Touching the Void

Touching the Void


Starring:Brendan Mackey, Nicholas Aaron, Ollie Ryall, Simon Yates, Joe Simpson (II), Richard Hawking
Director: Kevin Macdonald
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
Product Type: DVD

Editorial Review:
Amazon.com
To describe Touching the Void as a mountaineering documentary would be to do this breathtaking drama an injustice. By intercutting narration from the climbers themselves with a nail-biting reconstruction of their remarkable adventure in the Peruvian Andes, the film has the best of both genres: the authentic stamp of factual storytelling and the edge-of-the-seat tension of a dramatic movie.

In 1985, two British mountaineers, Joe Simpson and Simon Yates, embarked on a daring--arguably reckless in the extreme--attempt to climb the previously unconquered mountain Siula Grande. A mixture of overconfidence in their own abilities and underestimation of the climb's difficulties brought them to grief after the successful slog to the summit. What follows is an often harrowing account of their perilous descent.

Based on Joe Simpson's gripping book, the film boasts glorious widescreen photography of Siula Grande and its notorious glacier. Actors take the place of the two climbers for close-ups, though Simpson did return to Peru in order to reenact parts of his dreadful crawl back down the ice. The story of Simpson's almost-superhuman fortitude has become legendary in climbing circles, and even for viewers uninterested in mountaineering, Touching the Void is an astonishing slice of real-life drama, magnificently retold. --Mark Walker
Touching the Void
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Harrowing Survival Story
  • Great Show
  • Awesome
  • Impressive
  • One of the most dramatic movies I've seen in a long time - no spoilers
Touching the Void
Starring: Brendan Mackey , Nicholas Aaron , Joe Simpson (II) , Simon Yates , and Ollie Ryall
Director: Kevin Macdonald
Manufacturer: MGM (Video & DVD)
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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Similar Items:
  1. Touching the Void: The True Story of One Man's Miraculous Survival
  2. Everest (Large Format)
  3. National Geographic - Everest 50 Years on the Mountain
  4. Into Thin Air: Death on Everest
  5. NOVA - Everest: The Death Zone

ASIN: B00020X94W
Release Date: 2004-06-15

Amazon.com

To describe Touching the Void as a mountaineering documentary would be to do this breathtaking drama an injustice. By intercutting narration from the climbers themselves with a nail-biting reconstruction of their remarkable adventure in the Peruvian Andes, the film has the best of both genres: the authentic stamp of factual storytelling and the edge-of-the-seat tension of a dramatic movie.

In 1985, two British mountaineers, Joe Simpson and Simon Yates, embarked on a daring--arguably reckless in the extreme--attempt to climb the previously unconquered mountain Siula Grande. A mixture of overconfidence in their own abilities and underestimation of the climb's difficulties brought them to grief after the successful slog to the summit. What follows is an often harrowing account of their perilous descent.

Based on Joe Simpson's gripping book, the film boasts glorious widescreen photography of Siula Grande and its notorious glacier. Actors take the place of the two climbers for close-ups, though Simpson did return to Peru in order to reenact parts of his dreadful crawl back down the ice. The story of Simpson's almost-superhuman fortitude has become legendary in climbing circles, and even for viewers uninterested in mountaineering, Touching the Void is an astonishing slice of real-life drama, magnificently retold. --Mark Walker

Description

From OscarÂ(r)-winning* director Kevin Macdonald comes a riveting true story a gripping, white-knuckle (The Village Voice) adventure culminating in a cliffhanger a real one (LosAngeles Times)! After scaling the never-before-conquered 21,000-foot Siula Grande, mountain climbers Joe Simpson and Simon Yates face their greatest challenge yet: getting back down. But when Simpson shatters his leg in an awful fall and the friends are separated by a series of devastating mishaps, their individual journeys become a voyage into extreme experience that should not be missed (New York Post)! *1999: Documentary Feature, One Day in September (with Arthur Cohn)

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Harrowing Survival Story.......2007-04-22

Two twenty-something friends go to a formidable mountain in the Andes for mountain climbing in 1985. Facing a mountain face to climb like never before, they have the fortune of meeting a stranger who agrees to stay at their base camp. Once they start the climb, they bring the basics: a woefully short gas supply for a mini stove and a little food. They plan to "pack sack," or take the mountain "in a single push". Sort of the bare-bones rendition of backpacking and mountain climbing, they run in peril unforeseen in their young, virile lives. Testing their strength, courage, and spirit, each have crucial decisions to make collectively and individually.

As a documentary and a reinactment, the project is particularly vivid. Being able to recall and honestly share their innermost thoughts is a real draw. Partly based on Joe Simpson's book and containing the interviews of both participants; the actors for Simpson, [Brendan Mackey] and Simon Yatey (Nicholas Aaron) reconstruct their ordeal well. 'Touching the Void' is a thoroughly absorbing journey recalling a harrowing struggle to survive.

