Everest - Movie Review
Rating: 3 out of 5
With visually stunning imagery and a solid A-list cast, this film just about transcends its oddly uninvolving story. Based on true events, the scenes are harrowing and emotive, but spreading the story among an ensemble obscured by mountaineering gear and snowstorms makes it difficult to engage with anyone. And the plot-strands that do find emotional resonance feel like they've been manipulated.
In the early 1990s, companies began selling Everest expeditions to wealthy clients, and by the spring of 1996 there were 20 teams of climbers jostling for position on the slopes of the world's highest peak. Kiwi guide Rob (Jason Clarke) opts for a cautious approach with his team, which includes impatient Texan Beck (Josh Brolin), journalist Jon (Michael Kelly) and the nervous Doug (John Hawkes), who only just failed to reach the summit on his previous attempt. Rob's base camp manager Helen (Emily Watson) keeps everything running smoothly and, since the mountain is so overcrowded, Rob coordinates the climb with a rival guide (Jake Gyllenhaal) and his team. On the day of the final ascent, the skies are clear, but delays along the way and an approaching storm threaten the climbers.
Since the is a true story, it's clear from the start that some of these people won't make it home. And Icelandic director Baltasar Kormakur lays on the emotion thickly, with an overly pushy-majestic score by Dario Marianelli and several sentimental phone calls home. Rob's wife is played by Keira Knightley, and you can almost hear the ominous chord when she reveals that she's pregnant. A bit subtler is Beck's interaction with his wife, played with insinuating bitterness by the always terrific Robin Wright. Meanwhile, Clarke's sensitive leader and Brolin's bullheaded alpha male contrast nicely with Gyllenhaal's cool dude, while Sam Worthington is almost lost in the shuffle as a friend who's climbing a neighbouring peak.
Visually, the film looks terrific, as Salvatore Totino's ice-clear photography is edited seamlessly with a lot of whooshing digital effects shots that swirl around Everest's summit. But as the events become increasingly harrowing, keeping track of who's whom under all those snowsuits and goggles isn't very easy, and the film's point of view is fragmented between so many characters that there isn't really a through-story to grab hold of. Not to mention the fact that it's difficult to identify with stinking rich people who think they can buy their way to an achievement like climbing Everest while ignoring the danger to themselves and the people they have hired to convey them to the top. Intriguingly, this rather grim but important truth is what lingers, rather than the tale of heroism and sacrifice the filmmakers try to sell us.
by Rich Cline
Watch the trailer for Everest here:
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Facts and Figures
Year: 2015
Genre: Action/Adventure
Run time: 44 mins
Distributed by: MacGillivray Freeman Films
Production compaines: Universal Pictures, Working Title Films, Walden Media, Cross Creek Pictures, Free State Pictures, RVK Studios
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 3 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 93%
Fresh: 13 Rotten: 1
IMDB: 7.2 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Baltasar Kormakur
Producer: Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Nicky Kentish Barnes, Liza Chasin, Evan Hayes, Brian Oliver, Tyler Thompson
Screenwriter: William Nicholson, Simon Beaufoy
Starring: Jason Clarke as Rob Hall, Jake Gyllenhaal as Scott Fischer, Josh Brolin as Beck Weathers, John Hawkes as Doug Hansen, Sam Worthington as Guy Cotter, Robin Wright as Peach Weathers, Keira Knightley as Jan Hall, Clive Standen as Ed Viesturs, Emily Watson as Helen Wilton, Mia Goth as Meg, Michael Kelly as Jon Krakauer, Martin Henderson as Andy Harris, Elizabeth Debicki as Dr. Caroline Mackenzie, Tom Goodman-Hill as Neal Beidleman, Vanessa Kirby as Sandy Hill Pittman, Naoko Mori as Yasuko Namba, Mark Derwin as Lou Kasischke, Thomas M. Wright as Mike Groom
Also starring: Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Nicky Kentish Barnes, Liza Chasin, William Nicholson, Simon Beaufoy