These days, we see suffering streamed straight to our screens. Tragedy goes viral and real human pain is reduced to background noise. Every once in a while, though, a story reflects our society so clearly that it becomes impossible to look away. Francis Lawrence’s The Long Walk is one such story that hits close to home. Though it’s an adaptation of one of Stephen King’s earliest novels from nearly fifty years ago, The Long Walk remains eerily familiar today while telling a story of tenacity, human exploitation, friendship, and sacrifice.
Although King may be best known for horror, some of his most memorable works—The Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile, Stand by Me—stand out because they uncover the quiet strength and hope in everyday people. This movie follows that same path, showing what happens when a nation exchanges its conscience for a bit of entertainment.
Set in a dystopian America during the 1970s, The Long Walk depicts what happens when the state becomes god. The country is in an economic depression and the totalitarian regime has created an annual ritual that offers the only hope for many but requires a sacrifice. Fifty teenage boys, one for each state, are selected by lottery for the chance to win a great prize: wealth and the fulfillment of any wish. The catch is that they must remain the last one standing after a grueling, non-stop walk across America. They must keep a pace of at least three miles/hour and if they stop for sleep or bathroom breaks, or if they receive three warnings, they face execution.
What horrors do we witness daily with indifference? What injustices have we learned to scroll past? And most painfully, who have we silently decided doesn’t matter?
The film centers on Ray, a regular teenager-next-door who becomes the story’s emotional core. After his father dies, he lives alone with his mother and wants to provide a better life for them. Like the other boys, he “volunteers” for the Long Walk, but his choice isn’t about fame or glory. Rather, it comes from grief, desperation, and the kind of pressure poverty puts on those who have run out of options. Through Ray, we see just how cruel the system is; the state pushes its poorest kids to gamble with their own lives for even the slightest shot at a future. He’s the classic everyman thrown into something horrific because he loves his family and sees no other way.
Ray quickly forms a deep bond with Pete, who becomes his closest companion and the person he trusts most on the Walk. Pete is the type of guy who cracks jokes to hide his fear. He’s been hurt before, and it’s left him aching for real connection. He clings to friendship because it helps him define who he is in a world determined to erase that. His kindness, curiosity, and soft-heartedness make him the glue of the group, offering the other boys comfort in a world built to rob them of their humanity. His friendship with Ray becomes its own quiet rebellion, a way of saying that while the state might control their bodies, it can’t fully claim their hearts.
The duo soon falls in with several others: Arthur, a devout Christian and steady optimist; Hank, a loud-mouthed cynic; and Stebbins, who is quiet and insecure but physically adept. Each boy reveals a different way that people cope with suffering. Arthur becomes the group’s spiritual center, and though faith does not spare him from pain, it sharpens his sense of right and wrong. He prays over the boys, quotes Scripture, and speaks hope into their exhaustion. Arthur sees the Walk for what it truly is: a violent ritual dressed up as entertainment. And while he can’t change the regime, he resists it by treating the boys not as competitors, but rather, as valuable individuals. His optimism becomes a type of gentle protest, a reminder of the dignity the system tries to erase.
Hank, on the other hand, represents cynicism born from disappointment. He’s loud, blunt, and rarely filters what he says. His humor is sharp and often stings, but it cuts through the Walk’s cruelty in a way that nothing else can. Underneath the sarcasm, though, lies a kid bracing for disappointment from the world because it has never given him anything else. Hank reflects a common stance many people take in unjust societies: mock the system because you cannot change it. Underneath his show of bravery, he is actually very afraid, showing how mistrust often grows out of old wounds and lack of hope.
Stebbins is different: strong, capable, but emotionally distant. He walks at the edge of the road, detached from the other boys, always watching and rarely joining in. This makes the others uneasy, as if he knows something they don’t. He seems to understand the Walk on a deeper level and when he talks, he chooses every word carefully. In another life, his strength might have opened doors, but here, it’s just used against him. Eventually, we discover that the only reason he’s on the Walk is because of who his father is. He’s not walking to win the prize; he’s walking to be seen.
As the boys travel across the American landscape, crowds gather to cheer, soldiers march beside them, and cameras broadcast their every step live to a gawking nation. The boys form brief but meaningful connections along the way. They endure sleep deprivation, hunger, hallucinations, and the trauma of watching each other die. Their journey is both a test of physical endurance and a spiritual nightmare.
Leading their death march stands the Major, a cold, sunglass-wearing figure who feeds on control. He smiles at death, delights in fear, and enjoys the power he holds over the boys. As the Walk’s twisted leader, he resembles an anti-Christ figure, offering false blessing, false hope, and a false path to salvation. He demands loyalty but offers nothing in return. He symbolizes a godless, power-obsessed society. Whereas Christ lays down his life for others, the Major demands other lives to boost his own power.
Although the Walk is technically “voluntary,” it’s really the only chance that boys trapped in crushing poverty have. The system forces them to choose death, and even then, their sacrifice won’t change the world they long to escape. The Long Walk shows just how easily ordinary people can accept unthinkable things simply by going along with them. It highlights how society often forces its most vulnerable members to sacrifice dignity, health, and even their future simply to survive.
As the crowds line the road to cheer, the nation participates in its own spiritual decay. Adults and children clap as contestants fall. Only when the camera shifts to the grieving families of the fallen do viewers remember that these are not characters in a game—they are children. Watching such pain, we can’t help but ask ourselves: What horrors do we witness daily with indifference? What injustices have we learned to scroll past? And most painfully, who have we silently decided doesn’t matter? Jesus’ words in Matthew 25:40 resonate with fresh urgency: “Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these… you did it to me.”
Even though the Walk is built to turn the boys into enemies, deep friendships form, highlighting human compassion in a place meant to crush it. The boys share water and food, encourage each other, and tell jokes and stories to stay human while the Major insists they are nothing but numbers. But every friendship carries the pain of knowing that only one can survive. Ray and Pete choose connection anyway, symbolizing Christ’s teaching: “Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends” (John 15:13).
Unlike some Hollywood movies, The Long Walk does not offer easy redemption. The suffering is brutal and the boys die without honor. There are no hints of divine justice, no suggestion that good will overcome evil. God feels painfully absent here, and the film forces us to imagine a society where human power is the only authority left. Yet despite its bleakness, The Long Walk is impossible to look away from. The grotesque imagery and harsh language are unsettling but never gratuitous while the performances keep us emotionally tied to the boys and worried for each character’s fate.
In the end, this heartbreaking film leaves us with one truth: real sacrifice comes from love, not force. And whenever a society forgets that, it inevitably begins its own long walk toward destruction.

