on Aussie Television (March 10th) and was indeed worth the wait.As sensitively and professionally re-enacted as THE DAY OF THE ROSES (The story of the '74 Granville Train Disaster), which John Misto also scripted incidentally, HEROES' MOUNTAIN portrays the events leading up to the shocking deaths of 18 people in July 1997, trapped in a landslide in the southern NSW snowfields at Thredbo village, a few hours south of Canberra, the Australian Capital.The docudrama focuses primarily on the fortitude and incredible will to live by sole survivor Stuart Diver, as well as the ceaseless rescue efforts by so many, to finally extricate him after an unimaginable 65 hours trapped beneath mud, concrete and icy water. Diver also lost his wife that day when she was trapped in adjacent buildings.McLachlan turns in what is probably his best celluloid effort as Stuart Diver, acting under uniquely difficult circumstances. Word is that he was overcome emotionally at several points during filming, being unable to move himself under the elaborate and realistic sets. Being visible for the most part only from the neck upwards, necessitated extraordinary facial acting to project the real Diver's predicament.Whilst the set was constructed 1/3 larger than the original collapsed site (to allow for cameras and crew) each rock, girder and piece of wreckage was painstakingly reproduced from original photographs and filed news coverage. Many on-set who were present during the original rescue (including Diver himself) were said to be amazed at the authenticity of the recreation.An absolute must-see wherever it is shown!