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Lone Survivor
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPeter Berg
Screenplay byPeter Berg
Produced byPeter Berg
Sarah Aubrey
Randall Emmett
Norton Herrick
Barry Spikings
Akiva Goldsman
Mark Wahlberg
Stephen Levinson
Vitaly Grigoriants
StarringMark Wahlberg
Taylor Kitsch
Emile Hirsch
Ben Foster
Eric Bana
CinematographyTobias Schliessler
Edited byColby Parker Jr.
Music byExplosions in the Sky
Steve Jablonsky
Production
companies
Emmett/Furla Films
Film 44
Herrick Entertainment
Envision Entertainment
Spikings Entertainment
Weed Road Pictures
Closest to the Hole
Hollywood Studios Holdings (uncredited)[1]
Distributed byUniversal Pictures (United States)
Foresight Unlimited (International)
Release dates
  • November 12, 2013 (2013-11-12) (AFI Film Festival)
  • December 25, 2013 (2013-12-25) (United States, limited)
Running time
121 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$40 million[3][4][5]
Box office$80,481,967.56[6][7]

Lone Survivor is a 2013 American war film written and directed by Peter Berg, and starring Mark Wahlberg, Taylor Kitsch, Emile Hirsch, Ben Foster and Eric Bana. It is based on the 2007 nonfiction book of the same name by Marcus Luttrell and Patrick Robinson. Set during the War in Afghanistan, the film dramatizes the failed United States Navy SEALs mission Operation Red Wings, in which a four-man SEAL reconnaissance and surveillance team was tasked to track Taliban leader Ahmad Shah.

Development of the film began in 2007 after Berg first learned of the book while filming Hancock. He arranged several meetings with Luttrell to discuss adapting the book to film. Universal Pictures secured the film rights in August 2007, after bidding against other major film studios. In re-enacting the events of Operation Red Wings, Berg drew much of his screenplay from Luttrell's eyewitness accounts in the book, as well as autopsy and incident reports related to the mission. After directing Battleship for Universal in 2012, Berg returned to work on Lone Survivor. Principal photography began in October 2012, and concluded in November after 42 days; filming took place on location in New Mexico, using digital cinematography. Luttrell and several other Navy SEAL veterans acted as technical advisors, while multiple branches of the United States Armed Forces aided the film's production. In addition, the main actors had three weeks of military training beforehand to prepare for the physical demands of their roles.

Lone Survivor opened in limited release in the United States on December 25, 2013, before opening across North America on January 10, 2014, to critical acclaim and strong financial success. Critical reaction to the film was mostly positive, with commentators praising Berg's direction, as well as the acting, story, visuals, and battle sequences. Other reviewers, however, derided the film for focusing more on its action scenes than on characterization. Lone Survivor has grossed $80.4 million in box-office revenue worldwide – of which $76.7 million is from North America – and received two Academy Award nominations for Best Sound Editing and Best Sound Mixing.

Plot

The film is based on SEAL Team 10's failed mission: Operation Red Wings on June 28, 2005, to capture and kill a notorious Taliban leader during the War in Afghanistan.

Cast

Production

Development

"When I read the book, I knew instantly that this would be a perfect movie for [Peter Berg]. His strengths as a director are in taking an audience into a closed world...He loves to take an audience into a world and show them the details but then hit them with this emotional wallop. The book has this incredibly emotional story of brotherhood and sacrifice, and then ultimately, in the story with Gulab, this grace and humanity even in the midst of war."[8]: 15–16 

—Sarah Aubrey (producer)

Lone Survivor was written and directed by Peter Berg, and is based on the 2007 non-fiction book Lone Survivor: The Eyewitness Account of Operation Redwings and the Lost Heroes of Seal Team 10, a memoir written by former United States Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell, with assistance from British novelist and ghostwriter Patrick Robinson. Following the book's publication, producer Barry Spikings received a copy from Luttrell’s attorney. He and Akiva Goldsman later passed the book on to Sarah Aubrey, Berg's producing partner of their production company Film 44.[8]: 16  [9] Berg first learned of the book while filming Hancock and after Aubrey had read it herself.[10] After Berg had read the book, he and Aubrey arranged several meetings with Luttrell to discuss a film adaptation. Luttrell also viewed a rough cut of Berg's then-upcoming 2007 film The Kingdom, and was impressed by Berg's direction: “He caught me with his attention to detail, and how he portrayed the enemy in the film.”[10][8]: 16 