5 out of 5 stars Great Show.......2007-04-15

I would recommed this show to anyone. The only part I didnt like is where he says the F word about 20 times in a row.

4 out of 5 stars Awesome.......2007-03-11

This DVD was awesome in that it put the book in great perspective. It's amazing they were able to film some of the things they did. It made me greatly appreciate the book and the story more.

5 out of 5 stars Impressive.......2007-03-09

Changed my views about discomfort and inconvenience. The first time I saw it, I said to myself "This is where I would have gone to sleep and died." Several times.

5 out of 5 stars One of the most dramatic movies I've seen in a long time - no spoilers.......2007-02-14

When I hear the word "docudrama," I usually laugh and think of the silly reenactments on CourtTV. I also think of prisoners and prison guards strutting before a camera, trying hard to make their lives and worlds significant to the law-abiding (or mostly law-abiding) people at home on their couches. There's a lot of flashing, fear-flavored graphics and sound effects, nauseating camera zooms, and an overbearing narrator manufacturing gravitas. The stories are compelling, but it's the manner in which they are presented that strikes me wrong. There's no "drama," but rather a cheap off-brand, melodrama, and the overall effect is one of flaccid entertainment instead of genuine humanity.

Touching the Void captures the true scope of a docudrama project. The goal is to as accurately as possible recreate the impossible. Director Kevin MacDonald's blend of gorgeous footage with crisp sound effects made me physically colder just watching and listening to them.

The best parts of the movie are those where the viewer feels that the director is attempting something new. Most of the film is a straightforward docudrama where the real-life people participate with artists in documenting and recreating the drama of an ordeal. There are moments, however, when artistic license intensifies the truth. Perhaps an ice axe tings sharply, and the sound seems to glisten like sunlight off the surrounding snow. My favorite, however, is when MacDonald accurately films what it's like to have a song truly lodged in your head. At that moment, I felt like I was watching and listening to something new.

There are plenty of movies about mountain climbing. Recent Everest expeditions on the Discovery Channel are intense: deformations from frostbite, poor decision-making in delirium, and even a climber's frozen death. As exciting as those Discovery Channel documentaries are, they still feel like prison melodramas to me. In Touching the Void, there's no real base camp or tanks of oxygen, just two young men moving up a large rock no one had ever climbed back in 1985, and only a handful have climbed since.
Touching the Void
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Harrowing Survival Story
  • Great Show
  • Awesome
  • Impressive
  • One of the most dramatic movies I've seen in a long time - no spoilers
Touching the Void
Starring: Brendan Mackey , Nicholas Aaron , Ollie Ryall , Simon Yates , and Joe Simpson (II)
Director: Kevin Macdonald
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

GeneralGeneral | Documentary | Genres | DVD | Video
DVDs Under $14.99DVDs Under $14.99 | Today's Deals in DVD | Special Features | DVD | Video
( T )( T ) | Titles | Features | DVD | Video
Used DVDsUsed DVDs | Stores | DVD | Video | Action & Adventure | African American Cinema | Animation | Anime & Manga | Art House & International | Classics | Comedy | Cult Movies | Documentary | Drama | Educational | Fitness & Yoga | Gay & Lesbian | Horror | Kids & Family | Military & War | Music Video & Concerts | Musicals & Performing Arts | Mystery & Suspense | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Special Interests | Sports | Television | Westerns
Similar Items:
  1. Touching the Void: The True Story of One Man's Miraculous Survival
  2. Everest (Large Format)
  3. National Geographic - Everest 50 Years on the Mountain
  4. Into Thin Air: Death on Everest
  5. NOVA - Everest: The Death Zone

ASIN: B00020BW4G

Amazon.com

To describe Touching the Void as a mountaineering documentary would be to do this breathtaking drama an injustice. By intercutting narration from the climbers themselves with a nail-biting reconstruction of their remarkable adventure in the Peruvian Andes, the film has the best of both genres: the authentic stamp of factual storytelling and the edge-of-the-seat tension of a dramatic movie.

In 1985, two British mountaineers, Joe Simpson and Simon Yates, embarked on a daring--arguably reckless in the extreme--attempt to climb the previously unconquered mountain Siula Grande. A mixture of overconfidence in their own abilities and underestimation of the climb's difficulties brought them to grief after the successful slog to the summit. What follows is an often harrowing account of their perilous descent.

