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The Eight Mountains

Original title: Le otto montagne
  • 2022
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 27m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Luca Marinelli and Alessandro Borghi in The Eight Mountains (2022)
The Eight Mountains is the story of a friendship. Of children becoming men who try to erase the footprints of their fathers, but who, through the twists and turns they take, always end up returning home.
Play trailer1:15
3 Videos
99+ Photos
Coming-of-AgePeriod DramaDrama

An epic journey of friendship and self-discovery set in the breathtaking Italian Alps, The Eight Mountains follows over four decades the profound, complex relationship between Pietro and Bru... Read allAn epic journey of friendship and self-discovery set in the breathtaking Italian Alps, The Eight Mountains follows over four decades the profound, complex relationship between Pietro and Bruno.An epic journey of friendship and self-discovery set in the breathtaking Italian Alps, The Eight Mountains follows over four decades the profound, complex relationship between Pietro and Bruno.

  • Directors
    • Felix van Groeningen
    • Charlotte Vandermeersch
  • Writers
    • Paolo Cognetti
    • Charlotte Vandermeersch
    • Felix van Groeningen
  • Stars
    • Lupo Barbiero
    • Cristiano Sassella
    • Elena Lietti
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    18K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Felix van Groeningen
      • Charlotte Vandermeersch
    • Writers
      • Paolo Cognetti
      • Charlotte Vandermeersch
      • Felix van Groeningen
    • Stars
      • Lupo Barbiero
      • Cristiano Sassella
      • Elena Lietti
    • 54User reviews
    • 111Critic reviews
    • 78Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 18 wins & 29 nominations total

    Videos3

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:15
    Official Trailer
    The Eight Mountains
    Trailer 1:59
    The Eight Mountains
    The Eight Mountains
    Trailer 1:59
    The Eight Mountains
    THE EIGHT MOUNTAINS - Official US Trailer
    Trailer 1:59
    THE EIGHT MOUNTAINS - Official US Trailer

    Photos142

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    + 134
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    Top cast30

    Edit
    Lupo Barbiero
    • Pietro da piccolo
    Cristiano Sassella
    • Bruno da piccolo
    Elena Lietti
    Elena Lietti
    • Francesca Guasti
    Chiara Jorrioz
    • Sonia
    Filippo Timi
    Filippo Timi
    • Giovanni Guasti
    Fiammetta Olivieri
    • Donna con le capre
    Gualtiero Burzi
    Gualtiero Burzi
    • Luigi (Zio di Bruno)
    Adriano Favre
    • Guardiano rifugio
    Andrea Palma
    • Pietro da adolescente
    Francesco Palombelli
    • Bruno da adolescente
    Alex Sassella
    • Padre di Bruno
    Luca Marinelli
    Luca Marinelli
    • Pietro Guasti
    Leandro Gago
    • Amigo alla festa
    Daniela De Pellegrin
    • Amica della madre
    Alessandro Borghi
    Alessandro Borghi
    • Bruno Guglielmina
    Aurora Pernici
    • Coinquilini Torino
    Ermes Piffer
    • Coinquilini Torino
    Paolo Cognetti
    • Pablo
    • Directors
      • Felix van Groeningen
      • Charlotte Vandermeersch
    • Writers
      • Paolo Cognetti
      • Charlotte Vandermeersch
      • Felix van Groeningen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews54

    7.718.1K
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    Featured reviews

    9hendrikdeachtste

    An epic tale translated beautifully to the screen.

    Felix Van Groeningen and Charlotte Vandermeersch succeeded magnificently in bringing the epic tale of Paolo Cognetti about relationships between people and people and mountains to the big screen.

    With Luca Marinelli and Alessandro Borghi the main characters were brought alive by probably two of the biggest talents in acting Italy has to offer at the moment.

    The mountain scenery is simply stunning and the stuff that every mountain enthusiast's dreams are made of. However, you want to keep your eyes wide open for this picture. Neither flashy nor slow, this movie takes the time to tell a story, without it getting tedious at any point. It gives you the space to take it all in and it allows one's emotions to come into their own.
    9mateuszmiter

    Mountains are the ultimate metaphors for life

    There are certain movies in modern cinema that have an abstract length and tempo. They're often hard to describe and sometimes even tougher to sit through. At the same time, they work somewhat like a time travel machine. Suddenly, everything stops and life flashes before your eyes. Before you even realize it, you're contemplating the sense of your life and are forced to evaluate the decisions you made and the person you've become. You either love it or you hate it.

    In 2021, Drive My Car by Ryusuke Hamaguchi was a pitch-perfect example of such cinema. Now, it's almost impossible not to feel similarly about The Eight Mountains by Felix Van Groeningen and Charlotte Vandermeersch.

