About Mine
Mine (2016) is a gripping survival thriller that plunges viewers into a harrowing tale of endurance against impossible odds. Directed by Fabio Guaglione and Fabio Resinaro, the film follows a United States Marine sniper (played with raw intensity by Armie Hammer) who becomes stranded in a North African desert after a failed assassination mission. His immediate challenge isn't just the scorching heat or lack of water, but the fact that he's stepped on an active landmine that could detonate with the slightest movement.
The film masterfully builds tension through its stark setting and psychological depth. As hours turn into days, the Marine battles not only physical dehydration and exposure but also haunting hallucinations and memories that blur reality. The minimalist premise becomes a powerful exploration of human resilience, guilt, and the will to survive. Armie Hammer delivers a compelling, largely solo performance that carries the film's emotional weight.
While the 5.8 IMDb rating suggests some narrative unevenness, Mine succeeds as a tense, atmospheric thriller that will appeal to fans of survival stories and war dramas. The direction creates palpable suspense, and the desert cinematography is both beautiful and terrifying. Watch Mine for a different kind of war movie—one where the battlefield is internal as much as external, and where every second of hesitation could be fatal.
The film masterfully builds tension through its stark setting and psychological depth. As hours turn into days, the Marine battles not only physical dehydration and exposure but also haunting hallucinations and memories that blur reality. The minimalist premise becomes a powerful exploration of human resilience, guilt, and the will to survive. Armie Hammer delivers a compelling, largely solo performance that carries the film's emotional weight.
While the 5.8 IMDb rating suggests some narrative unevenness, Mine succeeds as a tense, atmospheric thriller that will appeal to fans of survival stories and war dramas. The direction creates palpable suspense, and the desert cinematography is both beautiful and terrifying. Watch Mine for a different kind of war movie—one where the battlefield is internal as much as external, and where every second of hesitation could be fatal.


