Major film studios including Warner Bros., Sony Pictures, Paramount, DreamWorks and Universal Pictures all put in bids for the film rights, with Universal eventually securing the rights in August 2007 for more than $2 million.[9] Berg, however, could not get support for the film from Universal without agreeing to direct Battleship (2012) for the studio first.[11] The film had an estimated budget of $40–50 million;[3][4][5] it was co-financed by Emmett/Furla Films, Herrick Entertainment and Envision Entertainment.[12][5]In addition, the film's producers—Berg, Aubrey, Spikings, Goldsman, Randall Emmett, Norton Herrick, Mark Wahlberg, Stephen Levinson and Vitaly Grigoriants—who contributed at least $1 million each.[3] To reduce production costs, Berg directed Lone Survivor for the minimum salary allowed under Directors Guild of America rules—$17,000 a week.[3][13] He was also able to convince several cast and crew members to lower their asking prices.[3]

Writing

"This story is about working together for something bigger than our ego, bigger than our individuality. It’s about coming together as a group—protecting each other, loving each other, looking out for each other—and finding a greater strength as a team than you could ever find as an individual. Marcus [Luttrell] wrote a book that, as much as it’s about 19 people being killed on a tragic day in Afghanistan, is about brotherhood, sacrifice and team commitment.”"[8]: 16 

—Peter Berg (writer, director and producer)

While the book Lone Survivor chronicles Luttrell's 1999 enlistment and training, as well as his 2005 deployment to Afghanistan, Berg decided that the film adaptation would focus mainly on the events of the failed United States Navy SEALs mission Operation Red Wings, as well as the bonding and camaraderie of Luttrell and his fallen teammates.[8]: 17  Prior to writing the script, Berg met with the families of the deceased. “My research started with meeting the families of the SEAL teammates who were killed," he said. "I went to New York and met the Murphys. I went to Colorado and met the Dietzes, and I went to Northern California and met the Axelsons. After spending time with them, you realize that these kids were the best and the brightest; they were the stars of the families. The grief and the wounds are still very raw. You would have to be inhuman to not feel the responsibility when that kind of grief gets shared with you." [8]: 17  Berg also expressed that he was motivated by the families to make the story as realistic as possible;[14] his goal was "to put [the viewer] into the experience of what these guys went through. And it was obviously a traumatic and violent and exhausting experience".[15]

To provide authenticity, Luttrell moved into Berg’s home for one month, and acted as a consultant, ensuring that Berg understood the events that unfolded during Operation Red Wings.[8]: 17  Berg also embedded with a Navy SEAL team—becoming the first civilian to do so—and lived with them for a month in Iraq while continuing to write the script.[16][17] In re-enacting the injuries and deaths of the fallen SEAL servicemen, Berg relied on Luttrell's eyewitness accounts from the book, as well as autopsy reports of the deceased and after action reports.[18] The United States Navy gave him unprecedented access to incident reports related to the mission,[14] and provided the production with archive military training footage, which is shown during the film's opening credits sequence.[16]: 1  Still photographs shown during the sequence were taken from Richard D. Schoenberg's war photography book The Only Easy Day Was Yesterday: Making Navy SEALs.[8]: 9  During filming, there were some dialogue changes in comparison to Berg's script, as the filmmaker encouraged improvisation.[17]

Casting

"What makes this story so special is the bond and the camaraderie between the guys, but also the state of where we are in the world today. The act of heroism by Gulab and his fellow villagers moved me the most. I found it so inspiring, and it gave me so much hope for the world."[8]: 19 

—Mark Wahlberg (Marcus Luttrell in the film)

Mark Wahlberg stars as Petty Officer Second Class (SO2) Marcus Luttrell, the medic and sniper of a four-man SEAL reconnaissance team, SEAL Team 10. Wahlberg was the first actor to sign on as a star during its early stages of development. He chose to portray Luttrell after reading Berg's script, and said he would not read the book during production to avoid arguments with the filmmaker over what was left out.[19][20] "The problem when adapting a piece of material like that is that you always feel like something is missing,” he explained. “I wanted to come at it from this perspective."[8]: 19  Of Wahlberg's portrayal, Luttrell stated, "Wahlberg is a consummate professional, and he’s a great actor. It was a little strange watching somebody trying to play me, but we talked about it and I knew it would turn out great. I was more worried about the other guys because they’re not around to speak for themselves.”[8]: 20  Wahlberg has since cited Lone Survivor as his favorite film role as an actor and producer: “This is the best working experience I’ve ever had, under the toughest conditions. I remember early on as an actor, you worked a long, hard day, but you did something you felt was special, and that car ride home you couldn’t stop thinking about it. I had that feeling every day on this movie."[8]: 19–20 

