Back in 2018 the lives of a Thai football team and their coach hit the news headlines as the world’s news media descended on Thailand to follow their rescue from the Tham Luang cave network. A film by the director Ron Howard documents the story in a new film called Thirteen Lives which will be released in selected cinemas on July 29, 2022 and streaming on Prime Video on August 5th, 2022.
An extract from Wikipedia, a review by Stuart Jeffries of The Guardian and a report by Helen Bushby of BBC News is copied below together with the film trailer provided by YouTube.
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Thirteen Lives is an upcoming biographical survival film directed and produced by Ron Howard, from a screenplay written by William Nicholson. The film stars Viggo Mortensen, Colin Farrell, Joel Edgerton and Tom Bateman.
Thirteen Lives is scheduled to be released in select cinemas on July 29, 2022, by United Artists Releasing, before streaming on Prime Video on August 5.
Premise
The film chronicles the events of the 2018 Tham Luang cave rescue that saw a junior football team and their coach trapped in a cave for a period of 18 days.
Source: Wikipedia
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Ron Howard
Going underground: inside Ron Howard’s explosive movie about the Thai cave rescue
Viggo Mortensen plays a heroic firefighter in new movie Thirteen Lives, based on the dramatic 2018 rescue of 12 boys and their coach in Thailand. But the film isn’t simply a white-saviour narrative, as its director explains
Stuart Jeffries
Fri 22 Jul 2022 06.00 BST Last modified on Fri 22 Jul 2022 14.28 BST
One day, retired firefighter Rick Stanton got a phone call at his home in Coventry. It was Ron Howard. He had good news. He had cast someone who had been in Lord of the Rings to play Stanton in his new movie, Thirteen Lives. Stanton’s mind raced. Ian McKellen? Andy Serkis? Probably not Cate Blanchett. “When I found out it was Viggo Mortensen, I was very pleased,” says Stanton, eyes glinting. “I’d never really thought who would play me in a film, but he’d be up there.”
Stanton was one of five cavers (“I call myself a caver not a diver, and definitely not a spelunker because that’s American”) who rescued 12 boys of the Wild Boars football team and their coach from the Tham Luang cave in northern Thailand in June 2018. The boys, aged 11 to 16, had gone into the cave after football practice and got trapped by flood water. They survived for 18 days on an elevated rock two-and-a-half miles (4km) from the cave mouth, with hardly any food but sustained by meditation led by the 25-year-old coach, Ekaphol Chantawong, a former monk. And by hopes of rescue . . .
Source: The Guardian
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Thirteen Lives: Thai cave rescue actor Tom Bateman relives diving fears
By Helen Bushby
Entertainment and arts reporter
23 July 2022
"The cast definitely all felt fear at various times," says director Ron Howard, who's revealing how he shot the rescue of a Thai boys' football team from a flooded cave, for his latest film.
Thirteen Lives tells the story of the perilous real-life rescue of the boys and their coach, trapped deep inside the Tham Luang cave network after monsoon rains came early in 2018.
"A couple of the actors admitted later they had some trying moments - but nobody had to leave the tank and breathe into a brown paper bag," the double Oscar-winner tells the BBC.
The film stars Viggo Mortensen, Colin Farrell, Joel Edgerton, Tom Bateman and Paul Gleeson as the divers, who guided the footballers along underwater spaces so narrow they could barely squeeze through . . .
For the full article see: BBC News
https://youtu.be/R068Si4eb3Y