Colin Farrell and Viggo Mortensen star as cave divers in the new movie.
Simply put, it is one of the best films I’ve seen this year.” Thrilling, intense and claustrophobic, with some of the most nerve-wracking underwater sequences I’ve seen in recent memory. The ingenuity and teamwork shown to rescue the young boys is amazing.” Another fan wrote: “What a brilliant, brilliant film #ThirteenLives and what a rescue. What a gripping example of humanity, courage, prayer and determination.” Farrell recently revealed that he experienced panic attacks while filming underwater scenes for the film.
Thirteen Lives, starring (L to R) Colin Farrell, Paul Gleeson and Thira Chutikul, tells the story of the astonishing rescue (Picture: AP).
‘It seemed like a long time, but it was only a matter of seconds. Each of them had a different cave and tunnel system to recreate the real-life situation. Of course, it would have been impossible to film in a real cave system, so the cave had to be replicated exactly. ‘So we had a couple of weeks where they were in the water with them every day, emulating it and for that reason, because they’ve done that work — they also volunteered to work on the weekends and whatever was required, so that all of the shots are them — they learned the cave diving techniques and the personalities of the men that they were playing.’ I panicked’ Rick Stanton, who Viggo plays in the new film and who was an essential part of the rescue mission, had a hand in teaching the actor how to cave dive for real.
For Ron Howard's retelling of the 2018 ordeal, Pattrakorn Tungsupakul not only played the mother of a stranded boy, she also made key script contributions.
“I feel proud,” said Rugeradh Tungsupakul, who goes by Waen. “I know how hard it’s been for her to get where she is today.” He died before her first television show ran and had not been happy when she abandoned law for the unpredictable life of an actress. “She introduces femininity and the soft side of energy,” Ruetaivanichkul said. Early success on a 2013 series in which she played a rural girl forced to move to Bangkok after her father is murdered made her a star in Thailand. When asked if she was famous, Tungsupakul demurred with a quiet “Yeah,” before adding, “But if I say ‘yes’ then maybe ‘Oh, I’m too much.’” The tears came so easily because the world the production team had recreated in Australia felt so close to home. She graduated from law school, but instead decided to move to Bangkok to pursue a career in acting. “She shows the empathy within the group. (The producer P.J. van Sandwijk worked on both “Thirteen Lives” and “The Rescue.”) Tungsupakul brought the idea of the bracelets to the production as another example of paying attention to the local customs. “I asked my friend who studies northern culture at Chiang Mai University, and he said this is a must-have item,” she said. Her character’s arc involves finding her voice in the quiet moments: She challenges the governor directly (“How can you understand? “Dramatically, she’s the most heartbreaking.”
An exclusive look at how the heartracing film was made, from building huge tanks in a warehouse to sifting through nearly 400 hours of footage.
Then, equal time is dedicated to life just outside the cave, as the efforts of locals—from family members to government officials to spirited volunteers—prove vital in the mission’s success. An international rescue effort of more than 10,000 people resulted in every one of them being delivered to safety after over two weeks of careful, tricky planning—though not without lives lost along the way. But instead of launching into space, this time he’s diving underwater.
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The movie is inspired by the real-life rescue of 13 people who were trapped in a cave in Thailand. You can stream "Thirteen Lives" on Prime Video.
If you buy them, we may get a small share of the revenue from the sale from our partners. You can find a list of supported devices and televisions on the Amazon website. Prime Video is also included as part of a full Amazon Prime membership for $15 a month. Twelve children and their soccer coach were trapped over two miles deep in the Tham Luang cave system in Thailand. However, that free trial period is a one-time deal, and if you don't cancel when the 30 days are up, you'll be looped into the monthly rate. You can sign up for Prime Video as a standalone streaming service for $9 a month.
Ron Howard's biographical survival film about the Tham Luang cave rescue stands out for how realistic it is and how it feels.
The criticism that I have for this story is the same that I had for the documentary, which is where is the perspective of the children? Without spoiling too much of the rescue for those who managed to dodge the news on the news as it was developing, Howard's no-frills approach to Thirteen Lives is what makes it such a success. This is barely touched on, so it's difficult for the audience to truly understand the fear that the parents had for their children who had no nationality or citizenship. On its own, the story of this rescue is inspiring, and the 18 day story kept the world at the edge of their seats. It makes a good pairing with Farrell's Volanthen who is much warmer, and as a father himself, can keenly imagine the pain that the parents of the children feel. Back in the summer of 2018, a group of kids between the ages of 11-16 decided to go into a local cave.
