Sony
The film opens with Petit (Joseph Gordon-Levitt, donning a comically thick French accent and actually speaking quite a bit of French) addressing us, the audience, as he prepares to take us through his incredible journey firsthand.
At first, the camera is framed eerily close to his face, but once the camera pulls away, we realize Phillippe is standing in the torch of the (poorly computer-generated) Statue of Liberty, with the twin towers framed prominently in the background. The film cuts back to this sequence throughout, and Phillippe tells us how he feels every single step of the way.
By repeatedly breaking the fourth wall, Zemeckis is doubling down on the audience's interest in Petit. Gordon-Levitt's accented narration is the film's main narrative drive, which feels like a safety net to ensure that the audience is properly thrilled and impressed with Petit's passion and achievement. This is wildly unnecessary.
YouTube/Sony
Anytime "The Walk" gets you in its hold, Petit is seconds away from interrupting the flow to tell you how impressed you should be. He's constantly dictating his feelings and talking about his dream in an attempt to instill a sense of wonder that's already inherently there.
This irritating narration is rather disappointing, because when the film works, it works quite well. It's at its best when it circumvents these generic "true-story" pitfalls and just lets the characters breathe.
Technically speaking, the film is a mixed-bag. Some of the CGI is just terrible (the aforementioned opening sequence is pretty rough, as well as a weird scene with a bird), but once things kick into high gear during the finale, the effects are incredibly spellbinding.
YouTube/Sony
Zemeckis is a seasoned filmmaking veteran, so it's a bit of a surprise to see him lack the faith to fully commit here. The material is so ripe for a blockbuster experience, and while the last 30 minutes definitely deliver that, the film's many misfires really weigh it down.
Watch the trailer below.
"The Walk" opens in theaters nationwide October 9th and in IMAX 3D on September 30th.