Alive

Alive 7.1

On October 13, 1972, the plane of a Uruguayan rugby team playing in Chile crashed in the Andes. In the face of the ice and snow, more than 20 survivors tried their best to get out of this uninhabited land of death alive. After waiting hopelessly for the rescue team to be fruitless, they desperately had to face the cruel fact that they had to live on less and less food, that the altitude was cold and harsh, that they had suffered several avalanches and that they were filled with great fear of death. After heated discussion and inner struggle, they began to try some impossible things, eating dead bodies. Finally, more than 50 days after the plane crash, the weather gradually warmed up, and the rescue team finally found them. The sixteen people who survived finally walked out of the land of death and were reunited with their families again. The disaster survival film, directed by American director Frank Marshall, is based on the true story of British writer Pierce Paul Reid's reportage living: the Story of Andean Survivor. The film's realistic description of the desire for human survival once inspired the fierce discussion of life and morality in American society.