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In
June of 1985, two young and talented British climbers set out
to tame the unconquered west face of Siula Grande, a remote, twenty-one-thousand-foot
peak in the Peruvian Andes. Two-and-a-half days after tiptoeing
up near-vertical icefields, Joe Simpson and Simon Yates reached
the summit. Little did they know their epic was only beginning.
What ensued is one of the most gripping tales in mountain history,
a survival story to rival the great epics: the notorious 1996
Mount Everest tragedy (immortalized in Jon Krakauers Into
Thin Air) and Shackletons remarkable 1914-16 Antarctic
expedition.
Simpsons
Touching the Void, the story of how he survived to tell
the tale, has been turned into a finely wrought and highly compelling
docudrama by Kevin Macdonald, a filmmaker best known for his Academy
Award®-winning One Day in September. Macdonald and his film
crew restaged on location some of the most extraordinary
and realistic mountain climbing footage this climber/aficionado
has ever seen, intercutting these scenes with interviews with
Simpson, Yates and their base-camp companion, Richard Hawking.
The
line between safety and disaster in the high mountains is thin
and Simpson and Yates tested these limits to the full. Soon after
they began to descend, Simpson broke his leg and faced the arduous
task of climbing down while unable to walk. More unbelievable
than fiction, the climbers nightmare involves not only a
horrendous descent in a snowstorm, but a tortuous decision: When
the rope joining them turns into a death trap, Yates decides to
cut it (virtually criminal behaviour in the climbing world), sending
Simpson crashing into the depths of a crevasse and condemning
him to almost certain death. Very much alive, Simpson faces one
of those tests that, more often than not, end in tragedy. Touching
the Void at once deals with the unconquerable human spirit
and examines the ties that bind two men when they join themselves
by a rope and set off to challenge extreme landscapes. Beautifully
filmed, this retelling of an epic tale of survival takes us places
most would never dare visit.