As he did with Wahlberg, Berg had discussed the project with supporting cast members Taylor Kitsch, Emile Hirsch and Ben Foster several years earlier.[8]: 22  Kitsch, who had previously collaborated with Berg on Battleship (2012), was cast as Lieutenant Michael P. "Murph" Murphy, the on-ground leader of Operation Red Wings.[8]: 20  [21]: 41–42  Kitsch said of portraying Murphy: “Murph’s actions speak louder than anything he’s ever said, and they should. I think he was that type of leader who just loved his guys, and getting the nod to play this guy was something special.”[8]: 20  Prior to production of Lone Survivor, Kitsch prepared for the role by performing high-intensity workouts with body armor and long runs with a 40-lb. weighted vest.[8]: 23 

Hirsch plays SO2 Danny Dietz, SEAL Team 10's communications officer and spotter. Hirsch was approached by Berg in 2009, and physically prepared for the role by attending a 90-minute weight program for nearly four months. "I wanted a challenge, so I started to train and work out on my own," he said. "I genuinely didn’t know what was going to happen. Months went by and it was to the point where I was passing on other movies, but I didn’t have this job. I was willing to do anything. I ended up training six days a week, four to five hours a day."[22]

Foster plays Sonar Technician (STG) Matthew "Axe" Axelson. Wahlberg recommended Foster to Berg, as they had previously collaborated on Contraband (2012).[19] Prior to filming, Foster met with the fallen serviceman's family and friends to understand the person he would be portraying: "It was such a rich opportunity to listen to the Axelsons talk about their son. Their generosity and inclusiveness with me was so touching and open. They love to talk about their boy because they love him; so we, in turn, love him. We can’t bring him back, but what we can do is aim, every day, to do the best that we can to honor him."[8]: 21–22 

Eric Bana plays Lieutenant Commander (LCDR) Erik S. Kristensen, the Navy SEALs' mission commander of Operation Red Wings. Bana had read the book prior to production, and was willing to join the film, regardless of which role was offered to him.[20] Upon being cast as Kristensen, he researched the fallen serviceman and his family. On joining Lone Survivor's production, Bana stated, "There are two factors that make this story special, and they are the reasons why I jumped on board. One is the story itself, and two is who chooses to direct a project like this. I knew how involved [Berg] would be and that he would know how to portray SEAL teammates. That was what I wanted to be a part of. The greatest way to honor these guys is to make a great film and have it stand the test of time."[8]: 22  Bana did not physically prepare for the role. "My responsibility was really to understand the role of the mission commander and the relevant information with respect with the chain of command and what it means to go in the QRF and the processes involved," he explained. "It was far more important to be the person that was responsible for that part of the story and understand that completely. There's no purpose in me going out and firing an M4 in this case."[23]

Although Wahlberg, Kitsch, Hirsch and Foster had physically trained for their roles prior to filming, Luttrell organized a three-week training regimen at a bootcamp in New Mexico,[22][24] where the actors were trained by elite military personnel in weapons, as well as military communications and tactics.[8]: 23  Military advisor Mark Semos[24] trained the actors in live-firing exercises so that they could feel the impact of firing military rifles. They also practiced "shoot move cover" drills that would improve their muscle memory and enable them to react convincingly as Navy SEALs during filming.[25]

