SCAN: Man on Wire

SCAN: Man on Wire

V

Genre

Documentary

Run time

1h 30min

August 7, 1974. A young Frenchman named Philippe Petit steps out on a wire suspended 1,350 feet above ground between the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center. He dances on the wire with no safety net for almost an hour, crossing it eight times before he is arrested for what becomes known as “the artistic crime of the century”. In the months leading up to his clandestine walk, Petit assembles a team of accomplices to plan and execute his “coup” in the most intricate detail. How do they pull it off? Like a band of professional bank robbers, the tasks they face seem virtually insurmountable. But nothing will thwart Philippe Petit mission to conquer the world’s tallest buildings.

“I think there's an important moral in Philippe's story, which I think the film offers up, which is that nothing is impossible. If you want to do something badly and passionately, you go about it with passion and meticulous preparation, one step at a time. You can do things that can surprise yourself”, – says director James Marsh.

James Marsh is a well-known documentary filmmaker, and his work has won numerous British awards for excellence in the documentary field, as well as international prizes. His breakthrough documentary, “Troubleman” (1994), chronicled the last years of soul singer Marvin Gaye and his murder. Marsh’s first dramatic feature film, “The King”, screened at the Cannes International Film Festival in 2005.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1155592/

Genre

Documentary

Run time

1h 30min

August 7, 1974. A young Frenchman named Philippe Petit steps out on a wire suspended 1,350 feet above ground between the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center. He dances on the wire with no safety net for almost an hour, crossing it eight times before he is arrested for what becomes known as “the artistic crime of the century”. In the months leading up to his clandestine walk, Petit assembles a team of accomplices to plan and execute his “coup” in the most intricate detail. How do they pull it off? Like a band of professional bank robbers, the tasks they face seem virtually insurmountable. But nothing will thwart Philippe Petit mission to conquer the world’s tallest buildings.

“I think there's an important moral in Philippe's story, which I think the film offers up, which is that nothing is impossible. If you want to do something badly and passionately, you go about it with passion and meticulous preparation, one step at a time. You can do things that can surprise yourself”, – says director James Marsh.

James Marsh is a well-known documentary filmmaker, and his work has won numerous British awards for excellence in the documentary field, as well as international prizes. His breakthrough documentary, “Troubleman” (1994), chronicled the last years of soul singer Marvin Gaye and his murder. Marsh’s first dramatic feature film, “The King”, screened at the Cannes International Film Festival in 2005.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1155592/