Seven Years In Tibet (1997) Synopsis & Summary

Synopsis

Typically impressive natural vistas from director Jean-Jacques Annaud (some secretly filmed on location in Tibet) highlight this adaptation of the memoir by Heinrich Harrer. Brad Pitt stars as the arrogant Heinrich, a famed Austrian mountain climber who leaves behind his wife and infant son to head a Himalayan expedition in 1939, only to fall into the hands of Allied forces as a prisoner of war. He and a fellow escapee, Peter Aufschnaiter (David Thewlis), make their way to the Forbidden City in Tibet, where Peter finds a wife and Heinrich befriends the Western culture-obsessed teenage Dalai Lama (Jamyang Jamtsho Wangchuk), the spiritual leader of his Buddhist nation. As Heinrich waits out the war, his friendship with the Dalai Lama begins to transform him from haughty to humble, but a crisis with China looms. A controversy over the revelation of the real-life Harrer's Nazi Party affiliation brewed during the film's production, forcing Annaud to briefly deal with the subject in the film. - Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Movie Info

Theatrical Release Date:
10/08/1997
DVD Release Date:
04/07/1998
Rating:
PG-13
MPAA Reasons:
for some violent sequences.
Run Time:
134 min.
Distributor(s):
Sony
Production Co.:
Applecross, Mandalay Pictures, Repérage, Sony Pictures Entertainment, TriStar, Vanguard
Director(s):
Genre(s):
Themes:
Colonialism, Heroic Mission
Tone:
Atmospheric, Compassionate, Earnest, Literate, Meditative, Reflective
Keywords:
Austrian [nationality], Buddhism, China, Dalai Lama, Himalayas, POW (Prisoner of War), Tibet, mountain-climbing
Time Period:
World War II
Language:
English
Version of / Remake of:
Status:
DVD