THE
CLIMBERS (2019)
Starring
Wu Jing, Zhang Ziyi, Zhang Yi, Jing Boran, He Ge, Jackie Chan.
Directed by Daniel Lee. (123 min)
ON
BLU-RAY FROM WELL GO USA
Review
by Tiger the Terrible😽
Not long ago, My wife showed me some current photos of Mt.
Everest. The summit
looks like a New Jersey landfill, littered with garbage and human
waste from thousands of tourists over the years. It's a far cry from the days when conquering the world’s highest
mountain was a triumph of the human spirit.
To
recreate one of those historic treks, it appears the makers of The
Climbers resorted to using other locations and plenty of CGI. If Everest's current state was the reason, that's pretty damn sad.
Inspired
by true events, The Climbers is about two famous Chinese
ascensions up Everest, both led by Fang Wuzhou (Wu Jing). The first
is made in 1960, but not recognized internationally because
photographic evidence is required and their camera was lost in an
avalanche. Fang’s reputation is tarnished, his group disbands and
his relationship with girlfriend Xu Ying (Zhang Ziyi) ends
acrimoniously.
But
Fang gets another crack at the mountain in 1975 with a
government-backed expedition. He gets the old crew back together and
they train a new batch of eager young mountaineers. Conveniently, Xu
Ying is also on-hand to provide storm data and additional drama. The
remaining half of the film features the climb itself, which is, of
course, fraught with enough peril for two movies...killer wind,
blinding snow, avalanches, runaway boulders, tragic accidents,
crushed limbs and equipment breaking at the worst possible moment.
"Thank God...a Starbucks." |
I’ve
got no idea how much of this is historically accurate, though I
suspect dramatic liberties have been taken. Granted, I’ve never
scaled a mountain myself – traversing my roof to clean the gutters
is thrilling enough, thank you – but the action is depicted like a Die Hard movie with Fang as its John Maclane. And
that’s okay, since I don’t think the film is intended as a
history lesson. Some of the sequences – while outlandish and
CGI-heavy – are pretty exciting, even suspenseful at times. Less
interesting are the characters. Fang is likable, boosted by Jing’s
earnest performance, but his relationship with Xu Ying is contrived
and pointless. None of the other characters register much and Jackie
Chan fans should note that he only has a cameo during an end-credits
coda.
Speaking
of which, the film ends with
vintage footage of the actual mountaineers during the 1975 expedition and is dedicated to their accomplishment (which was apparently a
great source of national pride). Their story is movie-worthy enough
without the heavy-handed – and likely embellished – melodrama
that sometimes threatens to undermine things. If you can power
through all that, The Climbers is
worth checking out.
Now if they could only keep all the filthy tourists from checking out the real Everest.
EXTRA
KIBBLES
2
BEHIND-THE-SCENES FEATURETTES – Basically promotional, and very
short.
2
TRAILERS
KITTY CONSENSUS:
NOT BAD. LIKE CAT CHOW.
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