Universal Pictures held an open casting call in Los Angeles, aiding in the filmmakers' search for supporting actors, extras, photo doubles, and stand-ins.[26] Alexander Ludwig, who portrays SO2 Shane Patton, joined the production in August 2012.[27] Ali Suliman, who previously collaborated with Berg on the 2007 film The Kingdom, was cast as Gulab, a Pashtun villager who rescues Lutrell from being executed by Taliban forces.[21]: 43  Luttrell also appears in the film in an uncredited role. He first appears as a SEAL teammate who lightheartedly hazes Patton, then during a briefing scene where he is seen shaking his head when the Rules of Engagement are being explained, and later as one of the servicemen who perishes when an MH-47 Chinook is shot down. Luttrell said of the latter scene, "I was on the other side of the mountain when those guys came to help me, so getting to die on the helicopter in the movie was a very powerful moment for me."[28] Yousuf Azami plays Ahmad Shah, a suspected Taliban leader; Sammy Sheik plays Taraq, Shah's right-hand man.[29] Other cast members include Rich Ting as SO2 James Suh; Dan Bilzerian as SOCS Daniel Healy; Jerry Ferrara as SGT Hasslert; Scott Elrod as Peter Musselman; Rohan Chand as Gulab's son; Corey Large as US Navy SEAL CAPT Kenney; Zarin Mohammad Rahimi, who acted as a technical advisor during production, appears as an elderly shepherd who discovers the four-man SEAL team during the mission; Nicholas Patel and Daniel Arroyo play the goat herders who assist the shepherd.[8]: 2 

Filming

Principal photography

Filming for Lone Survivor was scheduled to start on September 15, 2012.[30] Principal photography commenced in October 2012 and concluded in November after 42 days; filming took place in New Mexico.[8]: 25–28 [3][31] Berg shot the film with creative autonomy as Universal did not fully oversee the film's production. "Not having the studio there every day ... I respect Universal and get along great with them, but we were on our own completely, and in many ways, it was a more autonomous experience".[4]

With Lone Survivor, Berg continued his trademark of having war veterans on board as part of his film crew.[32] Luttrell, along with several other Navy SEAL veterans, acted as technical advisors during the production.[25] In addition, senior military advisor Harry Humphries, a former Navy SEAL who had worked with Berg on Hancock and The Kingdom, served as an associate producer.[8]: 27  Berg explained, "I always looked to hire vets. And not just because I'm a generous person. But selfishly, vets have turned out to be some of the hardest working people. It's self-serving".[32]

Filming first took place at the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of the Santa Fe National Forest; eight days were spent on mountains ranging from 11,000 to 12,000 feet (3,400–3,700 m). In recreating the Hindu Kush mountain range that stretches between Afghanistan and Pakistan, the film crew shot at 10 separate locations in the national forest.[8]: 22  The film's stunt coordinator was its second unit director Kevin Scott, who was tasked with depicting the four Navy SEALs tumbling down rugged terrain with sixty-degree inclines. To provide realism, Scott did not choreograph the stunt work, nor did he have the stunt performers use wires or dummies;[25][33] he told them to fall 15 to 20 feet (4.6–6.1 m) off cliffs and avoid looking at the ground until right before impact.[34] “We had to say, ‘Jump off the rock, land however you land, and go with it,’” he said. “When you’re doing that on a true hillside, you don’t have a choice.” Gravity takes over. The only thing stopping the stunt people from dropping another thousand feet down the hillside was padding set up just outside of the shot.”[25] Several stunt performers were injured after falling from the mountains, as the falls proved too difficult to control.[33] Berg recalled, "Some guys got hurt, some guys got bumped up and ribs were broken, a lung was punctured, some concussions, but these guys were determined to try and do everything they could to capture what Marcus described in the book."[35]

Production moved to Chilili, New Mexico for two weeks of filming. The location’s wooded areas were used to film several battle scenes, and the art department built sets to recreate a Shah village, as well as the Pashtun village where Luttrell was rescued.[8]: 26  The film's special effects supervisor Bruno van Zeebroeck created RPG explosions and bullet hits during battle sequences set in the village.[8]: 26  Filming then moved to the Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque, New Mexico, which doubled for scenes set in Bagram Airfield, a U.S. military base in Afghanistan.[8]: 27  Principal photography concluded on soundstages at I-25 Studios in Albuquerque.[8]: 28  The production occupied two 26,000 square feet (2,400 m2) stages in the facility[36] for interior scenes and bluescreen work.[8]: 28  The art department built the character Gulab's house, as well as interiors for Bagram Airfield's patrol base Camp Ouellette. The bluescreen work involved scenes depicting a MH-47 Chinook in a gimbal, and a 4-foot scale model of a Hindu Kush mountain cliff built by the art department team in Los Angeles, California.[8]: 28 [16]: 1 

