अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA wayward school bus driver and a dedicated school teacher battle to save 22 children from a terrifying inferno.A wayward school bus driver and a dedicated school teacher battle to save 22 children from a terrifying inferno.A wayward school bus driver and a dedicated school teacher battle to save 22 children from a terrifying inferno.
- निर्देशक
- लेखक
- स्टार्स
- पुरस्कार
- 1 जीत और कुल 1 नामांकन
Kay McConaughey
- Sherry
- (as Kay McCabe McConaughey)
Alexander Shimoyama
- Benjamin
- (as Alexander GT Auyang)
6.837.1K
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फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
how ordinary people can act extraordinarily under pressure
The Lost Bus is a 2025 survival drama film directed by Paul Greengrass, who co-wrote the screenplay with Brad Ingelsby. It is based on the non-fiction 2021 book Paradise: One Town's Struggle to Survive an American Wildfire by Lizzie Johnson about the 2018 Camp Fire. It stars Matthew McConaughey, America Ferrera, Yul Vazquez and Ashlie Atkinson.
Set during the 2018 Camp Fire in Paradise, California, the film centers on Kevin McKay (Matthew McConaughey), a school bus driver, and Mary Ludwig (America Ferrera), a teacher. When the wildfire rapidly engulfs the town, Kevin is called upon to evacuate 22 children stranded at a school. What begins as a routine route turns into a tense, fraught journey through smoke, flame, blocked roads, and chaos, as they fight to reach safety
McConaughey delivers a grounded, intense performance, while Ferrera adds heart and calm strength. The child cast brings raw emotion and realism. The ensemble including Yul Vázquez, Ashlie Atkinson (as the dispatcher), and child actors holds up its weight in a film dominated by disaster visuals. The children's fear, confusion, and moments of quiet resilience are often cited as among the film's emotional strongest points.
Paul Greengrass keeps the tension high with his signature handheld style and gripping pace. The visuals of fire and chaos feel terrifyingly real, though some emotional beats feel rushed or predictable. Cinematographer Pål Ulvik Rokseth and the visual effects team succeed in creating a visceral, suffocating atmosphere of fire, smoke, and heat. The visuals are among the film's strongest assets: the bus lit by orange glow, smoke creeping through the frame, and the impression of encroaching danger are all powerfully rendered.
A powerful, visually striking survival drama that captures human courage in crisis. Despite a few clichés, The Lost Bus burns bright with emotion and intensity. If you're a fan of survival dramas and disaster cinema done well, It's not perfect, but it's a visceral, ambitious ride that reminds us how ordinary people can act extraordinarily under pressure.
Set during the 2018 Camp Fire in Paradise, California, the film centers on Kevin McKay (Matthew McConaughey), a school bus driver, and Mary Ludwig (America Ferrera), a teacher. When the wildfire rapidly engulfs the town, Kevin is called upon to evacuate 22 children stranded at a school. What begins as a routine route turns into a tense, fraught journey through smoke, flame, blocked roads, and chaos, as they fight to reach safety
McConaughey delivers a grounded, intense performance, while Ferrera adds heart and calm strength. The child cast brings raw emotion and realism. The ensemble including Yul Vázquez, Ashlie Atkinson (as the dispatcher), and child actors holds up its weight in a film dominated by disaster visuals. The children's fear, confusion, and moments of quiet resilience are often cited as among the film's emotional strongest points.
Paul Greengrass keeps the tension high with his signature handheld style and gripping pace. The visuals of fire and chaos feel terrifyingly real, though some emotional beats feel rushed or predictable. Cinematographer Pål Ulvik Rokseth and the visual effects team succeed in creating a visceral, suffocating atmosphere of fire, smoke, and heat. The visuals are among the film's strongest assets: the bus lit by orange glow, smoke creeping through the frame, and the impression of encroaching danger are all powerfully rendered.
A powerful, visually striking survival drama that captures human courage in crisis. Despite a few clichés, The Lost Bus burns bright with emotion and intensity. If you're a fan of survival dramas and disaster cinema done well, It's not perfect, but it's a visceral, ambitious ride that reminds us how ordinary people can act extraordinarily under pressure.
Thrilling And Involving
If you have any doubt as to how frightening and deadly a wild fire is, then this film will set you right. No one does kinetic, anxiety-inducing action quite like Paul Greengrass, and in telling this true story of a bus driver and teacher trying to get a bus full of school kids to safety in the midst of the worst wildfire in California's history, Paul Greengrass is certainly in territory made for his signature strengths. It's a shame this has only had a limited cinema release before streaming - it would have looked and sounded truly immersive on the big screen. It's claustrophobic and thrilling enough on television, with the cinematography and sound design really standing out. A good Matthew McConaughey and America Ferrera, along with the rest of the cast, do a decent job with a screenplay that is sometimes a necessary exposition dump, and whilst the character development isn't all it could be, this is still a thrilling and involving disaster film that doesn't let up for any of its run time.
