It’d be easy to call Everest
a man versus nature story, but that’s downplaying the extent to which
nature dominates. It’s never a fair fight. Telling the true story of a 1996
storm that left a group of mountain climbers stranded at the world’s tallest
peak, making the return climb treacherous and nearly impossible, the film
creates an enveloping sense of natural danger. When the winds kick up and gusts
of snow pummel the characters as they stumble along narrow paths, clinging to
guide ropes near cavernous drops, there’s a convincing sense of disorientation
and danger. One wrong step, one wrong decision, and it could mean certain
death. In the film’s most haunting image, a struggling member of the group
steps wrong, wobbles, and simply disappears, falling off the edge of the frame
while a man in the foreground holds on for dear life. He glances back, notices
with horror the empty hooks swinging in the storm, and then continues trudging
foreword towards his ultimate fate. As one character ominously warns early on,
“the mountain always has the last word.”
Shot with solid meat-and-potatoes sturdiness and completely
convincing effects and stunts, director Baltasar Kormákur (Contraband) indulges in a few sweeping spectacular vistas, but
otherwise keeps the epic backdrop in the background. He chooses instead to
focus on the people making their way through the landscape, as they joke, bond,
argue, succeed, struggle, and die. William Nicholson (Unbroken) and Simon Beaufoy (127
Hours), no strangers to stories of remarkable survival, have written a
screenplay interested in process and procedure, spending a great deal of time
assembling the team and taking them through the steps of an ordinary climb up
Everest, a fraught and fascinating prospect in and of itself. It’s clear how
slow, difficult, and challenging it is to climb any mountain, let alone
Everest. There are medical concerns, perilous heights, unexpected delays, deadly
cold, and dwindling oxygen. And that’s before the storm even starts.
The main characters are a crew from New Zealand running an
expedition up the mountain, a guide (Jason Clarke), a base camp supervisor
(Emily Watson), and a doctor (Elizabeth Debicki). Their clients include a
mailman (John Hawkes), a wealthy Texan (Josh Brolin), a journalist (Michael
Kelly), and an experienced climber (Naoko Mori). Also on the mountain are rival
groups, including one led by a brash American (Jake Gyllenhaal) trying to reach
the summit, and one (led by Sam Worthington) going up the shorter mountain next
to it and can only watch in horror as the storm clouds roll in over their
colleagues. It’s not always easy to tell all these people apart, especially
once they have oxygen masks over their faces and ice-covered hoods pulled low
over their goggles. We see only figures struggling up the mountain, and then
feeling the panic kick in once they desperately need to get back down.
When a mask is pulled off, revealing the character actor
beneath, it’s easier to tell who is where. But maybe the point is to mimic some
of the disorientation of thin air and exhausted lungs. The performances are
solid physical presences, filling their corners of the frame with a sturdiness
and confidence that’s all the more difficult to see fade away. Some are
unpersuasively overconfident. Others are understandably worried. There are
token characterizations to flesh out the ensemble. We hear reasons for the trip
– to be brave, to be accomplished, to be awed – and overhear sentimental calls
back home to nervous wives (Keira Knightley cuddling a fake pregnant belly, Robin
Wright corralling teens). But these biographical details are sparse, adding
only reliable extra gloom as the camera contemplates the thunderous darkness
encroaching.
Kormákur shoots the proceedings with a relatively restrained
eye. He doesn’t amp up the action, provide CGI dazzle, or find room for unrealistic
cinematic heroics. As small mistakes and nature’s fury combine, death comes
quickly for some, slowly for others, and narrowly misses still more. Cinematographer
Salvatore Totino’s wide lenses capture an immense sense of beauty and danger,
while the sound effects crunch and howl. It never comes to life as a personal
journey, the characters remaining too vague to really develop, but as a view of
process – of a feat of mountaineering giving way to a struggle to make it back
alive – it’s gripping. As it narrows to consider the tiny interpersonal moments
that seal each one’s fate, there are moving moments of triumph and pain,
flashes in a storm that wipes away all certainty. It’s a big Hollywood epic
with a small eye, with stories of survival not through any grand action,
but through endurance and chance. It has the trappings of a disaster movie, but
none of the thrill. It starts with cautious excitement, turns scary, then left
me feeling only sad.
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