Film Reviews, News & Competitions

 
 


 
LATEST
 

Beyond the Edge

 
 
Film Information
 

Plot: The story of Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary's monumental and historical ascent of Mt. Everest in 1953.
 
Release Date: 23rd May 2014
 
Director(s): Leanne Pooley
 
Cast: Chad Moffitt, Sonam Sherpa, John Wraight
 
BBFC Certificate: PG
 
Running Time: 90 mins
 
Country Of Origin: New Zealand
 
Review By: Dan Clay
 
Film Genre:
 
Film Rating
 
 
 
 
 


 

Bottom Line


There are many more tales this mountain has yet to tell but this is clearly the most remarkable


0
Posted May 21, 2014 by

 
Film Review
 
 

Mountaineering movies certainly peaked with 2003’s startlingly inspirational Touching The Void. Now, utilising dramatic reconstructions and 3D footage with archive clips and real-life testimony, Leanne Pooley ascends Edmund Hillary’s monumental 1953 climb of Everest to bring us Beyond the Edge, an inspiring tale of perseverance and courage.

Released before both The Summit and Jake Gyllenhaal-starring Everest this is thankfully no doomed-to-perish disaster flick that those offerings will, no doubt, be marketed as. Instead, Pooley wants us to join her in admiring those who made the dangerous climb to the top with modest gear and mountains of guts.

Of course the big draw here is probably the 3D panoramic footage, which looks stunning, as even the 2D landscapes are enough to take the breath away as figures from the expedition narrate through the difficulties encountered along the way.

However in amongst all the impressive cinematography, nestled amongst voiceovers from some of the key players, Pooley somewhere lost the sense of character and empathy which made Touching the Void so heart-breakingly compelling.

There’s no doubt – as the stock footage of the real life climbers testifies – that there’s plenty of emotional weight in this tale, meaning it’s an interesting choice to use actors and reconstruction for moments when real-life footage would suffice.

It’s a shame too that a film intent on showcasing how Man overcame nature should focus only on the rudimentary elements of climbing at times. Perhaps a more emotive score and ‘script’ might have made up for the lack of an emotional core at the heart of Pooley’s film.

However, once Hilary and Tenzing conquer their Everest and stand on top of the world, her use of such reconstruction is clearly justified to bring us a stunning moment and testament to the endurance of the human fight for achievement. There are many more tales this mountain has yet to tell (stay tuned for those two, mentioned above, sometime this/next year) but this is clearly the most remarkable.


Dan Clay

 


0 Comments



Be the first to comment!


You must log in to post a comment