Friday, September 12, 2025

DAILY CALL SHEET: SEPTEMBER 12, 2025

 

The Long Walk (2025) Sometime after a civil war has caused the U.S. to slip into fascism and economic collapse, teenaged boys from across the country volunteer for an annual state-sponsored competition in which participants must walk at a predetermined pace without stopping or face immediate execution. The last one still walking (and therefore alive) is the winner, who is then showered with wealth and celebrated as a symbol of dogged American determination. This grueling take on Stephen King's allegory about the sacrifice of youth to endless wars and the rat race in general is one of the better adaptations of the author's work in some time. However, a character decision at the very end of the movie, likely written to reflect the filmmakers' own bleak world view, is completely misguided and nearly ruins the whole thing.

TIL: Unlike The Hunger Games, in which teens are forced to participate, those who take part in The Long Walk voluntarily submit their names for inclusion in hopes of escaping impoverishment. This leads to one of the many interesting philosophical discussions in the film (it is a movie entirely about people walking and talking after all) in which some of the boys wonder if their participation makes them just as guilty as those in power who sponsor the contest. Despite the mitigating circumstances of abject poverty, the Church might say yes. As the Catechism notes, one cannot cooperate with an intrinsically evil act without sufficient proportionate reason. By participating in a death-driven game, one risks causing scandal (leading others to sin or weakening their moral resolve) and undermining the Church’s witness to life.

Now Showing at a Blog Near You: For Aleteia this week I take a look at 'Triumph of the Heart', one of the few faith-focused films I can honestly recommend for everyone. This imaginative take on the last days of Maximilian Kolbe is very well done.

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