Thirteen Lives stars Colin Farrell and Viggo Mortensen as two of the heroic divers. Is it accurate?
The tunnels are so murky that even with headlamps, the only way the rescue divers can find their way out and not get lost in the cave network is by keeping hold of a guide rope installed before the boys are swum out from Cavern 9. It was in fact the Thai military who called in Thanet Natisri (Nophand Boonyai), a Thai restaurant owner and self-taught groundwater storage expert from Marion, Illinois who happened to be working on a project in Thailand building wells for farmers. With the attempt to reach the boys suspended because of the constantly-rising water level, a Thai-American water engineer points out that unless the water pouring in from above is diverted, the divers will never be able to get in. In fact, hundreds of rescuers formed a ‘daisy chain’ to slide, carry, and even zipline the boys on stretchers over a complex network of pulleys previously installed by rock-climbers (also not shown). Some stretchers were placed on an impromptu slide made of hoses installed to pump out water. The two British experts were indeed the first to navigate the difficult narrow tunnels past Cavern 3 and find the boys alive in Cavern 9, and they did bring on two more British divers plus Harris. However, possibly in the name of not overwhelming the audience with more characters than they can possibly keep track of, the film has omitted from the core team another Australian and another lead diver, Jim Warny from Ireland, who joined on the final day of the rescue. They bring the “packages,” anesthetized boys in wetsuits and scuba gear on light stretchers with hands and feet restrained, to a staging area in Cavern 3, where the stretchers are guided through the rest of the network to the cave entrance by a team of Thai SEALS and divers. Also not shown are the 90 Thai divers and the foreign dive shop owners who were stationed along the route to perform medical check-ups and resupply air-tanks for the main divers, and the team who installed the oxygen tanks, cables, lighting system, communication devices, and the water drainage pipes and pumping system used to drain water from the tunnels. In the film, the mother of one of the boys tells the assistant to the area’s governor, Narongsak Osatanakorn (Sahajak Boonthanakit), that her family is from Myanmar and so don’t have any official ID cards. The film’s version of the rescue itself shows only the four British cave dive experts guiding each unconscious boy (one diver per boy) between Caverns 9 and 3 over the course of three days. The film depicts about 20 Thai Navy SEALS beginning the rescue operation, but, trained for open water diving and not work in narrow cave tunnels, they can only get about halfway down the tunnel network to Cavern 3. The confusion may arise from the fact that all four were from the ethnic minority hill tribes that populate both sides of the porous border in the notorious Golden Triangle, a hotbed of drug smuggling, between Thailand, Myanmar, and Laos, where Thai authorities estimate the “stateless” population with no documented nationality may be as high as three million. The bad news: The story was covered so exhaustively at the time that much of the core audience is already familiar with all the details and will notice any fudging for dramatic effect.
The perilous journey of a junior soccer team trapped in a cave by floodwaters captured the world's attention in 2018 and is the focus of this new film by ...
When Howard sticks to the action beats, Thirteen Lives is satisfying. It's a six-hour-plus dive from the cave where they're marooned and back to safety, a journey that wends its way through treacherous underwater tunnels that only a skilled diver could possibly navigate. "I didn't come here to kill kids, Rick," Harris protests, a line of dialogue that yields the movie's biggest unintentional laugh.
The Ron Howard-directed film, based on the incredible true story of an international rescue, is now streaming on Prime Video.
Join Prime for a free 30-day trial to stream Thirteen Lives for free. Thirteen Lives is streaming on Prime Video at no additional charge to Prime members. The story follows the rescue of a Thai soccer team who got trapped in the Tham Luang cave during an unexpected rainstorm.
Thirteen Lives stars Colin Farrell, Tom Bateman, and Sahajak “Poo” Boonthanakit share behind-the-scenes stories about making the rescue drama.
The film also stars Joel Edgerton, Paul Gleeson, Pattrakorn Tungsupakul, Tui Thiraphat Sajakul, James Teeradon Supapunpinyo, and Weir Sukollawat Kanaros. Thirteen Lives was written by William Nicholson As word spread around the planet, more than 10,000 volunteers joined forces to help save the twelve boys and their coach, including a team of the world’s most skilled and experienced divers. - The way Howard shot the film.