Based on Joe Simpson's gripping book, the film boasts glorious widescreen photography of Siula Grande and its notorious glacier. Actors take the place of the two climbers for close-ups, though Simpson did return to Peru in order to reenact parts of his dreadful crawl back down the ice. The story of Simpson's almost-superhuman fortitude has become legendary in climbing circles, and even for viewers uninterested in mountaineering, Touching the Void is an astonishing slice of real-life drama, magnificently retold. --Mark Walker

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Harrowing Survival Story.......2007-04-22

Two twenty-something friends go to a formidable mountain in the Andes for mountain climbing in 1985. Facing a mountain face to climb like never before, they have the fortune of meeting a stranger who agrees to stay at their base camp. Once they start the climb, they bring the basics: a woefully short gas supply for a mini stove and a little food. They plan to "pack sack," or take the mountain "in a single push". Sort of the bare-bones rendition of backpacking and mountain climbing, they run in peril unforeseen in their young, virile lives. Testing their strength, courage, and spirit, each have crucial decisions to make collectively and individually.

As a documentary and a reinactment, the project is particularly vivid. Being able to recall and honestly share their innermost thoughts is a real draw. Partly based on Joe Simpson's book and containing the interviews of both participants; the actors for Simpson, [Brendan Mackey] and Simon Yatey (Nicholas Aaron) reconstruct their ordeal well. 'Touching the Void' is a thoroughly absorbing journey recalling a harrowing struggle to survive.

5 out of 5 stars Great Show.......2007-04-15

I would recommed this show to anyone. The only part I didnt like is where he says the F word about 20 times in a row.

4 out of 5 stars Awesome.......2007-03-11

This DVD was awesome in that it put the book in great perspective. It's amazing they were able to film some of the things they did. It made me greatly appreciate the book and the story more.

5 out of 5 stars Impressive.......2007-03-09

Changed my views about discomfort and inconvenience. The first time I saw it, I said to myself "This is where I would have gone to sleep and died." Several times.

5 out of 5 stars One of the most dramatic movies I've seen in a long time - no spoilers.......2007-02-14

When I hear the word "docudrama," I usually laugh and think of the silly reenactments on CourtTV. I also think of prisoners and prison guards strutting before a camera, trying hard to make their lives and worlds significant to the law-abiding (or mostly law-abiding) people at home on their couches. There's a lot of flashing, fear-flavored graphics and sound effects, nauseating camera zooms, and an overbearing narrator manufacturing gravitas. The stories are compelling, but it's the manner in which they are presented that strikes me wrong. There's no "drama," but rather a cheap off-brand, melodrama, and the overall effect is one of flaccid entertainment instead of genuine humanity.

Touching the Void captures the true scope of a docudrama project. The goal is to as accurately as possible recreate the impossible. Director Kevin MacDonald's blend of gorgeous footage with crisp sound effects made me physically colder just watching and listening to them.

The best parts of the movie are those where the viewer feels that the director is attempting something new. Most of the film is a straightforward docudrama where the real-life people participate with artists in documenting and recreating the drama of an ordeal. There are moments, however, when artistic license intensifies the truth. Perhaps an ice axe tings sharply, and the sound seems to glisten like sunlight off the surrounding snow. My favorite, however, is when MacDonald accurately films what it's like to have a song truly lodged in your head. At that moment, I felt like I was watching and listening to something new.

There are plenty of movies about mountain climbing. Recent Everest expeditions on the Discovery Channel are intense: deformations from frostbite, poor decision-making in delirium, and even a climber's frozen death. As exciting as those Discovery Channel documentaries are, they still feel like prison melodramas to me. In Touching the Void, there's no real base camp or tanks of oxygen, just two young men moving up a large rock no one had ever climbed back in 1985, and only a handful have climbed since.
Touching the Void [Region 2]
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Harrowing Survival Story
  • Great Show
  • Awesome
  • Impressive
  • One of the most dramatic movies I've seen in a long time - no spoilers
Touching the Void [Region 2]
Starring: Brendan Mackey , Nicholas Aaron , Joe Simpson (II) , Simon Yates , and Ollie Ryall
Director: Kevin Macdonald
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

GenresGenres | DVD | Video | Action & Adventure | African American Cinema | Animation | Anime & Manga | Art House & International | Classics | Comedy | Cult Movies | Documentary | Drama | Educational | Fitness & Yoga | Gay & Lesbian | Horror | Kids & Family | Military & War | Music Video & Concerts | Musicals & Performing Arts | Mystery & Suspense | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Special Interests | Sports | Television | Westerns
( T )( T ) | Titles | Features | DVD | Video
Used DVDsUsed DVDs | Stores | DVD | Video | Action & Adventure | African American Cinema | Animation | Anime & Manga | Art House & International | Classics | Comedy | Cult Movies | Documentary | Drama | Educational | Fitness & Yoga | Gay & Lesbian | Horror | Kids & Family | Military & War | Music Video & Concerts | Musicals & Performing Arts | Mystery & Suspense | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Special Interests | Sports | Television | Westerns
Similar Items:
  1. Touching the Void: The True Story of One Man's Miraculous Survival
  2. Everest (Large Format)
  3. National Geographic - Everest 50 Years on the Mountain
  4. Into Thin Air: Death on Everest
  5. NOVA - Everest: The Death Zone

ASIN: B0001B3ZI2

Amazon.com

To describe Touching the Void as a mountaineering documentary would be to do this breathtaking drama an injustice. By intercutting narration from the climbers themselves with a nail-biting reconstruction of their remarkable adventure in the Peruvian Andes, the film has the best of both genres: the authentic stamp of factual storytelling and the edge-of-the-seat tension of a dramatic movie.

