In May 1996, several expeditions were high on Mount Everest,
making attempts on the summit on a part of the mountain often referred to as
the Death Zone. Things were already going wrong for them when a blizzard fell
over the mountain. In its wake, eight people died, five of them on the Nepalese
side of the mountain during the storm. The story has been documented before, in
Jon Krakauer’s eyewitness book Into Thin
Air. An IMAX film, Everest, told
the story as well; the IMAX team of climbers had been safe, lower on the
mountain during the storm, and took part in the rescue of climbers from the
high camps. The co-director of that film, David Breashers, would make a
documentary several years later, Storm
Over Everest, revisiting the disaster with commentary from the survivors.
Now a feature film about the tragedy is out in theatres, from director Baltasar
Kormakur.
The film opens with the climbing season at base camp
underway. Two guiding expedition companies are among the teams looking to climb
the mountain. One is led by a New Zealander, Rob Hall (Jason Clarke). He’s
promised his wife Jan (Keira Knightley) that he’ll be back home in time for the
birth of their baby. The other team is led by an American, Scott Fischer (Jake
Gyllenhaal). We meet Helen Wilton (Emily Watson), a base camp manager, Andy
Harris (Martin Henderson), a guide, and we meet some of the clients who are
paying to be guided up the mountain- Americans Beck Weathers (Josh
Brolin), Doug Hansen (John Hawkes), Jon Krakauer (Michael Kelly), and Japanese climber Yasuko Namba (Naoko
Mori). The expeditions set out up the mountain, through the dangerous Khumbu
Icefall and up towards the high camp, eager to reach the summit. Things go
wrong early- there are too many people high up on the mountain, turn-around
times are ignored, and the weather takes a turn for the worst.
The events of that year are well known- the disaster made
extensive coverage in the media at the time, and books and documentaries
explored it in the years afterwards. Screenwriters William Nicholson (Shadowlands, First Knight, Gladiator)
and Simon Beaufoy (127 Hours, Salmon
Fishing In The Yemen, The Full Monty) took those events and fashioned a
screenplay on it focusing much of the attention on the two expeditionary teams.
Unlike a scientific expedition (the IMAX team, for instance, were involved that
year in setting up seismic equipment on the mountain), guided expeditions were
the sort of operation that would hire themselves out to anyone with enough
money who wanted to tag the top to get them up there (one of the underlying
issues of the disaster, too many unqualified climbers on the mountain,
particularly at the highest altitudes all at once, and not much respect for the
Sherpas who do so much of the critical work at great risk on any given season
climbing there).
Nicholson and Beaufoy’s screenplay explores that- we see
people on that mountain who haven’t earned the right to be there, who are doing
it for their own egos. We also see people making mistakes- expedition leaders
feeling the pressure to get their clients on the summit disregarding their
better instincts, climbers not paying heed to turn around times. The story
keeps up the suspense, a formidable thing, considering the audience knows what
is coming. Themes are interwoven into the narrative- the hubris of humans, the
unforgiving power of nature, and the will to survive. There is some speculation
in the screenplay as to the fates of some of these people- in a couple of
cases, the bodies were never found, but the way the film presents their deaths
doesn’t seem implausible.
Kormakur is an Icelandic director, with a mix of European
and North American films to his name, though this is the first time I’ve seen
any of his work. Everest presents
quite a challenge for a filmmaker, and he comes through. While some location
filming was done in Kathmandu and around the Everest base camp, a good deal of
the location filming was done in the Italian Alps, while studio work and CGI
(quite convincing in both cases) managed for some of the sequences at the
highest parts of the mountain. The doubling of different locations for Nepal
(helped along by CGI) works- because let’s face it... no studio would
underwrite a film putting actors high up on the actual mountain.
Kormakur does a good job in conveying the tension of the story,
even for those who know the outcome, giving the audience a good sense of where
the climbers are at any given time. Early on that tension shows itself in the
Icefall, one of the most treacherous areas on the mountain, while later it
really shows itself during the height of the storm. The gear and clothing have
an authentic look- and I like the way the crew conveyed the ferocity of the
storm and its effect on high camps and the climbers themselves, both in terms
of CGI work and set work. I also like the way the crew conveys height, even on
studio set filming- there are sequences throughout the film that will give
problems to anyone who doesn’t like heights. It can, admittedly, be a problem
keeping track of who’s who, when many members of the cast are hidden beneath
winter coats, goggles, and oxygen masks, but everything looks like it belongs
up there. And I also like Dario Marianelli’s rich, evocative, foreboding score,
a good fit for the ominous mood of the film. It’s a sharp contrast, of course,
from some of his other work, such as the 2005 Pride & Prejudice or Salmon
Fishing In the Yemen.
The cast is well chosen, even if some of them don’t get a
whole lot to do. Robin Wright (The
Princess Bride) plays Beck’s wife Peach, worrying and uncertain through much
of the time she gets onscreen- and the character gets an emotional roller
coaster as one might expect as she waits on the other side of the world for
news. Naoko Mori as Yasuko Namba is an interesting touch- the woman is
separated from those around her by the language barrier, and so we don’t get to
know too much about her. The real Yasuko had climbed the other mountains in the
seven highest in the world, and was eager to cap that with Everest- and yet
fate ended up taking things in another direction during the height of the
storm. We can feel for her even at the end, and the actress and story take it
that way.