Design

Costume designer Amy Stofsky was tasked with ensuring that the military wardrobe reflected the 2005 time period, because what the fallen servicemen wore back then is no longer current issue. The special make-up effects were created by Gregory Nicotero[8]: 25  and Howard Berger of KNB EFX Group.[8]: 9  Luttrell ensured that the costumes and make-up effects replicated the uniforms and injuries of himself and the fallen servicemen. To aid Nicotero and Berger in recreating the injuries, Berg provided autopsy reports of the deceased.[8]: 28  Zarin Mohammad Rahimi, an Afghan refugee who fled to the United States to avoid the Taliban, and his sons, Muhammad Nawroz Rahimi and Nawaz Rahimi, also acted as technical advisors during production. They collaborated with extras, as well as the casting and wardrobe departments to help them understand the language, customs and fighting methods of the villagers and Taliban fighters. The eldest Rahimi also played the role of an elderly shepherd in a crucial scene.[8]: 26 

Multiple branches of the United States Armed Forces supplied the production with military vehicles. The United States Air Force provided two Sikorsky HH-60 Pave Hawks from the Kirtland Air Force Base, which were manned by military personnel and used to depict a combat search and rescue; the United States Army provided the production with two MH-47 Chinooks and two Boeing AH-64 Apaches from Fort Hood, Texas; and the United States Marine Corps provided thirty Marine Corps reservists for scenes set in Bagram Airfield and Jalalabad.[8]: 27 

Cinematography

"[Berg] wanted the audience to be as close to our characters and as close to the action as possible to experience the extreme circumstances our war heroes had to go through emotionally and physically."[37]: 2 

—Tobias Schliessler (cinematographer)

Lone Survivor was director of photography Tobias Schliessler's fifth collaboration with Berg,[21]: 51  as well as Berg's first film shot with digital cinematography. Schliessler intended to shoot Lone Survivor with Arri Alexa cameras, but because of budgetary concerns, he chose to shoot the film with Red Epic digital cameras, using Fujinon and Angénieux lenses.[37]: 2  Schleissler chose the Red Epic camera "due to its compact size and lightweight body."[37]: 2  He also filmed several scenes with a Steadicam.[37]: 2 

In preparing to shoot the film, Schliessler was inspired by British-American photojournalist Tim Hetherington's war photography book Infidel, which details a single U.S. platoon, assigned to an outpost in the Korengal Valley during the War in Afghanistan. The book's images became a guide to creating the overall look of the film after Schliessler had shown them to Berg, as well as the art and costume departments.[37]: 2  Prior to filming, Schleissler and Berg shot test footage with the digital cameras and brought it to digital colorist Stefan Sonnenfeld at post-production facility Company 3 for color grading.[37]: 4 

As Berg aimed to recreate the physical and emotional turmoil of Luttrell and his fallen SEAL teammates, Schleissler shot the action scenes with wide-angle lenses that were placed close to the actors.[37]: 2  He also had had a team of camera operators shoot a majority of Lone Survivor in a "documentary-shooting style" with a minimum of three handheld cameras.[37]: 2  The Santa Fe National Forest's rocky terrain and steep inclines proved difficult for conventional camera equipment—such as cranes and dollies—which resulted in much of the film's scenes being shot by the camera operators, who were rigged to aerial ski lifts above the action.[8]: 26  "The location we picked was on top of the ski area above 12,000 feet in Santa Fe, and the high altitude made it extremely physically demanding," Schleissler explained. "All our equipment had to be hand-carried into some of our remote locations, which meant we had to limit ourselves to the bare minimum...No one ever hiked to the set empty-handed, including our producers. It was one big team effort that made us a close film family."[37]: 2 

DeLuxe supplied the production with a 40-foot trailer, known as the EC3 (a joint venture between Company 3 and EFILM). The trailer was designed as a mobile post-production facility for dailies and color grading services.[38] All cameras used during the production were equipped with high-definition wireless transmitters, onboard monitors, and wireless remote iris and focus control units. The equipment enabled Schleissler to overlook every shot of the film in the EC3 trailer. He also collaborated with colorist Adrian Delude in changing the exposure for all cameras used, which "would have been more difficult when shooting on film."[37]: 2  Digital imaging technician Jeff Tomcho was tasked with ensuring that the Red Epic cameras were properly set up and successfully capturing the filmed footage. He then converted the filmed footage to raw image format files, before submitting them to the dailies operators in the EC3 trailer.[38] Company 3 carried out the digital intermediate (the post-production digital manipulation of color and lighting), which was supervised by Sonnenfeld.[37]: 3 