In 1985, two British mountaineers, Joe Simpson and Simon Yates, embarked on a daring--arguably reckless in the extreme--attempt to climb the previously unconquered mountain Siula Grande. A mixture of overconfidence in their own abilities and underestimation of the climb's difficulties brought them to grief after the successful slog to the summit. What follows is an often harrowing account of their perilous descent.

Based on Joe Simpson's gripping book, the film boasts glorious widescreen photography of Siula Grande and its notorious glacier. Actors take the place of the two climbers for close-ups, though Simpson did return to Peru in order to reenact parts of his dreadful crawl back down the ice. The story of Simpson's almost-superhuman fortitude has become legendary in climbing circles, and even for viewers uninterested in mountaineering, Touching the Void is an astonishing slice of real-life drama, magnificently retold. --Mark Walker

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Harrowing Survival Story.......2007-04-22

Two twenty-something friends go to a formidable mountain in the Andes for mountain climbing in 1985. Facing a mountain face to climb like never before, they have the fortune of meeting a stranger who agrees to stay at their base camp. Once they start the climb, they bring the basics: a woefully short gas supply for a mini stove and a little food. They plan to "pack sack," or take the mountain "in a single push". Sort of the bare-bones rendition of backpacking and mountain climbing, they run in peril unforeseen in their young, virile lives. Testing their strength, courage, and spirit, each have crucial decisions to make collectively and individually.

As a documentary and a reinactment, the project is particularly vivid. Being able to recall and honestly share their innermost thoughts is a real draw. Partly based on Joe Simpson's book and containing the interviews of both participants; the actors for Simpson, [Brendan Mackey] and Simon Yatey (Nicholas Aaron) reconstruct their ordeal well. 'Touching the Void' is a thoroughly absorbing journey recalling a harrowing struggle to survive.

5 out of 5 stars Great Show.......2007-04-15

I would recommed this show to anyone. The only part I didnt like is where he says the F word about 20 times in a row.

4 out of 5 stars Awesome.......2007-03-11

This DVD was awesome in that it put the book in great perspective. It's amazing they were able to film some of the things they did. It made me greatly appreciate the book and the story more.

5 out of 5 stars Impressive.......2007-03-09

Changed my views about discomfort and inconvenience. The first time I saw it, I said to myself "This is where I would have gone to sleep and died." Several times.

5 out of 5 stars One of the most dramatic movies I've seen in a long time - no spoilers.......2007-02-14

When I hear the word "docudrama," I usually laugh and think of the silly reenactments on CourtTV. I also think of prisoners and prison guards strutting before a camera, trying hard to make their lives and worlds significant to the law-abiding (or mostly law-abiding) people at home on their couches. There's a lot of flashing, fear-flavored graphics and sound effects, nauseating camera zooms, and an overbearing narrator manufacturing gravitas. The stories are compelling, but it's the manner in which they are presented that strikes me wrong. There's no "drama," but rather a cheap off-brand, melodrama, and the overall effect is one of flaccid entertainment instead of genuine humanity.

Touching the Void captures the true scope of a docudrama project. The goal is to as accurately as possible recreate the impossible. Director Kevin MacDonald's blend of gorgeous footage with crisp sound effects made me physically colder just watching and listening to them.

The best parts of the movie are those where the viewer feels that the director is attempting something new. Most of the film is a straightforward docudrama where the real-life people participate with artists in documenting and recreating the drama of an ordeal. There are moments, however, when artistic license intensifies the truth. Perhaps an ice axe tings sharply, and the sound seems to glisten like sunlight off the surrounding snow. My favorite, however, is when MacDonald accurately films what it's like to have a song truly lodged in your head. At that moment, I felt like I was watching and listening to something new.

There are plenty of movies about mountain climbing. Recent Everest expeditions on the Discovery Channel are intense: deformations from frostbite, poor decision-making in delirium, and even a climber's frozen death. As exciting as those Discovery Channel documentaries are, they still feel like prison melodramas to me. In Touching the Void, there's no real base camp or tanks of oxygen, just two young men moving up a large rock no one had ever climbed back in 1985, and only a handful have climbed since.

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