Become a Member
Life

The Long Walk: ‘call it the Dystopian State Teen Killing genre’★★★★

One hundred young men compete in an endurance event until there is only one is left. Those who are moving too slowly are shot in the head in this tough-to-watch movie adapted from Stephen King’s first novel

September 16, 2025 15:00
sdf
Death march: Cooper Hoffman (centre, in hat) and David Jonsson (third from left) in Frances Lawrence's The Long Walk
2 min read

Frances Lawrence has directed most of the Hunger Games franchise, which is possibly one reason why this tough-to-watch movie – adapted from Stephen King’s first novel – feels as if it belongs to the same genre.

Call it the Dystopian State Teen Killing genre. They feature a totalitarian country whose government sacrifices its youth as a way of both suppressing dissent and entertaining the masses. This one is set in an America experiencing “economically desperate times” after a war.

Photographed in muted light and colours, the period has the look and feel of the Great Depression, though it chimes too with the 1960s, the decade in which King wrote his novel, which, although it was his first, came out in 1979 five years after his published debut, Carrie.

The plot is simple. One hundred young men are chosen from millions of applicants to walk a road across dystopian landscape until there is only one competitor left. Those moving at less than four miles per hour are given a warning.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.

Topics:

Film