Post-production

Editing

Colby Parker Jr. spent six months editing the film at the Lantana Entertainment Media Campus in Santa Monica, California.[39][37]: 3  The editorial department used four Avid Media Composer systems to edit the film. Parker edited the film during principal photography, but was not on location. "I like to blast through the footage to keep up with the camera. This way I can let [Berg] know if any extra coverage is needed," he explained. "Often I’ll get word to the 1st [assistant director] and he’ll sneak in extra shots if the schedule permits. Although I will have a first assembly when the production wraps, Peter will never sit though a complete viewing of that. He works in a very linear manner, so as we start to view a scene, if there’s something that bothers him, we’ll stop and address it."

The first cut of the film was 2½ hours long. Parker then cut the film down to two hours when he realized there was a way to further trim the film: "There were a number of scenes that paced well when we intercut them rather than letting them play as written in a linear fashion. For instance, we wanted to let the mission briefing scene play normally—this is where the SEAL team is briefed on their target. That scene was followed by a scene of the target beheading a local. We realized that an actual briefing is very technical and rote, so intercutting these scenes helped keep the audience engaged."[39]

Sound editing and mixing work took place at Todd Soundelux, with Wylie Stateman serving as the supervising sound editor.[40] Stateman recorded on-location sound during filming, placing microphones on the actors' backpacks and clothing "so [the viewers] would hear explosions and bullets going by as though [they] were with these guys as they were being attacked."[41] In creating sound effects for the environment of each scene, Stateman relied on foley design, rather than traditional sound effects.[39]

Visual effects

The two visual effects companies for the film were Industrial Light & Magic—responsible for creating a helicopter crash sequence in the film—and Image Engine, who handled set extensions and location enhancements, such as mountains, buildings, and backgrounds.[37]: 3  "Muzzle flashes were added or enhanced and mountains were added to some backgrounds," Parker explained. "The sets of the villages were only one or two huts and then Image Engine built everything around those. Same for the SEAL base. There were only a few real buildings and from that they built out a larger base."[39] Post-production work on Lone Survivor concluded after seven months.[37]: 3 

Music

Post-rock band Explosions in the Sky collaborated with composer Steve Jablonsky to score the film.[42] Jablonsky had previously scored Berg's 2012 film Battleship, while Explosions in the Sky had scored his 2004 film Friday Night Lights.[21]: 52–53  Berg said of the collaboration, "[Jablonsky] did the last reel; the band Explosions in the Sky did pretty much did everything else. They have an emotional, tender quality to their music, even when it gets aggressive. I didn’t want the score to be overly aggressive, I wanted it to be haunting and emotional. Steve Jablonsky came in at the end to do something more traditional, but when Steve does “traditional,” it’s not the usual strings. He created a wonderful sound at the very end."[17] Songs featured in the film include "Canned Heat" by Jamiroquai[8]: 9 , and "Heroes" performed by Peter Gabriel and the New Blood Orchestra[8]: 9  which is played during a four-minute montage that features actual photos and videos of the fallen servicemen.

The motion picture soundtrack for Lone Survivor was released on December 17, 2013 by record label Metropolis Movie Music.[43]

Historical accuracy

Michael Murphy (left) with Matthew Axelson, taken in Afghanistan

While based on true events, the film alters events in many regards.[44] Early in the film, the four-man SEAL reconnaissance team is discovered by three goat herders — an elderly man and two teenage boys. In fact, Luttrell wrote in his book that only one of the goat herders was a boy, not two.[45] The decision to kill the three goat herders or let them go has sparked a significant amount of controversy and debate over the Rules of Engagement and morality in combat.[44]

Also in dispute is the number of Taliban fighters involved in the ambush. In Luttrell’s original after-action report, he said he was attacked by 20-35, while his book places the number at over 50.[46] The screenplay describes “A solid line of at least fifty Taliban in firing positions on top of the hill above them."[46] The Summary of Action for Lt. Murphy's posthumous Medal of Honor describes the enemy force as numbering "more than 50,"[47] while the Official Citation puts the number at "between 30 and 40 enemy fighters."[48] Author Ed Darack takes a contrary view in the book Victory Point and estimates the number of enemy fighters at 8-10.[46]

