Thirteen Lives delivers critically.It is a top quality film.Unfortunately, it underperformed financially due to a limited theatrical release before showing up on Amazon Prime last August.Additionally, the production suffered from minimal marketing and attention during awards season, and overall very little exposure.It may be true, as Quentin Tarantino has stated, that movies released on streamers just don’t exist in the zeitgeist. It slipped under the radar.Which is unfortunate because as far as realistic adaptations of true life events go, this one is exceptional.
A dramatization of the cave rescue of the Thailand soccer team in 2018 was inevitable, but also in good hands with Ron Howard at the helm and Colin Farrell and Viggo Mortensen in the leads.However, it is intense.I do not recommend it for the faint of heart.I was reminded of videos online of cave divers moving through narrow spaces and how that fosters a creeping sense of claustrophobia.
While anyone who paid attention to the story in the news knows what happened, the film remains riveting and suspenseful.
Thirteen Lives follows the ‘Wild Boars’ youth soccer team of Northern Thailand who decide one day after practice to venture into the Tham Luang cave. There is a wide shot early on of the soccer team on an open grassy field with the shadowy, cavernous mountains in the background, foreshadowing the dark and treacherous experience ahead of them.Another bit of astute editing early on juxtaposes the slow drip of water within the cave with the rushing flood waters of the storm outside of it.Emphasizing how unaware the team was of the rising waters while they were inside the cave and how such a thing could occur in the first place.