Alpha

  • USA Alpha (more)
Trailer 8

Plots(1)

When a hunting expedition goes horribly wrong, a young hunter (Kodi Smit-McPhee) is left on his own and must battle against the harsh weather and terrain to find his way back to camp. When he encounters a lone wolf who has also been separated from his pack, the two form an unlikely bond to help each other back to safety. (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment)

(more)

Videos (6)

Trailer 8

Reviews (7)

MrHlad 

all reviews of this user

English This flop about how the friendship between man and wolf was formed thousands of years ago turned out to be a surprisingly successful thing. Alpha is a family adventure that isn't afraid to be a little grittier than we're used to with films like this, it manages to be engrossing and, above all, incredibly beautiful to look at. It is brought down by the second half, in which the gradual rapprochement between human and animal protagonists is, after all, too schematic and predictable. ()

angel74 

all reviews of this user

English Even though the adventure film Alpha is an overly digitized fairy tale about the origins of the friendship between man and wolf (or dog), I quite liked the story. Except I could have done without the initial time loops. However, I'm sure the child audiences must be absolutely thrilled with this film. (75%) ()

Ads

Malarkey 

all reviews of this user

English Who would have guessed that the creators can make a prehistoric story into one of the nicest films about the friendship of a man and a dog. A nice surprise, where the bar is unnecessarily lowered by its beginning, but once a young boy and a wolf enter the stage, then every scene features a beautiful shot and brings you a dose of emotions. ()

POMO 

all reviews of this user

English If Alpha had been set in an actual harsh environment à la The Revenant, its trivial and unoriginal survival storyline might have worked. What we have instead is quite the opposite – an artificial, oversaturated, kitschy coloring book in which even the setting sun is not real. It could withstand criticisms such as “an adventure fairy tale shot in front of a green screen” – it’s not as stupid as Emmerich’s 10,000 BC and the actors are eagerly emotional, but the fake stuff around them was too much for me. Not to mention the overly aggressive camera close-ups and time-lapses that look like something from a bombastic commercial or video game. A movie that is supposed to make me feel the protagonist’s loss and helplessness in a harsh, hostile environment must be done differently. ()

novoten 

all reviews of this user

English Sometimes a more grown-up Disney movie, sometimes an uncompromising fight for survival, but throughout the entire running time, it's an avalanche of emotional decisions and breathtaking visual scenes. Almost every other shot of this (almost) inaccessible version of Brother Bear deserves its place like a picture on the wall. And I don't care deeply that it's not a groundbreaking story and that the dialogue sometimes comes across as pathetic phrases. Alpha tells a tale of such archetypal and almost life-giving stuff that the resulting avalanche of emotions loudly drowns out any criticism. ()

Gallery (40)