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What
would you do?
Touching
the Void
Stars
Brendan Mackey, Aaron Nicholas, Joe Simpson, Simon Yates and
Richard Hawkins. Rated M. 107 minutes.
Reviewer: David Sibley
Rating:
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Simon
Yates, played by Aaron Nicholas, makes a hard decision
to cut the rope that his friend, Joe Simpson, is holding
on to.
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Joe
Simpson, played by Brendan Mackey, crawls across the
glacier with a broken leg after surviving falling down
a crevasse.
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You’ve
been holding your mate hanging on a rope over an ice cliff
for over an hour. Your arms and shoulders are burning with
the strain and then you begin to slip in your icy seat in
the snow.
You can’t see your mate below but you know he has a badly
broken leg. You’re high on a savage mountain in a remote part
of Peru. The nearest road is two days walk away.
You slip again. What do you do? This isn’t an adventurous
training activity where there’s an instructor nearby to pull
you to safety. It’s just you and him. You slip again, again,
again, heading for the void in which your mate is hanging.
Do you hang on and both of you die? Or do you save yourself?
In 1985, British climber Simon Yates made that decision –
he cut the rope and saved himself.
His mate Joe Simpson, hanging over the ice cliff, fell and,
for all Yates knew, died. Yates then dug a cave in the snow
of the mountain they had successfully climbed that morning
and the next morning completed his descent.
The mountain was Siula Grande, a 21,000ft monster in the Andes
mountains, which run the length of South America.
Yates and Simpson, two madkeen mountaineers in their early
20s, had decided to climb its west face, a towering wall of
ice and rock which noone had climbed successfully before.
They climbed Alpine-style, that is, the two of them with no
support at all. All they would need – ropes, equipment, food
– would be on their backs.
If something went wrong, then the chances of survival were
low. But they were young, fit and, as Simpson said, wanted
to climb the world.
They travelled to Peru and on the way to Siula Grande, recruited
a fellow Brit, backpacker Richard Hawkins, to come to the
mountain and mind their base camp. The climb up the west face
took three days.
On their way down from the summit, traversing along the north
ridge, Simpson was descending a ice cliff when his ice axe
slipped. He fell and horribly broke his left leg.
Yates made the decision to lower Simpson down the mountain,
using two lengths of rope knotted together to make a 300ft
line.
Yates would let Simpson, in incredible agony, down the slope
until they reached the bottom where a glacier joined the mountain.
He had no choice but to work fast – Simpson was in shock and
the side of a 21,000ft mountain was no place to rest and wait
for help which wouldn’t, come. And then Simpson went over
the cliff. After holding his mate for nearly two hours, Yates
cut the rope.
Four days later, Simpson crawled out of the rocks near the
camp where Yates and Hawkins were sleeping.
He had survived a fall of more than 100ft, landing in a crevasse.
Incredibly, he survived, making his way from the crevasse
on to the glacier and then crawling all the way back to base
camp.
After his recovery (including six operations on his leg),
Simpson wrote Touching the Void, the story of what happened
on Siula Grande, and the basis for this documentary, made
by director Kevin Macdonald.
A key motivation for writing the book was to defend Yates.
After the story became public, many in the British mountaineering
community criticised Yates for cutting the rope and leaving
Simpson to die.
Macdonald used a simple and effective narrative device of
having the two climbers and Hawkins tell their story looking
direct into the camera.
He then interweaved the story of the climb and Simpson’s survival
between the interviews, all the time driving the story through
their words.
The actors, Brendan Mackey, who played Simpson, and Aaron
Nicholas as Yates, do not have much dialogue – there’s no
need for expository dialogue as they recreate what happened.
Shot in Peru, at Siula Grande, and the European Alps, the
scenery is dramatic and cold, mixing close-ups and vistas
with powerful effect to the narrative of Simpson and Yates.
At times the horror is chillingly underscored by casual, understated
self-deprecating humour.
Simpson comes across as incredibly passionate and driven,
Yates more as a typical phlegmatic Englishman who did what
had to done – the kind of chap who would make a hard decision,
not because he wanted to or liked to, but because that’s what
a decent chap would do.
Go see if you can answer the question: What would you do?
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