Review by Jon Donnis
Francis Lawrence's 2025 adaptation of Stephen King's novel arrives with a brutal, uncompromising premise. The idea is stark and simple. Fifty boys are forced to walk until only one remains, watched by soldiers and a bloodthirsty public. That setup is the film's central currency, and it buys the filmmakers a mood that is bleak and unrelenting.
If there is a single thing the film does well it is acting. Cooper Hoffman as Ray Garraty is the reason to stay in your seat. He gives Ray a mix of stubbornness, fatigue and quiet decency that feels lived in. When the story narrows to small, human exchanges these scenes land, because Hoffman invests them with a weary sincerity. The main cast around him is serviceable, and the occasional flash of camaraderie among the boys is the movie's emotional glue.
But the positives are limited, in number and in reach. The problem is structural. Once you understand the rules of the Walk, there is not much left to discover. The film stretches that single idea to nearly two hours, and the result is a steady feeling of repetition. Deaths happen, grief follows, the boys talk, and the march continues. Over time the rhythm begins to feel like a loop, and the narrative rarely finds new momentum.
Predictability is another weight against it. Key beats arrive exactly as you expect, which robs the shocking moments of power. A bleak tone can be effective, but here it slides into monotony. Good performances cannot change that. The film feels paper thin at points, as if scenes exist to fill runtime rather than to deepen character or theme. If the core idea had been tightened into a shorter format it would have felt sharper and more urgent. As it stands, the film tests patience more than it rewards it.
There is a certain grim honesty to the movie, and that may appeal to viewers who want their dystopia raw and unadorned. Yet there is a persistent sense of missed opportunity. The material begs for a clearer emotional arc, or for more surprising turns that interrogate the premise instead of merely replaying it. What might work as a compact, forty-minute television piece feels overextended as a full-length feature.
In short, The Long Walk has a standout central performance and it commits to its bleak vision. It also overstays its welcome and offers little in the way of narrative invention. I left the cinema impressed by Cooper Hoffman and frustrated by how little else the film earned. My score is 4 out of 10.
In Cinemas Now