Kevin Macdonald's disappointing film recounts the disastrous 1985 attempt that Joe Simpson and Simon Yates made on the 21,000 foot Siula Grande in the Peruvian Andes.
Touching the Void (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:134
Fresh:125
Rotten:9
Average Rating:8/10
Consensus: Gripping even though the outcome is known.
Theatrical Release:Jan 23, 2004 Limited
Box Office: $4,527,224
Synopsis: In 1985, Joe Simpson and Simon Yates set out to climb the 21,000 feet Siula Grande mountain in the Peruvian Andes—the only mountain in the Peruvian range that hadn't yet been conquered. They were... In 1985, Joe Simpson and Simon Yates set out to climb the 21,000 feet Siula Grande mountain in the Peruvian Andes—the only mountain in the Peruvian range that hadn't yet been conquered. They were young, fit, skilled climbers and were confident that they would succeed where others would fail. Their story has become part of mountaineering legend. Simpson and Yates' method of climbing was Alpine Style—moving quickly up a mountain with the barest of supplies and no series of base camps. This approach left absolutely no room for error. Any problem they might encounter along the way would have extremely grave consequences. Following a successful three and a half day ascent, disaster struck. Simpson fell and broke several bones in his right leg. His lower leg pushed through his knee joint, crippling him. At that altitude and in those remote conditions, this was effectively a death sentence. With no food or water, severe dehydration and the ugly spectre of hypothermia before them, the climbers knew they had to get off the mountain—and fast. Yates was determined to find a way to get his friend home. They each had 150 feet of rope, which tied together so that Yates could lower Simpson down the mountain 300 feet at a time. The only complication was that Yates had to stop after each 150 feet and signal for Simpson to give him enough slack so that he could get the knot past his harness. Each drop down the mountain was agonizing for Simpson, but Yates had no choice but to ignore his partner's cries. Both of their lives were at stake. Things were progressing unexpectedly well when Simpson failed to respond to Yates' signal. Unable to move any further and having no idea why Simpson was not pulling at the rope, Yates positioned himself against the mountain face and waited in the blinding storm. He held onto the rope with all of his strength, but was all too aware that eventually his muscles would fail him and both would plummet down the incline. What Yates couldn't know was that he had unknowingly lowered the injured Simpson over the edge of a crevasse. Simpson was hanging over the sheer vertical face of the mountain. Joe remained suspended, unable to climb back up the rope with frostbitten fingers and unable to communicate with Simon above him. Simon hung onto the rope for an hour, with his strength ebbing away and Joe's weight on the rope slowly pulling him towards the edge of the cliff. Eventually Simon realized he was faced with an unthinkable dilemma: he could hang on to the rope until they were both pulled off the mountain. Logic would say that it would be better for only one man to die rather than both. But the biggest taboo that any climber can commit is to cut the rope that binds you to your partner. For a climber, it is unthinkable. Certain they would both soon be pulled to their deaths, Yates cut the rope… Based on Joe Simpson's international bestseller, "Touching the Void" combines dramatic and documentary techniques and is directed by Kevin Macdonald, the Academy Awardwinning director of "One Day in September." Produced by John Smithson and Sue Summers, "Touching the Void" will be released by IFC Films in January 23, 2004. -- © IFC Films [More]
Starring: Brendan Mackey, Aaron Nicholas
Starring: Brendan Mackey, Aaron Nicholas
Director: Kevin MacDonald
Director: Kevin MacDonald
Producer: John Smithson
Studio: IFC Films
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Reviews for Touching the Void
A vivid cinematic experience proving that the grip on narrative momentum evident in MacDonald's 1999 Oscar-winning account of the 1972 Munich Olympics hostage crisis, One Day in September, remains as powerful as ever.
Expertly told, the doc ratchets up horrifying tension that's almost unbearable.
Kevin Macdonald's documentary/ docudrama juxtaposes stunningly beautiful scenery and the nearly unbelievable true story of a mountain-climbing expedition gone awry to chilling effect.
Invigorating and exciting, Kevin Macdonald's docu-drama is excruciating in its emotional involvement.
Few films have portrayed the resiliency of the human spirit with the stark realism of Touching the Void.
The facts drop away, and it becomes impossible not to read the movie symbolically -- as a journey to the center of the earth, or farther still.
Full of breathtakingly sublime photography, awful dilemmas and cliffhanger suspense.
The brilliance of Mike Eley's cinematography creates a profound sense of the smallness of man in a magnificent but indifferent universe.
Moral quandaries and the insouciance of youth aside, Void has to be the most dangerous-looking, thrill-packed mountaineering movie ever made.
A truly moving tale about that strongest of human instincts: survival.
A good pseudo-documentary, but the nagging questions could’ve easily replaced the wasteful screen time given to hammering home the obvious situation: that these climbers found themselves in quite a bind, with only instinct keeping them alive and moving.
Harrowing suspense is maintained at a high level, even though we know the outcome.
Survival stories tied to extreme activities always come with caveats ... All cynicism vanishes once Touching the Void, a docudrama by Oscar- winning director Kevin Macdonald, charts climber Joe Simpson's excruciating descent.
First you get to see some amazing climbing footage, then you experience an ordeal that is hard to believe even after seeing it happen. What a powerful story.
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