Emily Watson (Gosford
Park, The Boxer) gets the most to
do of the women in the cast, playing Helen as you’d expect when we first meet
her. As a base camp manager, she’s highly organized, quick to adapt, and given
the location, it’s a high stress sort of job even if things go well. The
character keeps things together (while dealing with the tremendous strain of
the situation. She’s something of a motherly sort- ironic, given that many of
the other characters are her age. Keira Knightley gets a chance to cry (given
the subject matter, totally understandable) as Jan, Rob’s wife, in New Zealand
and pregnant while all of this is going on. Her conversations with Rob are
poignant and heartbreaking- part of the emotional core of the film.
Jake Gyllenhaal plays Scott Fischer in a way that I would
expect- ambitious, tough, resourceful, and driven. Scott had the experience to
be on the mountain, with climbs on Everest, K2, and other peaks. He comes
across as a capable leader- perhaps pressuring himself more than anyone else to
get his clients on the summit (one of those mistakes that people keep making as
things go along). For all that experience though, Scott was hiding something
else that was a problem even before the storm- he was suffering from hypoxia
and likely cerebral edema during the climb, which left him lethargic at high
altitudes. Gyllenhaal takes these into consideration through his performance,
and as the story goes along and things get worse, he really conveys the man’s
sense of exhaustion and the notion of a man at the end of it all.
If the marriage between Rob and Jan is one of the emotional
cores of the film, the other is Beck Weathers, and Josh Brolin brings the
character to life. The man himself provides one of the few positives about that
disaster- the sheer willpower of someone literally left for dead at the top of
the world, getting up and moving on his own- if there are miracles in this world,
that’s definitely one. Beck survived the storm, paid a steep price in physical
damage, and yet his spirit stayed strong, and Brolin, who has matured into a
strong actor, plays to that, portraying a decent man with an overpowering will
to live. I found myself wondering if
Brolin had spent time with Weathers and his family in preparing for the part.
Jason Clarke gets the role of the poignant New Zealander Rob
Hall, and it’s a good part to play. The actor’s done a lot in his native
Australia, but might be best known to international audiences for roles in Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes and Terminator Genisys. The real man, lost
in the storm high on the mountain, was by all reports a likable, decent fellow,
good natured and capable. Having had missed the chance the previous year to get
his clients to the summit, he must have been putting pressure on himself to rectify
that in 1996. Things go wrong- Doug isn’t listening to those voices of warning
in his head, the same voices that tell other climbers to turn back and not push
for the summit. And while he has opportunities to descend on his own- to save
his own life- his sense of duty to the life of one of his own clients prevents
him from carrying that out. Clarke seems to bring all of that to life in his
performance, and particularly in the way he and Keira Knightley relate as a
married couple- they feel very believable, while Clarke’s take on Rob feels
quite true to life.
There have been yet more deaths on Everest in the nearly two
decades since that disaster. Guided expeditions continue to bring unqualified
climbers up to the highest point on the planet. The arrogance of man in the
face of nature persists. This, of course, is not a new thing, and there will,
time and time again, be yet more tragic deaths on the slopes of Everest. The
story of that one climbing season that plays out in this film captures the
ferocity of that storm well, demonstrating both the hubris of ambition and the
strength of the human will. I found the film both harrowing and enjoyable.
Though if one has a fear of heights, watching this might end
in a few years worth of therapy sessions.
Never seen these. I did graduate high school in 1996 though. ;)
ReplyDeleteI remember the times, but the mountain climbing trend was never really my thing, so the movie never interested me.
ReplyDeleteI read the book, "Into Thin Air" unbelievable. A great read.
ReplyDeleteFirst, picked it up because it was a interesting story even if I do not mountain climb. I knew the ending but I kept thinking that it had to end differently.
Second, because of one of my friends brother who was on the IMAX team (I think can't remember now) I was even more interested in the story.
I also saw the film "Everest" fabulous. I was so tense as the helicopters pilots flew higher than than they should have.
I rarely go out to movies now but the art direction on this one might make me go.
As always a great review.
Even though Tucson is not Everest we have people dying
every year climbing the hills, ravines and mountains around here. Not snow and ice but flash flood during the monsoons seasons. Every year newspaper, TV and radio tell everyone about the dangers and people just go off and do what they want. Just because it is not raining where you are does not mean a wall of water filled with boulders and trees is not coming your way.
People think they are infallible and do not listen to that little voice that tells you get out now.
cheers, parsnip
I don't know why this concept always freaks me out some. I guess I'm not terribly fond of heights and the concept of wanting to climb Everest is a bit beyond me. That being said, I can appreciate a good film about it, thanks for the great review!
ReplyDeleteI knew you'd see this one!
ReplyDeleteI'm not afraid of heights, but I don't think I'd ever want to climb Everest or any other mountain.
@Kelly: I recommend seeing this while it's in theatres.
ReplyDelete@Diane: mountaineering is a big thing for me.
@Parsnip: my parents knew one of the IMAX founders. Though he and the other founders were retired at this time, it wouldn't surprise me if he was called in on the efforts to reconfigure the IMAX camera so it could be taken to the top of the world.
@Meradeth: I would at least like to see the mountain for myself- a trip to base camp.
@Norma: it's not the fall that kills you, it's the sudden stop!
I'm going to pass. Fear of heights defines me. Sometimes. I just read about some intrepid climbers (National Geographic) trying to climb a mountain in the far east. Nobody's made the top to measure its GPS. They didn't make it, either..
ReplyDeleteI thought they were crazy for doing it. Good review, Sir Wills.
ReplyDelete