Lost on Everest

2020

Action / Documentary

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
551.87 MB
1280*576
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 0 min
P/S 0 / 1
1.11 GB
1920*864
English 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 0 min
P/S 3 / 4

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by notforgayjesus-284311 / 10

Ridiculous

If you go look for someone lost somewhere 100 years ago your first objective should be to focus on the search. The prelude was to go inspect a precise zone on the mount Everest for Irvine body and then they absolutely forget about him and went for the summit.

"Oh this summit is so hard look how cool I am on the top...." This is way beyond a farse.

Shame on you.

Reviewed by JurijFedorov4 / 10

Frankly boring with overly loud music

The version found for free on Youtube is called "The Ghosts Above" and is 36 minutes long, but I have watched many such docs with exactly the same fake "goal". This search for a camera from a 1924 climb is actually a idea many climbers have. It's just a cheap way to give your summit a "point". You either do it to push yourself, to do fake "research", or to do some fake historical studies. It's largely just an excuse to climb the mountain and then make a doc about it to earn some profit.

In the "research" docs on Everest you never see any actual research or even measurements. And you also have to wonder what new and crucial research you could even do there as you also summit the mountain?

This doc is a short doc jumping from shot to shot. Some shots are cool, but they last 3-5 seconds and then we see something new. It feels a bit like a Powerpoint slideshow. The music is VERY LOUD. This part is hard to understand music is obviously crucial for these docs. But when it's this loud you can't hear the dialogue or focus on the story. The narration is... super... slow... he... speaks... like... this. It's curious because the interviews have way faster speaking voices even in the death zone where people have a hard time speaking or moving. It's slow on purpose to add some artistic depth to it, but instead the narrator/producer just sounds overly depressed, tired and completely unengaged. It feels like he really didn't want to be there or record the narration which obviously makes you not really want to see his personal journey either.

They talk about how Sherpas carry 3 times more weight than the climbers and you feel like they are talking down to Sherpas as they talk about friendship and respect in extremely on the nose ways. There is no personal connection it's just this "we must respect Sherpas" fakeness. Either way it's an oxygen climb where Sherpas do most of the work so it's pretty much a tourist climb where you just pay to get up. Ropes are fixed, Sherpas work hard, the climbers largely just need to move slowly upward without any thinking or any technical climbing whatsoever. It's still impressive, but it's not quite top climbing you see in many other more groundbreaking docs.

They claim that this is a search mission where they may also summit. But this is a lie. It's a summit. Then at minute 32 one guy unclips himself from the rope then walks a few meters down to look around. We see him maybe go 3 meter away from the rope, that's it. Totally pointless and just for show so that the camera can film him. A drone made for the thin atmosphere could search 10 times the area in the same time. There is no need to unclip yourself when Sherpas tell you not to do it. These are tourist climbers so they ought to listen to the professional guides. But frankly none of them respect Sherpas or listen to them. So it's nothing new.

Reviewed by maccas-563679 / 10

Gripping stuff, beautiful cinematography

Have long been intrigued by the mystery of Mallory and Irvine. I love basically everything about Everest, and have since I was a kid. This National Geographic documentary is no exception!

Some spectacular cinematography and footage of Everest. Viewers are made to feel like they're part of the adventure and expedition. The conditions and danger of Everest are captured well.

Numerous moments made me go "whoah". Full credit to all the guys for the risks taken. It just got slightly frustrating towards the end. For a film that is basically all about Mallory and Irvine, and looking to solve the mystery, it then descends into a usual 'lets summit Everest' documentary.

The actual search for Irvine's body seemed to take a real backseat towards the end - just seemingly tacked on. But still, this was a great documentary for Everest buffs and those into unsolved mysteries. National Geographic have been putting out some excellent climbing films recently.

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