The Trail
The Trail
| 08 February 2006 (USA)
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After her mothers death, Grace, 14, decides to go back to Africa to find her father whom she hasn't seen since her parents divorced. After his plane crashes in the desert, her father gets caught by diamond hunters. Grace follows her fathers route along with family friend Kadjiro...

Reviews
Onlinewsma Absolutely Brilliant!
Yash Wade Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.
Leoni Haney Yes, absolutely, there is fun to be had, as well as many, many things to go boom, all amid an atmospheric urban jungle.
Kayden This is a dark and sometimes deeply uncomfortable drama
ThomsonAAA Gary, a passionate and romantic geologist had quit his job to stay on in Namibia, spellbound by the world he had been exploring for a mining company. He met his wife there and they brought up a daughter in a house in the bush, living side by side with the Himba people who took them as of their own.Years later something happened that broke the spell for his wife and she drove them to return to Europe. But Gary was compelled to go back, torn away from his family by the spell that never left him. "His body journeyed but his spirit never moved, sooner or later the question hits us, how far can we betray ourselves so not to lose the ones we love?" His young daughter could only see her loss and 3 years later at 14 follows him back to the desert to find out why he left her.Just as they were getting to know each other he makes a fated small plane journey over the bush. Trapped in a gorge by fierce winds he has no choice but to fly down in the opposite direction to where rescuers would expect him to be.Rescuers cannot find his plane but his daughter thinks she knows where he is and sets out with the help of old family friend Kadjiro, a Himba man on a journey of discovery across the desert and the past.------- Possible mild spoilers belowValli plays quite deftly with our preconceptions. Leads us down a few common routes before exposing the commonality of humans anywhere. He knows humanity enough to know we're all the same and so rare when stereotypes are such a safe box office bet, here we have a film maker showing us people with the stereotypes removed. This is far from gritty realism though, but also it is not fake. He shows a romantic vision, just like the very real beautiful landscapes he chooses to show us, he portrays the best of the humanity from even the most desperate of characters there.I suspect the relatively low rating this film is getting is at least partly from doubting it's realism. For anyone doubting the beauty portrayed of the land trust me it really does exist without CGI in this world, if you search for places we have hardly been. If you doubt the way the diamonds were there just think of all the other treasures laid out across this earth, for us to pick up and use or trade. If you doubt people like Gary really exist you really need to see more of the world and discover them, they are out there. A classic romantic hero in the French imagination but not so well understood by others i think. Surely Valli is one himself.I found this film quite captivating, clever on a number of levels and beautiful in many ways. Definitely deserving of more than the ratings given here so far. I think Valli should be proud of his achievement.
samson_deleila After her mother dies in Europe, 14-year-old Grace (Camille Summers) returns to Africa to see her father, Gary (Julian Sands), a geologist who's taken the exploitation of Africa's resources to heart. Grace and her dad have barely a day to get reacquainted before he flies off in a tiny plane to ferry urgent supplies.When he begins his return flight, he's whipped off course, crashes in sand dunes, and then he's taken prisoner by black guerrillas who are also diamond poachers.While search parties wait out bad weather, intrepid Grace sobers family friend Kadjiro (Eriq Ebouaney) from a drunken stupor to guide her through the merciless desert to find her father.