The film shows Luttrell (Wahlberg) being able to walk after the Taliban’s ambush on the four-man SEAL team. In reality, Luttrell explained that his legs were numb immediately after the ambush and when feeling did returned to them the pain from the shrapnel in his legs made it too painful to walk, and had to crawl seven miles looking for water and sanctuary. A rocket-propelled grenade hurled him into a mountain crevice where he was able to hide from the Taliban. [44][49] Luttrell also expressed that he did not witness the MH-47 Chinook helicopter being shot down, as seen in the film.[44] At the end of the film the Pashtun villagers fight off a Taliban attack in a firefight, which never actually happened. In reality the Taliban were outnumbered by the villagers and had no intentions of attacking the village but they did try to sneak in and take Luttrell in secret.[46] Luttrell also didn't go into cardiac arrests after he was rescued as in the film.

Release

Strategy

Universal Pictures acquired the U.S. distribution rights as part of a negative pickup deal with the producers.[4] Before filming, producer Randall Emmett took Berg to the 2012 Cannes Film Festival to secure worldwide presales for the film. Envison Entertainment, through its foreign sales agency partner Foresight Unlimited, shopped the distribution rights to a number of foreign buyers at Cannes, where they managed to sell the film to 40 international markets.[30][5]

Berg first screened Lone Survivor to a number of professional American football teams, including the Dallas Cowboys,[50] Denver Broncos,[51] Carolina Panthers, and Cleveland Browns as well as the University of Alabama Crimson Tide football team.[52] The screenings generated a strong word-of-mouth from the football players who took to social media to praise the film.[53] A gala premiere screening of Lone Survivor was held during the AFI Film Festival at the TCL Chinese Theatre on November 12, 2013.[54] Lone Survivor held its red carpet premiere on December 3, 2013 at the Ziegfeld Theatre in New York City, where the film received a standing ovation. The premiere also doubled as a tribute to the fallen sailors of Operation Red Wings; in addition to several cast and crew members, Marcus Luttrell and family members of the deceased were in attendance. Mohammad Gulab, the Afghan villager who helped rescue Luttrell, also attended the premiere, marking his first time in New York City and in a movie theatre.[22]

In what the film industry calls a "platform release," Lone Survivor was released in a small number of theaters before opening wide in other countries; it opened in limited release—in New York and Los Angeles—on December 25, 2013 (thereby rendering itself eligible for awards consideration) before being released across North America on January 10, 2014.[6][55] [56] Entertainment One distributed the film in Canadian markets;[57] Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures International released the film in the Phillipines on January 8, 2014.[58]

Box office

Lone Survivor's limited American release saw it take $155,400—an average of $46,250 per theater—in its first five days.[59][60] Expanding to 2,875 screens in the United States and Canada, Lone Survivor grossed $14,400,000 on its first day of wide release.[61] By the end of its opening weekend in wide release, the film had grossed $38,500,000, securing the number one position at the domestic box office. Its opening weekend gross made it the second largest debut for any film released in January after the 2008 film Cloverfield's opening weekend gross of $40.1 million. The Hollywood Reporter noted that Lone Survivor's opening weekend box-office totals were "far more than expected and the best showing of any post-9/11 war film," surpassing the $28,544,157 total box office for Brothers (2009).[62][63][64]

Lone Survivor had dropped 30.3% in revenue during its second weekend of wide release, earning $26,393,000; it had dropped to second place behind Ride Along.[65] As of January 20, 2014, the film has grossed $76,739,691 domestically and $3,769,387 in foreign countries, for a worldwide gross of $80,481,305.[6][55]

Critical response

"The defining trait of Lone Survivor—with respect to both its characters and Mr. Berg’s approach to them—is professionalism. It is a modest, competent, effective movie, concerned above all with doing the job of explaining how the job was done."

