Adventure
Action
A Viking boy is left behind after his clan battles a Native American tribe. Raised within the tribe, he ultimately becomes their savior in a fight against the Norsemen.
Directors
Karl Urban
Ghost
Moon Bloodgood
Starfire
Nicole Muñoz
Little Sister
Clancy Brown
Gunnar
Jay Tavare
Blackwing
Ray G. Thunderchild
Elder #1
Ralf Moeller
Ulfar
Russell Means
Pathfinder
Nathaniel Arcand
Wind In Tree
Michelle Thrush
Indian Mother
Kevin Loring
Jester
Wayne Charles Baker
Indian Father
Burkely Duffield
Ghost, 12 Years Old
Duane Howard
Elder #2
Brandon Oakes
Elder #3
Stefany Mathias
Flashback Mother
Ken Jones
Ghost Father
Barney
Bear (uncredited)
Directors
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User reviews3
Review
Featured review
_**Great-looking action/adventure flick is dramatically weak and banal**_
Vikings come to North America hundreds of years before Columbus bringing death & destruction to the Beothuk people in what is now Newfoundland. One of the latter, Ghost (Karl Urban), is actually a Viking by blood, a survivor of a previous Viking expedition.
I thought this was going to be some low-budget Syfy flick but, no, "Pathfinder" (2007) is a theatrical release with stellar production values. The first thing I noticed was that the director is Marcus Nispel, who went on to direct the 2011 version of "Conan the Barbarian."
There are some glaring derivative bits sprinkled throughout, like Tarzan, "Conan the Barbarian" (1982), "Rambo 2," "Last of the Mohicans," and so forth. This isn't helped by forced lines, like the exchange about the two wolves within each individual. Clichéd bits like this CAN work, but they have to be better executed.
The antagonists are the Vikings, who are depicted as comic booky inhuman monsters, whereas the natives are virtuous. This brings up the whole nature vs. nurture issue as Ghost is of Viking heritage but because he's brought up by the spiritual Beothuk people he isn't corrupted by the Vikings' ways. This suggests that evil or immorality is socially spread.
Russell Means, who played Chingachgook in "Last of the Mohicans," is on hand as the elder Pathfinder. It's great to see him still truckin' along at almost seventy years old.
The film was shot in British Columbia in mostly forest settings, but with occasional mountains that don't look much like the Northeast; some do though. Despite this flaw, "Pathfinder" is a visually striking film from beginning to end, and I don't just mean the scenery. Nispel knows how to make a spectacularly good-looking movie, that's for sure. In fact, it's so awe-inspiring it's worth the price of admission.
Unfortunately, I can't say the same for the story. Everything is here for a quality movie, but somehow the story just isn't all that captivating like "Last of the Mohicans" or the original "Conan the Barbarian," although it's serviceable. Some complain about the extreme violence but it's not necessarily a case of violence for the sake of violence as there are dramatic valleys to contrast the violent highs. Depth is hinted at, it just needed more. Meanwhile the overkill action sequences needed reigned in.
The film runs 1 hour, 39 minutes.
GRADE: C
Wuchak06 Feb, 2022
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Box office
Budget
$45,000,000Gross worldwide
$30,800,000



































































