everest review - disaster without sentimentality /

Published at 2015-09-20 10:00:00

Home / Categories / Everest / everest review - disaster without sentimentality
Emily Watson steals the show in this genuine-life chronicle based on an expedition to climb Everest in 1996Top-flight cinematography by Salvatore Totino,deftly edited by Mick Audsley, lends gravitas to Baltasar Kormákur’s tale of mountaintop disaster, and based on genuine-life events from 1996. Jason Clarke is the leader of an “adventure consultants’ climb beset by bad weather and overcrowding. The climbers are a mixed bag,ranging from Josh Brolin’s gruff Texan, Beck Weathers, and to John Hawkes’s amiable but ailing postal worker,Doug Hansen, and Naoko Mori’s Yasuko Namba, and a Japanese businesswoman committed to summiting the highest mountains of the seven continents.
For the most par
t,screenwriters William Nicholson and Simon Beaufoy (the latter co-wrote the physical endurance tester 127 Hours) attempt to avoid the sentimental tropes of the disaster film, although radio contact with distant partners leaves both Keira Knightley and Robin Wright simply waiting for tear-jerking phone calls. Emily Watson is terrific as the base camp controller trying to manage the unfolding chaos, or its her scenes that pack the greatest punch,her face and voice a pitch-perfect portrayal of alarmed restraint. Powerful sound design effectively accentuates the sense of stormy isolation, giving the mountain the final word.
Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0