    The film follows a simple yet complex story of Pietro, who visits an almost abandoned mountain village as a child with his mother during summer. There, he meets Bruno, a boy his age who's one of the 14 citizens who have stayed following an "industrial revolution." Their lives vary on every possible level.

    Pietro is a city-raised boy, with all the flashy clothes and fancy Adidas on his feet, while Bruno wears the same dirty bags and has to take care of cattle. The former is successful in school, while the second struggles to read. Yet, they form a connection that, to much of their surprise, would hold them together until the end of their lives.

    At first sight, The Eight Mountains feels like an ordinary story of friendship that was lost in time, yet marks its return in an unexpected fashion as both Bruno and Pietro (now adults) find themselves building a house together. A house, that was a dream of Pietro's father, who doesn't really have a significant relationship with his son but has found an oddly, though, understandably, strong bond with Bruno instead.

    The friendship between Pietro and Bruno is a feat so incredibly acted and written, with its subtlety telling us more emotions than any words could have, that it's definitely a perfect choice to have it as a main story. What does true friendship mean? And how much can it take? Does it have boundaries, and if so, can they ever be crossed? You'll find answers to these questions here. But The Eight Mountains is much more than that.

    It's a tale about stepping out of your parents' shadow, yet struggling to cut away the same (often toxic) habits they had. It's about searching for your own purpose, while also trying to fulfill your parents' wishes and dreams. It's about looking for your own place in the world in light of always being the second choice among the people you know, but still coming back and finding happiness and solace with them. It's about crossing your own limits in your head but failing plenty of times along the way.

    The list of themes in The Eight Mountains is definitely a lengthy one. Such cases are often a recipe for messy productions that struggle to keep viewers' attention. This time around, it's also not perfect. There are moments when you start crying, only to wipe your tears and focus again on the short but important conversations, with dramatic, almost thriller-like music suddenly playing in the background. Then you're back to crying but also holding your breath.

    Yes, The Eight Mountains can be sometimes hard to keep track of. With all its emotional themes and rhythmical rollercoaster, you will find yourself confused, just like I did. Still, it does an even better job of gluing you back into the screen, not only due to the story but the monumental views it shows.

    The majority of the movie takes place somewhere in Italian Alps. While I've never personally seen this part of the world, I don't need any convincing anymore to do so. The film is shot masterfully, with the camera often zooming out and transforming the main characters into a small element of the background, while the astonishing mountains take the main stage.

    There aren't many moments like these in The Eight Mountains, but when they strike, they do so with full force. With an inspiration surely taken from a movie like Into the Wild (2007), it feels somewhat familiar, but it doesn't take away the pleasure and with its unusual narrow camera angle, it's certainly special.

    On top of that, these mountains, cliffs, edges, and so on aren't only there to take your breath away. They're a perfect metaphor for the story. "The mountain is a way of living life. One step in front of the other, silence, time and measure," says Bruno throughout the film.

    The Eight Mountains is an incredibly ambitious project which tells numerous stories, all connected to each other. Pietro's journey to self-discovery is one that won't grab everyone's attention at first sight, but those who give it a try and have some patience will certainly be rewarded with a mix of emotions. Emotions, that take your heart by storm and won't let go.

    You either love or hate this kind of cinema, and I unquestionably belong to the first group. After watching The Eight Mountains, you will love it as well.
    10rune-andresen

    Highly recommend

    This movie is beautiful. It's about life, childhood, living the life, death, existential crisis and friendship. It's a slow burner but never boring - on the contrary - you want to know the whole story about the two main characters and how they end up in life.

    The scenery is stunning - from the alps to the Himalayas.

    This is not pure entertainment- more like reading a book with pure wisdom and plenty of life experience. I suspect the story will stay with me for days or weeks. The acting is top notch.

    However, this is the very opposite to the pure entertaining Hollywood movie, and is maybe not optimal for a Friday night after a long workweek.
    9Mengedegna

    A sensationally good, an thus rare, film about male friendship

    These days, when the emphasis in so many independent films is (for completely understandable reasons of prior neglect) on the feelings and relationships of women, here is a film that strides unapologetically into unusual territory - the complex emotional ties of two straight men who (with sometimes lengthy absences) have been close friends since boyhood. This is not to be confused with banal bromance films, with their pat tropes and (in too many cases) their uneasy joking about (yuk!) gayness. This is about two guys who sincerely, deeply love each other, even as they seek out and experience sexual intimacy with women. Could it be that the subtlety with which their relationship is portrayed was made possible by the many fine woman-centric films we have seen of late and that explore similar themes? Whatever, because it avoids clichés and cheap high-emotion plot twists (there are so many sequences when I braced for these and then, blessedly, they don't come), the film is deeply moving, and this avoidance of the explicit and the obvious places it, for me at least, on a higher plane than other recent efforts that cover similar territory (the recent, and in its own way excellent, Belgian film "Close", for example, in which the sexual pull between two early-adolescent boys is more fully developed, or the comparatively overblown "Banshees of Inisherin", which hammers away at you with cheaper, plot-driven superficiality).

