Now, I can't vouch for how the movie comes across in regular 2D viewing, and I understand that 3D and "The Walk" is like no other movie you have ever seen, and I am telling you that if you can afford it, see it in 3D and if possible at an IMAX theater, because you WILL feel like you're up there with Petit, and the stunning sense of making entire audiences feel the thrill just as much as Petit did is a truly rare entertainment experience that will likely be appreciated fondly for a lifetime.
Kudos go out to Zemeckis and everyone involved for managing to make the movie spine-tinglingly tense while somehow making it OK for kids to handle the tension, in addition to keeping it clean with little or no foul language. The only thing that might make parents get annoyed is that Petit decides the best way to feel if a narrow piece of rope reached his rooftop from the other Trade Center rooftop is to strip naked and feel around for it in the dark with every available inch of skin.
But the moment is so off the wall and silly, offering comic relief from all the tension while devoid of any sexual pretext, that seeing a bare-bottomed Petit dancing around in the dark for five to ten seconds should not spark any sinful thoughts in any viewer and should also not spark any parental concerns.
Filled with wondrous special effects that seem all too real, a witty and tension-packed screenplay that ultimately inspires viewers to make their own dreams come true, and a highly charismatic performance from Gordon-Levitt, "The Walk" is worth running to the theater for.