Lone Survivor has received "largely positive reviews" from film critics, according to The Hollywood Reporter.[67] The Los Angeles Times reported the critics' consensus was that "the film succeeds in bringing the mission to life, although it avoids probing the deeper issues at hand."[68] Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes sampled 154 reviews, and as of January 2014, the film holds a 73% rating, with an average score of 6.6/10. The website's consensus reads, "While it may deliver its messages of patriotism, courage, and sacrifice a tad heavy-handedly, Lone Survivor finds writer/director Peter Berg wielding enough visceral power to mitigate many of his movie's jingoistic flaws."[69] Another review aggregator, Metacritic, assigned the film a weighted average score of 60 (out of 100), based on 41 reviews from mainstream critics, considered to be "mixed or average reviews".[70] CinemaScore polls reported that male and female audiences gave the film a rare "A+" on an A+ to F scale.[71]

Justin Chang, writing for Variety magazine, gave the film a positive review, and called it "the most grueling and sustained American combat picture since Black Hawk Down, as well as a prime example of how impressive physical filmmaking can overcome even fundamental deficiencies in script and characterization."[72] Alonso Duralde, writing for The Wrap, stated, "The film never makes a grand statement about whether or not the war in Afghanistan is, per se, a mistake, but it does portray war itself as a disgusting folly. Berg sets up the cathartic moments we’re used to in movies like this, but then he pulls out the rug, reminding us that the cavalry doesn’t always miraculously show up in time to save the day."[73] Todd McCarthy, writing for The Hollywood Reporter, described the film as being "rugged, skilled, relentless, determined, narrow-minded and focused, everything that a soldier must be when his life is on the line,"[74] while Scott Bowles of USA Today called Lone Survivor "brutal, unrelenting and ultimately moving."[75] Leonard Maltin described the film as "visceral," while praising Berg, the main actors, and the stunt performers for successfully reenacting the events of Operation Red Wings. Maltin concluded that the film "is a tough movie but a rewarding one. It’s humbling to watch this dramatization of the sacrifices these men make, without hesitation. Peter Berg was determined to do justice to them, and he has succeeded."[76] Betsy Sharkey, writing for The Los Angeles Times praised the overall look of the film: "The production and costume designers have paid a great deal of attention to the details, from the uniforms and tribal robes, to the bullet wounds and blood. It certainly adds to the film's verisimilitude."[77]

Several reviewers, however, criticized Lone Survivor for focusing more on its action scenes than on characterization. In his negative review for The Star-Ledger, Stephen Whitty wrote, "This is the sort of bare-bones story that well served plenty of World War II movies once, and it would work here, if Berg had the sense to develop these men as characters, first. But we don't really get to know any of them, or what they might bring personally to this life-or-death emergency."[78] Rafer Guzman of Newsday wrote, "The movie seems more concerned with military-style action than with telling us who these fallen heroes really were."[79]

One of the film's strongest detractors was Time Out magazine's Keith Uhlich, who called the film "war porn of the highest order".[80] Geoff Pevere wrote in his review for The Globe and Mail, "The sensation of being pinned down and shot apart is so harrowingly conveyed...that one almost forgives the movie’s failure to be quite as persuasive in almost every other respect."[81] While praising the film for its visuals and sound effects, as well as Berg's atmospheric direction, Kyle Smith of the New York Post gave Lone Survivor a mixed review. Smith concluded his review by describing it as "a movie about an irrelevant skirmish that ended in near-total catastrophe, during a war we are not winning."[82] Film critic Steven Boone, writing for Roger Ebert's website, compared the film's violence to that of Mel Gibson's 2004 film The Passion of the Christ: "What's in between amounts to The Passion of the Christ for U.S. servicemen: a bloody historic episode recounted mainly in images of hardy young men being ripped apart, at screeching volume. Though Berg's source material isn't the New Testament, he often handles Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell's account...with the thunderous reverence Mel Gibson brought to Christ's crucifixion and resurrection."[83]

Accolades

Awards
Award Category Recipients and nominees Result
2013 Las Vegas Film Critics Society Awards[84] Best Action Film Won
Top 10 Films of the Year Won
19th Critics' Choice Awards[85] Best Action Film Won
Best Actor in an Action Movie Mark Wahlberg Won
20th Screen Actors Guild Awards[86] Best Stunt Ensemble in a Motion Picture Won
86th Academy Awards[87] Best Sound Editing Wylie Stateman Pending
Best Sound Mixing Andy Koyama, Beau Borders and David Brownlow Pending
18th Satellite Awards[88] Best Adapted Screenplay Peter Berg Pending
Writers Guild of America Awards[89] Best Adapted Screenplay Peter Berg Pending

See also

References

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