Parents' Guide to

Society of the Snow

Movie R 2023 144 minutes
Society of the Snow movie poster: Survivors try to get rescued

Common Sense Media Review

Jennifer Green By Jennifer Green , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 15+

Snowy survival tale has violence, emotional intensity.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 15+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 13+

Based on 3 parent reviews

age 15+

Incredible attention to detail with a lot of philosophical musings

The similarities to Alive (1993) are difficult to shake, but there are some key differences. The film is clearly told as an amalgamation of perspectives from the survivors. There is an incredible attention to detail, an omnipresent silence that permeates the film and a whole lot of philosophical musings. The pacing of the film is a bit clunky and self-absorbed, which is curious since this is clearly a story about surviving as a community. The emphasis of the survivor's ingenuity and consequently of the human spirit is in every frame. Bayona is skilled in centering all of the members of the fateful flight. I do not know if there could be too much deference, but perhaps Bayona played with that possibility a bit.
age 10+

Life Changing

If you fully absorb the message of this film, it just might change your life.

Arguably the best example of brotherly love ever committed to screen, Society of the Snow is a true story of mankind - abruptly stripped of all comforts and violently deposited in the harshest of circumstances, resolving to devote every breath to helping each other hold on to life.

This is the latest movie adaptation of the ordeal that unfolded on Friday, October 13, 1972 when Uruguayan Air Force flight 571, carrying 45 passenger & crew, slammed into the Andes Mountain Range, leaving 29 initial survivors, 16 ultimately, to navigate the next 72 days of extreme suffering in a place where “life is the anomaly”.

This event has undergone multiple movie iterations since it occurred. We’ve seen focuses on the gore (1973’s Survive!) and on a shared sense of humor & spiritually (1993’s Alive), but in Society of the Snow, it is the boundless generosity of heart and incredible dedication to one another that is uplifted most.

Providing far grittier depictions of the brutal conditions in which the young men were left, this film makes the extreme cold, hunger, and agony, feel intimate and visceral. The camera often brings us so close to the faces of characters that it feels we are right there with them during pivotal moments, but then pans out to show us the vastness of the Andes where they were stranded. The director’s stylistic choice to omit dialogue wherever a look / expression can convey a scene without words, is striking.

A South American cast lends additional authenticity to this version, and the bond the actors formed with each other is felt through their performances. There is deep and intense love in their interactions. Obviously taking on the roles of the Andes survivors has impacted the young actors immensely, and that effect is imparted to viewers, as well.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (3 ):
Kids say (2 ):

This true events-based film's impressive production values compensate for a two-and-a-half-hour ordeal of disaster, death, and survival. Society of the Snow focuses on the realistic horrors of what the passengers aboard a crashed Uruguayan jet suffered to survive for months in the remote Andes mountains, including cannibalism. Though director J.A. Bayona and co-scripters Nicolás Casariego and Jaime Marques weave in themes questioning the meaning of life and death in the face of meaningless tragedy, the movie centers on the calamities more than the characters.

The script offers a limited backstory and development of the individuals' lives and personalities. We care about their survival because they are the ultimate underdogs, and fewer and fewer keep making it through the unthinkable. We watch them struggle against every possible odd and want there to be purpose to their suffering. Bayona throws disturbing images at us—starting with the realism of the crashing bodies when the plane goes down, and ending with a stripped-down view of their battered physiques and psyches. He relies on effects, including an impressive sound design and intermittent extreme wide shots and close-ups, to convey the psychological and physical trauma of these men. The feat is sure to win the team technical recognition, but it won't be for all audiences.

Movie Details

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