    The story is made all the more powerful by its examination of the complex relationships of the two boys, and later young men, with their respective fathers, and particularly with the father of Pietro, the narrator, (masterfully played by Filippo Timi) who, we eventually understand, became a central influence in the lives of both. The father of Bruno, the other protagonist, remains an unseen, malign presence -- though he does seem to have appeared in earlier cuts, since IMDB lists a credit for him. (Though the film in its present form clocks in at 2h27min, one does get the sense that there's a lot that ended up on the cutting room floor, which possibly accounts for how the later Nepal-located episodes seem somewhat underdeveloped and undermotivated. I would love to see a director's cut - I imagine it would be even richer and more rewarding.)

    The acting throughout is on the highest level, including in the roles of the two protagonists as boys and as grown men. Luca Marinelli, in particular, who plays Pietro as a young adult, gives a stunning, understated, totally credible and moving performance. (He bears a striking resemblance to the young Gael Garcia Bernal, although, on the evidence of this film, his gifts as an actor may be greater.) The majesty of the mountain scenery (in the alpine Aosta valley) is stunningly portrayed and acts a glue to the film, grounding it in a specific reality and binding the characters to each other.

    The one false note (if you will pardon the pun) lies in the soundtrack, which unaccountably draws on the English-language bleatings of a Swedish singer/songwriter named Daniel Norgren, who makes great, and to my mind cheesy, use of the organ. When the latter swells up at key moments, some of the air gets sucked out of the film's emotions. In a film of such delicacy and acuteness of observation, these moments seem like intrusions. This is one of those films that doesn't need music to make its impact, and the directors should perhaps have had the courage to leave well enough alone, as demonstrated by a few, hugely powerful shots that occur in near-total silence. But, with something this fine overall, that is a quibble.
    10BrentVanderSijpe-1

    Visually stunning, well casted movie about your relationships towards others and nature

    It took me some weeks to properly put my thoughts about this movie into words. I haven't read the book, although I am definitely planning to. For what I've heard, the movie is mostly true to the original story by Paola Cognetti.

    The movie was filmed and produced during the Covid-pandemic. Felix Van Groeningen, Charlotte Vandermeersch and the film crew stayed near the mountains during the shoot. This embodies in a way the self-sought isolation in the mountains of one of the main characters Bruno.

    The music nicely complements the documentary-like, authentic images of the breath-taking nature - a term clearly only used by city people.

    This is not your average "wanderlust" movie. Le Otto Montagne is about a difficult father-son relationship which could have been totally different if they knew each other at different times. It is a movie about the quest to finding yourself which everyone strays or should stray by themselves. Most of all, it is about the strong relationship based on the mutual love for the mountains between two life-long friends, who do not have to hear or see each other every week or month to maintain it. A relationship strong enough to easily overcome disputes, misfortunes and most importantly time is something rare and special and something I wish for everybody.

    I saw the movie at the end of 2022 and it easily became my top movie of that year. 10/10.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Directors Charlotte Vandermeersch and Felix van Groeningen (husband and wife in real life) learned Italian in order to communicate properly with the actors.
    • Goofs
      When Giovanni and Pietro finish their first hike they are seen walking across the ridge together away from the summit cross. The same shot with the same snow formation is seen later on with the older Pietro.
    • Quotes

      Pietro Guasti: A place you loved as a kid can also look completely different to you as an adult and turn out to be a disappointment; or it can remind you of what you are no longer and make you feel very sad.

    • Connections
      Featured in Amanda the Jedi Show: The Most Theatre Walkouts I've EVER Seen | Cannes 2022 Explained (2022)
    • Soundtracks
      Alabursy
      Music by Daniel Norgren

      Performed by Daniel Norgren

      Copyright (P) @ 2015

      Produced and arranged by Daniel Norgren and Superpuma Records

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 14, 2022 (Belgium)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • Belgium
      • France
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • Menuetto Film (Belgium)
      • Polyfilm (Austria)
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • English
      • Nepali
    • Also known as
      • Sekiz Dağ
    • Filming locations
      • Brusson, Valle d'Aosta, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Wildside
      • Rufus
      • Menuetto Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €7,687,148 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $302,456
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $33,323
      • Apr 30, 2023
    • Gross worldwide
      • $11,376,563
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 27 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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