Welcome to Marwen Trailer Decode: Too early to shed tears
Published On: 19 July 2018 | Hollywood | By: Kezia M. James
Opening our eyes to the victims of brutal attacks and misfortune
Welcome to Marwen is an upcoming American biographical drama film co-written and directed by Robert Zemeckis. It is inspired by Jeff Malmberg's 2010 documentary Marwencol. The film stars Steve Carell, Leslie Mann, Diane Kruger, Merritt Wever, Janelle Monáe, Eiza González, Gwendoline Christie, Leslie Zemeckis, and Neil Jackson. The film will be released by Universal Pictures on December 21, 2018.
The upcoming feature film from Robert Zemeckis is based on a documentary, Marwencol, by Jeff Malmberg, which tells the story of Mark Hogancamp, who loses his memories after being beaten almost to death, and as a form a therapy (because he can afford no other), he makes a replica of a tiny Belgian village and populates it with characters that represent him and those in his life — both loved ones, and his attackers.
It's too early to be crying already, that too over a trailer. But this is the truth. The trailer has us clutching on to our hankies and tissues crying over the true life story of Mark Hogancamp. The acting we see only for a few minutes by Steve Carell is breath taking and beautiful. It truly brings out the essence of what Hogancamp had gone through in his life.
The movie takes us to a place where Mark is trying to get over his attacks and try to remember his life before the incident of him being brutally beaten up by thugs. The story line also revolves around the Nazis and the plight that they put people through.
Here is the Trailer,
Not only heart wrenching, but truly inspirational.
Tags: Hollywood Welcome to Marwen
Free Movie Tickets Contest currently active on Moviekoop.
Hindi,Telugu,Tamil,Malayalam,Kannada | 25 December 2024
Hindi | 25 December 2024
Hindi,Telugu,Tamil | 10 January 2025
Telugu | 27 March 2025
Tamil | 2025
Trending:
Ram Charan and Kiara Advani Shine in 'Dhop' Song from Game Changer
Fashion:
Movie Reviews:
UI Movie Review: A Bold, Flawed Experiment by Upendra