The Grey Review: Liam Neeson Discovers Wolves Don't Like Company
By Kelly Twedell This movie pits man against the wolves following a horrific airplane crash in Alaskan weather conditions. More specifically a crew of oil rig workers who struggle against a pack of wolves. The title could mean two things – either the
The Grey could be used as an anti-tourism ad for Alaska: your plane will crash in the snowy wilderness somewhere and you will get eaten by wolves welcome!
Beware the wolf pack. No, it's not another sequel to 'The Hangover,' but something almost as scary. Action-horror hybrid 'The Grey' pits man (Liam Neeson) versus wild (bloodthirsty wolves) in a sub-Arctic death match.
Heigl quit a lucrative TV career on 'Grey's Anatomy' to pursue romantic comedies, but her recent films have been lackluster. Ramin Setoodeh went to a midnight screening of her new movie, which wasn't screened for critics, to find out what's going on.
The Grey is gruesome at times, but it's also involving emotionally, as the puny mortals reveal themselves to each other in the face of something as insurmountable as the frigid Alaskan outback.