A Good Balance of Drama and Suspense
"The Lost Bus" is a solid thriller-drama that manages to keep the audience engaged with its tense atmosphere and emotional undertones. While it doesn't necessarily break new ground in terms of storytelling, it makes up for it with good pacing, a strong sense of tension, and a cast that delivers believable and heartfelt performances.
What works best here is the way the film blends survival tension with personal drama, making the stakes feel more grounded and human. The direction keeps the suspense alive without going overboard, and visually, the film captures the claustrophobic and unsettling tone well.
That said, some narrative choices lean toward the predictable, and the film doesn't always take full advantage of its premise. Still, "The Lost Bus" is a well-executed ride-tense, engaging, and worth watching if you enjoy character-driven thrillers with a touch of emotional depth.
What works best here is the way the film blends survival tension with personal drama, making the stakes feel more grounded and human. The direction keeps the suspense alive without going overboard, and visually, the film captures the claustrophobic and unsettling tone well.
That said, some narrative choices lean toward the predictable, and the film doesn't always take full advantage of its premise. Still, "The Lost Bus" is a well-executed ride-tense, engaging, and worth watching if you enjoy character-driven thrillers with a touch of emotional depth.
Great story, camera shaky whole time
Matthew McConaughey shines as Kevin, the determined bus driver, infusing the role with stoic grit and subtle vulnerability. America Ferrera, as Mary, the teacher, matches his intensity, her warmth and resolve anchoring the young ensemble cast of students, who bring authenticity and raw emotion to the screen. Their performances elevate the film, capturing the courage and fear of those caught in an unimaginable crisis.
Yet, the film's impact is severely hampered by its abysmal cinematography. The shaky, handheld camera work feels chaotic and disorienting, often resembling amateur footage rather than a polished production. Scenes of the wildfire's terrifying beauty-flames consuming the landscape-are reduced to a blur of erratic zooms and unsteady frames, robbing the visuals of their potential grandeur. This jarring approach distracts from the story's weight, undermining the otherwise immersive production design and haunting soundscape of roaring flames and distant sirens.
The Lost Bus is a tale of resilience that deserves to be seen with clarity, but its unprofessional camera work overshadows its strengths. While the stellar acting and gripping plot make it worth watching, the cinematographic missteps hold it back from greatness.
Rating: 6/10.
Yet, the film's impact is severely hampered by its abysmal cinematography. The shaky, handheld camera work feels chaotic and disorienting, often resembling amateur footage rather than a polished production. Scenes of the wildfire's terrifying beauty-flames consuming the landscape-are reduced to a blur of erratic zooms and unsteady frames, robbing the visuals of their potential grandeur. This jarring approach distracts from the story's weight, undermining the otherwise immersive production design and haunting soundscape of roaring flames and distant sirens.
The Lost Bus is a tale of resilience that deserves to be seen with clarity, but its unprofessional camera work overshadows its strengths. While the stellar acting and gripping plot make it worth watching, the cinematographic missteps hold it back from greatness.
Rating: 6/10.
Great movie, but hard to watch
As a former resident of Paradise, this caused a surge of emotions. I lived less than a half mile from Ponderosa Elementary and had moved 3 months prior to the fire. Watching this knowing every road, every place that bus went was heartbreaking. Great movie but exceedingly difficult to watch. Absolutely recommend watching cause it's just one of hundreds of stories of people trying to survive a fire that shouldn't have made it over Feather River Canyon. But those winds...damn they drove that fire like Satan himself was leading the charge.
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क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThis movie was filmed in Ruidoso NM mid April of 2024. Two months later the Southfork wildfire would devastate the village.
- गूफ़Kevin (Matthew McConaughey) tells Mary (America Ferrera) he wasn't where he thought he'd be at age 44. While talking to his son Shaun (Levi McConaughey) about the importance of finishing high school, he said he didn't finish because he had to drop out since Levi's mom became pregnant. His son is 15 years old. That would mean Matthew McConaughey was still in high school at 29 years old.
- भाव
Chief Martinez: [At the press briefing] I just want to add one thing: Every year the fires get bigger, and there's more of them. We're being damn fools, that's the truth.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in CTV News at 11:30 Toronto: 5 सितम्बर 2025 को प्रसारित एपिसोड (2025)
- साउंडट्रैकBroken Halos
written by Michael Henderson and Chris Stapleton
performed by Chris Stapleton
courtesy of: Mercury Nashville
under license from: Universal Music Operations Ltd
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
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2025 TIFF Festival Guide
See the current lineup for the 50th Toronto International Film Festival this September.
विवरण
- चलने की अवधि
- 2 घं 10 मि(130 min)
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 2.39 : 1
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