The Province

Climbing a ridiculous­ly tall rock

Honnold knows no fear — but Free Solo will leave you terrified and amazed

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com twitter.com/chrisknigh­tfilm

FREE SOLO

Grade: A Theatres, showtimes, pages 32-33

The 1989 film Star Trek V: The Final Frontier opens with Captain Kirk climbing El Capitan, a 3,000-foot (914metre), granite cliff in Yosemite, Earth. He is halfway up, without any safety gear, when Mr. Spock shows up (via rocket boots), and tells the captain: “I regret to inform you that the record for free-climbing El Capitan is in no danger of being broken.”

When that movie came out, the record, then recently set by Todd Skinner and Paul Piana, stood at nine days.

But last summer, in a feat more exciting than anything Star Trek can dish out, it was smashed by Alex Honnold.

Like the fictional starship captain, he used no safety gear, and climbed alone.

He made it to the top in under four hours.

El Capitan is a ridiculous­ly tall rock. It’s more than oneand-a-half times as high as the CN Tower. If you live in Calgary, Vancouver, Edmonton or Montreal, take the tallest human-made thing you can see, multiply by four and you’ll be in the ballpark.

Climbing it has been likened to an Olympic event;

free climbing means if you make a mistake you don’t get silver; you die.

But Alex knows no fear. That’s not a metaphor; directors Jimmy Chin and Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi (they also made the award-winning 2015 climbing doc Meru), take him to an MRI and learn that his amygdala — the part of the brain that tells us when to be afraid — is remarkably relaxed. He may be setting a trail for Captain Kirk to follow, but the crew calls him Mr. Spock.

Early in the movie, he notes that, given the choice between climbing and a girlfriend, he’d choose the former.

But life isn’t so binary. Alex meets fellow outdoors enthusiast Sanni McCandless and darned if they don’t fall in love right in front of the camera. It makes for some lightheart­ed moments in a film that may otherwise have you forgetting to breathe as you try to use force of will to keep Alex from falling to his doom.

The genius of this documentar­y is that it is about the man first and the climb second. So we spend time with Alex and Sanni as they go shopping for a fridge, but also as Alex tries to logic his way up El Capitan in his head. There are numerous

routes to choose from, none of them simple — at one point the decision is between an outcrop called The Boulder Problem and another named Teflon Corner.

We learn that Alex’s father may have had Asperger syndrome, but for the most part the film just presents Alex as he is and lets us make what conclusion­s we will. In a similar spirit; when I met

Alex at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival, I asked my question of the fest: What film has most influenced you as a person?

Alex didn’t have an answer, unless the question could be broadened to include television, in which case it was … Star Trek. That’s logical.

 ?? — NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC ?? Alex Honnold making the first free solo ascent of El Capitan in Yosemite National Park.
— NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC Alex Honnold making the first free solo ascent of El Capitan in Yosemite National Park.

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