Martin Sheen stars in The Way Movie Review
Martin Sheen stars in The Way - Movie Review Movies for Grownups
Directed by Emilio Estevez
Rated PG-13, Runtime: 115 mins.
Stars: Emilio Estevez, Martin Sheen and Deborah Kara Unger A story about a father and son, The Way succeeds in large part because it stars Martin Sheen, the real-life father of the film’s writer and director, Emilio Estevez. It is also the tale of a literal journey that leads to a spiritual, personal transformation, and that is territory that Sheen — survivor of both addiction and heart disease, parent of a wayward son, devout Catholic — knows well. Sheen makes this film work, though he couldn’t have done it without his son. See also:
The Way begins with Tom (Sheen), a widowed ophthalmologist, filling his days with work and golf. He argues with his only son, Daniel (Estevez), who has decided, at almost 40, that he’s not going to complete his doctoral dissertation but is instead going to set out to see the world. “You don’t choose a life,” the son tells his dad, “you live one.”
Movie Review The Way
Emilio Estevez' s uplifting story of life and purpose
Everett Collection From left: Martin Sheen, James Nesbitt, Deborah Kara Unger and Yorick van Wageningen star in The Way.Directed by Emilio Estevez
Rated PG-13, Runtime: 115 mins.
Stars: Emilio Estevez, Martin Sheen and Deborah Kara Unger A story about a father and son, The Way succeeds in large part because it stars Martin Sheen, the real-life father of the film’s writer and director, Emilio Estevez. It is also the tale of a literal journey that leads to a spiritual, personal transformation, and that is territory that Sheen — survivor of both addiction and heart disease, parent of a wayward son, devout Catholic — knows well. Sheen makes this film work, though he couldn’t have done it without his son. See also:
The Way begins with Tom (Sheen), a widowed ophthalmologist, filling his days with work and golf. He argues with his only son, Daniel (Estevez), who has decided, at almost 40, that he’s not going to complete his doctoral dissertation but is instead going to set out to see the world. “You don’t choose a life,” the son tells his dad, “you live one.”