Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Watch The Wall Movie with Full HD Format

Based on Marlen Haushofer's eponymous feminist classic novel, THE WALL is a highly original exploration of the experience of solitude and survival set in a spectacularly beautiful Austrian mountain landscape. Martina Gedeck, the brilliant interpreter of the Oscar-winning The Lives Of Others, brings a rare and vivid intensity to her role as the unnamed lead character in this contemporary female Robinson Crusoe tale. --(c) Music Box Films Unrated
Release Date The Wall May 31, 2013 Limited
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Actors For The Wall

Martina Gedeck,Ulrike Beimpold,Karlheinz Hackl,Wolfgang Bauer,Julia Gschnitzer,Hans Michael Rehberg,Wolfgang Maria Bauer,Hans-Michael Rehberg,Wolfgang M. Bauer

Genres The Wall : Drama

Visitor Ranting & Critics For The Wall

User Ranting The Wall : 3.8
User Percentage For The Wall : 72 %
User Count Like for The Wall : 755
All Critics Ranting For The Wall : 6.3
All Critics Count For The Wall : 36
All Critics Percentage For The Wall : 72 %

If You Like this movie you can streaming The Wall movie without downloading HERE

Movie Overview For The Wall

The life of the fictional rock star 'Pink' is the subject of the visually evocative cult film based upon the music and visions of the group Pink Floyd as portrayed in the album of the same title. Relationships, drug abuse, sex, childhood, WWII and fascism combine in a disturbing mix of episodic live action and lyrical animation drawn by British caricaturist Gerald Scarfe.

TagLine The Wall

The Memories. The Madness. The Music... The Movie.

Trailer For The Wall

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Review For The Wall

Bleak and beautiful, harrowing yet inspiring, "The Wall" ("Die Wand") is a stunning tale of isolation and survival in a wild and silent world.
Ethan Gilsdorf-Boston Globe

An elegant, slow-burning exercise in narrative minimalism.
Drew Hunt-Chicago Reader

Pölsler's film is quietly deliberate without ever feeling slow, thanks to a few handy assets at his disposal.
Stephanie Merry-Washington Post

It's a shudder-inducing original.
John Hartl-Seattle Times

This mesmerising, austere and contemplative film provides a rarefied yet utterly immersive viewing experience.
Trevor Johnston-Time Out

A remarkably involving film, especially given its brave, self-imposed limitations.
Gary Goldstein-Los Angeles Times

Has any movie ever had so much gab on the soundtrack? Every confession, every philosophical tidbit of the movie's tormented female protagonist.
Gerald Peary-Arts Fuse

If you surrender to the style and premise, it's a rich and immensely rewarding film that begs repeat viewing.
Stephanie King-Electric Sheep

The sheer quantity of voiceover - or, more likely, subtitles - acts as a barrier to deep psychological immersion.
Catherine Shoard-Observer [UK]

Starts with an interesting concept but goes nowhere with it, giving the viewer too little with which to relate or comprehend and asking them to mistake the clunky narrative as "deep."
Brian Tallerico-HollywoodChicago.com

The Wall is a riveting piece of cinema, and given it bears such a simplistic, obscure narrative, Pölsler does a fine job holding down your attention throughout.
Stefan Pape-HeyUGuys

A beautifully photographed and elegantly handled existential drama.
Allan Hunter-Daily Express

A lover and a fighter. This will remind you to hold everything dear.
Adam Lee Davies-Little White Lies

An elegant, stunningly photographed reflection on the human condition that is as odd as it is entrancing.
Allan Hunter-The List

Julian Roman Pölsler's bewitching debut manages to be at once a creepy sci-fi parable, a feminist Robinson Crusoe and a clear-eyed ode to the wonders of nature experienced in solitude. Walden pond with added wall.
Xan Brooks-Guardian [UK]

Call it a landlocked variant on Robinson Crusoe, but it's a hypnotic one, with a sense of mystery and interior life that are all its own.
Tim Robey-Daily Telegraph

The story is slow-paced and eventless but the cinematography makes the most of the landscape, while voiceover diary readings give us access to her thoughts.
Carmen Gray-Total Film

Bold and beautiful, this is a mystery worth puzzling over.
David Parkinson-Empire Magazine

The Wall is certainly [an] absorbing and intensely thought-provoking film.
Staci Layne Wilson-Yahoo! Movies

A German/Austrian import so weighed down by a stereotypically angst-ridden voiceover of emotional numbness and philosophical despair that one could be forgiven for thinking Werner Herzog wrote it as a goof.
Brent Simon-Shockya.com

Gedeck, the only human on screen for almost the entire film, and silent other than her voice-over, grounds this fantastical premise in gritty, blister-handed reality, tending to her chores and her animals.
Marc Mohan-Oregonian

Movie Images The Wall

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