Based on 128 votes and 35 reviews.
outstanding
A great film for all. Inspirational!!!
A wonderful grown up movie so well directed and acted you felt like you were walking the road to Santiago also, being the 5th person! I would recommend this movie to my friends in a heart beat!
I won a free pass to this movie preview. I enjoyed the storyline. LOVED the Dutchman especially since I just had a visit from a Dutch cousin and the accent was so familiar and comforting. Typical Dutch stereotype played out in the movie, but found the character very endearing. Found the Irish dude tiresome. The Canadian woman did NOT look Canadian at all. I found the movie started to drag a bit about 3/4 way through, as it is quite a long movie. I wish that Martin Sheen's character would have talked more. I felt his feelings did not come out enough on screen, and that is what the story was centred around. A touching story, but not as emotional as I would have expected.
Moving, beautifully photographed story of a professional (Martin Sheen) who does not approve of his only son (Emilio Estevez) opting to walk the Camino de Santiago in Europe instead of finishing his PhD. When an accident claims his son's life only one day into the journey, he decides to finish it, scattering his son's ashes as he goes. Along the way, he meets with a Canadian woman fleeing an abusive relationship, an Irish travel writer struggling with writer's block. Comic relief is supplied by a pot-smoking Dutchman trying to lose weight to regain his wife's affection. If you're looking for a film that makes you think about what's really important in life, and don't mind the fact that