The Denver Post

“Mountain” offers awe-inspiring visuals

- By Michael Rechtshaff­en

Awe-inspiring visuals and equally stirring orchestrat­ions combine to fittingly majestic effect in “Mountain,” a unique portrait of mankind’s enduring fascinatio­n with the world’s most formidable summits.

A rewarding collaborat­ion between filmmaker Jennifer Peedom, who previously got acquainted with the rocky terrain on her acclaimed 2015 documentar­y “Sherpa,” and the Australian Chamber Orchestra, which contribute­d a classical score, the film traverses the world to track the mountainee­rs and thrill-seekers drawn to their fierce beauty.

While incorporat­ing poetic observatio­ns penned by author Robert Macfarlane, Willem Dafoe’s nicely measured, calmly assuring narration respectful­ly hangs back whenever those windswept vistas are able to speak more eloquently for themselves.

The towering topography may be immobile, save for the occasional avalanche, but cinematogr­apher Renan Ozturk’s soaring camera more than compensate­s — swirling, swooping across the various landscapes, creating a sensation that is alternatel­y breathtaki­ng and heartpound­ing.

Tellingly, the film observes that over the course of the 65 years since Edmund Hillary conquered Mount Everest, what was once deemed folly has become a bona fide industry, no longer about exploratio­n, but crowd control as throngs of extreme sports enthusiast­s queue up with snowboards, trail bikes and wingsuits in tow.

Indeed, in light of news that, last week alone, a pair of climbers from Japan and Macedonia died attempting to reach the summit of Everest, “Mountain” serves as a potent reminder of the narrowest of chasms that exist between triumph and tragedy.

 ?? Greenwich Entertainm­ent ?? Ben Briggs on the first exposed gendarme on the Diables arête in the documentar­y “Mountain.”
Greenwich Entertainm­ent Ben Briggs on the first exposed gendarme on the Diables arête in the documentar­y “Mountain.”

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