South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

For ‘Free Solo’ team, challenges of making ‘The Rescue’ steeper

- By Jake Coyle

In “The Rescue,” Oscar-winning “Free Solo” filmmakers E. Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin trade climbing peaks for watery depths.

Their documentar­y, which recently premiered at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival, retraces the 2018 rescue of the youth soccer team from Thailand’s Tham Luang cave, detailing the daring underwater maneuvers of an internatio­nal group of elite cave divers. The National Geographic release, in theaters Oct. 8, was a pulse-thumping, nerve-inducing nonfiction standout at the festival and the first major big-screen documentar­y of a real-life drama that captivated the world.

“It is ironic that we went from these great heights to subterrane­an,” Chin said, chuckling.

In comparison to Vasarhelyi and Chin’s two previous films — “Meru” and “Free Solo” — “The Rescue” might seem like an easier task. Most filmmaking that doesn’t include dangling off the side of the Shark’s Fin on Meru Peak in the Indian Himalayas, or suspended alongside free solo rock climber Alex Honnold on the Yosemite granite monolith of El Capitan would, naturally, seem like tamer stuff.

Yet the challenges of “The Rescue” were in many ways steeper. Vasarhelyi and Chin, who are married with two children together, were for the first time not shooting the event itself. They had to track down footage — which included copious news broadcasts from outside the cave but little from within — and piece together a compelling and clear view of a rescue that took place overwhelmi­ngly in cloudy, pitch-black waters.

While the world watched and rain loomed in the forecast, an internatio­nal coalition of some 5,000 worked tirelessly to free the 12 boys and their coach from the flooded caves, an operation that ultimately relied on the singular cave-diving talents of mostly civilian hobbyists.

To stitch the story together, the filmmakers, working through the pandemic, relied on interviews over Zoom and re-creations carefully shot with the real divers in the U.K. Much of the footage from inside the cave they got from the

Thai Navy Seals, who were instrument­al in the overall operation but lacked the diving skills to pull off the improbable 2 ½ -hour swims that saved the boys. Those documentar­y trials, though, aren’t visible in “The Rescue,” which with underwater footage and 3-D graphic maps makes a murky tale remarkably lucid.

One thing “The Rescue” thoroughly captures is just how difficult it was to find and reach the boys, and harder still to come up with a plausible path of rescue. Expecting fatalities, on day 16, with the threat of monsoons that would further submerge the cave, the cave divers swam each child out, one at a time, while they were sedated.

For those who casually followed the ordeal, “The Rescue” brings home just how anxious and nailbiting the plot was.

“We just went in and found the boys, according to the media. Then every day we went in and brought the boys out and it all seemed to go without drama. Nobody saw, really, what was involved,” says Richard Stanton, the decorated British civilian cave diver who spearheade­d much of the mission. “We possibly made it look too easy. This is the first time, apart from maybe our books, that people get to engage with what actually happened and what risky a decision it was and how close to the line it was.”

 ?? NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC ?? “The Rescue”retraces the rescue of a soccer team trapped in a cave.
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC “The Rescue”retraces the rescue of a soccer team trapped in a cave.

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