You can’t spend five and a half days falling into Utah’s Brugeon Canyon with your arms against a giant boulder, but that’s the premise of Danny Boyle’s survival flick 127 Hours. Based on the true story of daredevil canyoner Aaron Ralston, this film is about what happens when you underestimate the great outdoors and don’t tell your closest and dearest that you’re spending a few days alone in the wilderness. is a study of In an era before universal cell phone coverage existed, James Ralston, played enthusiastically by Franco on his Mountain, rode his motorcycle around the desert, creating a video diary and introducing his buddies. You start the movie as a lucky adventurer who enjoys doing things. Hikers around a secret underground pool.
For Ralston, life is a series of spectacular sunsets and vistas until a big rock puts an end to the party. Now comes the interesting part. Lonely, desperate, terrified, and stuck in a canyon with no hope of rescue, Ralston must dig deep and find out what he’s really made of to survive the ordeal. hallucinates, resorts to desperate measures such as drinking urine, doubts his sanity, and films several heartbreaking video diaries for his mother and father. Interestingly, Ralston also gets a glimpse into the future, and this cements his resolve to survive, leading him into some pretty dark places, even if he doesn’t want to ruin the movie. It shines as a leading role that conveys various emotions, including fatalism. Yet what he most embodies is the fierce and unconquerable will of the human spirit to endure, survive, live and fight another day.