Isolated

2013 "How fare are you willing to go?"
6.1| 1h25m| NR| en
Details

Five world class surfers travel to New Guinea in search of undiscovered waves, but end up discovering so much more.

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Reviews

Baseshment I like movies that are aware of what they are selling... without [any] greater aspirations than to make people laugh and that's it.
Odelecol Pretty good movie overall. First half was nothing special but it got better as it went along.
Deanna There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.
Zlatica One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.
tperez225 Admittedly I am not a surfer but I do enjoy surfing movies. I put this on in the background just for the noise. I hadn't seen the trailer and didn't know anything about it.The self righteous indignation from many of the reviews is surprising. They are up front about their intentions - simply to find the perfect wave. They did not start off with lofty pursuits just looking for a good wave. That they connected with the indigenous people of the area they were visiting was a turn in the story.I was not aware of the atrocities of the Papua people. I found the story compelling and enlightening. The surfers were clearly touched by the people they stayed with and are trying to take the message of those people to the rest of the world. Are they TFB - maybe - are they just rich surfers - probably - but they are using their position to shed light on a population who is being terribly abused.
pbaley I've read some rather obtuse reviews about this movie. The "Natives" that are boring and the TFB's that are there to surf and witness the atrocities...that is the point. Without awareness, when the world is blind to such matters, we fail. This, to Melanesia/West Papua, was a chance to inform others. Of course the TFB surfers were there. We need them to get the word out, because nobody listens to those with little status and no money. In accordance with UN and West Papua Decolonization, the stance from Kobe Oser was this, "focusing on the politics of decolonization and the UN Committee, as West Papua Melanesia is unfinished UN business (we were until 1962 as a Melanesia nation on the UN non-self governing territories list). I also addressed the producer (Geoff Clark) of the Isolated movie to congratulate them with the fantastic picture of Ryan Phillipe (see attachment) wearing a West Papua t-shirt! To get our struggle for independence and political justice recognized by the Hollywood entertainment industry and publicly by Ryan Phillipe is a huge boost! I also brought to their attention a big West Papua Rally which our friends from the advocacy organization ETAN." So I suggest that before anyone speaks hastily, they may want to learn about why it was done and how West Papua feels. Also, check out James Cameron's AvaTar Sands...another means to address a global problem. Don't criticize before you actually know. What is happening is not boring. It's real and perhaps parts are boring. Personal opinion. West Papua hopes that others will see and care.
enrico2000 I admit I didn't watch it until the end. But that was because I became bored with one too many scenes of native children playing in the surf, feral surfers showing children how to surf, ruminations about us all living together happily, surfing on low waves as they search for the big wave. A lady alluded to the fact that genocide is going on in the country and that it's being kept secret. But that has been known for a few years especially with the growth of the internet. Actually more inclusion of the human rights violations mentioned in the Netflix promo probably would have helped break up the drowsy inducing scenes of the hip young Westerners interfacing with their native hosts but as I said I finally couldn't take it anymore. Maybe at the end they found the big wave I don't know by then a wave of sleep had overtaken me.
simpleman2423 great chill filmI enjoyed vicariously witnessing wildly beautiful places with sanguine surfing explorers, and the side story's (which develops into THE story) added depth (which is all about caring for strangers) really fixed me happily to the whole tale. Another critic skewered this film for lack of integrity. If all he gathered from this film is that these surfers were "trust fund babies" on a vacation, then I think the guy is simply disagreeable. Sometimes the people trying anything they can think of to make a difference seem silly to people whose efforts have never reached beyond the criticism of others.