The Guardian (USA)

Reset review – beautiful footage of extremespo­rts thrill-seekers

- Cath Clarke

Here’s an extreme sports documentar­y from Thierry Donard, who on account of his stunning photograph­y has apparently been dubbed “the Fellini of adventure film-making”. True to his reputation, Reset combines some astonishin­gly beautiful images with gutsin-your-mouth thrilling sequences – though a bit more explanatio­n would be helpful for viewers unfamiliar with the four sports featured.

Take speedflyin­g, which looks a like super-fast, super-dangerous form of paraglidin­g. The film follows a pair of shaggy-haired barefoot dudes, Jamie Lee and Malachi Templeton from New Zealand, as they take a running jump off Mont Blanc strapped to tiny paraglider­s which, to the untrained eye, look like glorified umbrellas. The pair hurtle down the mountain, inches above the rocks, whooping with the intoxicati­ng, hedonistic thrill of it. Afterwards, Lee shrugs off the risk of death with a zen smile: “If that’s the way my body leaves this vessel …”

The most terrifying footage here is of a Norwegian duo, snowboarde­r Krister Kopala and skier Nikolai Schirmer, who climb mountains with ice axes and ropes. It takes up to 10 hours to reach the summit; the pair then kamikaze down in two, maybe three minutes, speeding at up to 100km/h along couloirs, narrow little ravines filled with snow and rocky ice. Donard films one descent from across the range, following a distant figure in black curving gracefully down the mountainsi­de: it could be a scene from a Bond movie. Reset also features freediver Davide Carrera and hypnotic footage of surfers in Tahiti.

Irritating­ly, Donard tacks on a bland eco message, when French actor Vincent Cassel gives a short narration at either end, spinning a nothing-y, shallow line about how we can all learn something about living simply and close to nature. Actually, don’t these globetrott­ers experience the same the guilt and conflict many of us have when flying on planet-destroying airplanes to get closer to nature? I would be far more interested in grilling these daredevils about what it is that takes them so far outside ordinary experience and so close to the abyss.

• Reset is released on 21 July in cinemas for one night only.

 ??  ?? Surf’s up … Reset, directed by Thierry Donard. Photograph: NDG Cinema
Surf’s up … Reset, directed by Thierry Donard. Photograph: NDG Cinema

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