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Notes from Underground

  And, indeed, I will ask on my own account here, an idle question: which is better—cheap happiness or exalted sufferings? Well, which is better?---Fyodor Dostoevsky ---Notes from Underground Fyodor Dostoevsky ---Notes from Underground Even now, so many years later, all this is somehow a very evil memory. I have many evil memories now, but ... hadn’t I better end my “Notes” here? I believe I made a mistake in beginning to write them, anyway I have felt ashamed all the time I’ve been writing this story; so it’s hardly literature so much as a corrective punishment.  Why, to tell long stories, showing how I have spoiled my life through morally rotting in my corner, through lack of fitting environment, through divorce from real life, and rankling spite in my underground world, would certainly not be interesting; a novel needs a hero, and all the traits for an anti-hero are expressly gathered together here, and what matters most, it all produces an unpleasant impression, for we are...

Hope

To be human is to be a miracle of evolution conscious of its own miraculousness — a consciousness beautiful and bittersweet, for we have paid for it with a parallel awareness not only of our fundamental improbability but of our staggering fragility, of how physiologically precarious our survival is and how psychologically vulnerable our sanity. To make that awareness bearable, we have evolved a singular faculty that might just be the crowning miracle of our consciousness: hope.-- Erich Fromm


TOUCHING THE VOID (2003)





A docudrama that redefines survival. The harrowing true story of Joe Simpson and Simon Yates on the unclimbed West Face of Siula Grande.

The movie is about Joe Simpson and Simon Yates, two Brits in their mid-20s who were determined to scale the forbidding west face of a mountain named Siula Grande, in the Peruvian Andes. They were fit and in good training, and bold enough to try the "one push" method of climbing, in which they carried all their gear with them instead of establishing caches along the route. They limited their supplies to reduce weight, and planned to go up and down quickly.
It didn't work out that way. Snowstorms slowed and blinded them. The ascent was doable, but on the way down, the storms disoriented them and the drifts concealed the hazard of hidden crevices and falls. Roped together, they worked with one man always anchored, and so Yates was able to hold the rope when Simpson had a sudden fall. But it was disastrous: He broke his leg, driving the calf bone up through the knee socket. Both of them knew that a broken leg on a two-man climb, with rescue impossible, was a death sentence, and indeed Simpson tells us he was rather surprised that Yates decided to stay with him and try to get him down.




For someone who fervently believes he will never climb a mountain, I spend an unreasonable amount of time thinking about mountain-climbing. In my dreams my rope has come lose and I am falling, falling, and all the way down I am screaming: "Stupid! You're so stupid! You climbed all the way up there just so you could fall back down!"
Now there is a movie more frightening than my nightmares. "Touching the Void" is the most harrowing movie about mountain climbing I have seen, or can imagine. I've read reviews from critics who were only moderately stirred by the film (my friend Dave Kehr certainly kept his composure), and I must conclude that their dreams are not haunted as mine are.
"I didn't take a single note during this film. I simply sat there before the screen, enthralled, fascinated and terrified. Not for me the discussions about the utility of the "pseudo-documentary format," or questions about how the camera happened to be waiting at the bottom of the crevice when Simpson fell in. "Touching the Void" was, for me, more of a horror film than any actual horror film could ever be." 

 



This film is an unforgettable experience, directed by Kevin Macdonald (who made "One Day In September," the Oscar-winner about the 1972 Olympiad) with a kind of brutal directness and simplicity that never tries to add suspense or drama (none is needed!) but simply tells the story, as we look on in disbelief.
Roger Ebert




The UnsolvableEthics of the Void 

 Simon Yates held Joe on a rope for nearly two hours in a freezing storm. Joe was dangling over a massive drop, unable to move. Simon was being slowly pulled off his own precarious perch.

  • Both climbers were exhausted and frostbitten.
  • The rope was taut; neither could communicate in the gale.
  • Simon had to choose: die together or cut the rope and save one.





The Beckoning Silence

In The Beckoning Silence, Joe Simpson - whose amazing battle for survival featured in the multi-award winning Touching the Void - travels to the treacherous North Face of the Eiger to tell the story of one of mountaineerings most epic tragedies.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N2M6rK3SpF4






The Story: A Descent into the Void

The film follows the climbers as they successfully reach the summit of the 21,000-foot peak. However, the disaster begins during the descent:

  1. The Injury: Simpson falls and shatters his leg, driving his tibia through his knee joint. In the "pure" style of Alpine climbing they practiced, there was no rescue team; Yates was Joe's only hope.

  2. The Lowering: Yates attempted to lower Simpson down the mountain 300 feet at a time using two ropes tied together. This worked until a fierce storm blinded them.

  3. The Decision: Yates inadvertently lowered Simpson over an ice cliff. Unable to see or hear each other, and with Simpson dangling in mid-air, Yates began to be pulled off his own precarious seat in the snow. To save his own life, Yates made the agonizing decision to cut the rope.

  4. The Survival: Simpson fell into a deep crevasse. Presuming him dead, Yates returned to base camp. Miraculously, Simpson survived the fall and, instead of trying to climb out, abseiled deeper into the crevasse to find an exit.

  5. The Crawl: Over the next three days, without food or water and suffering from severe frostbite and a broken leg, Simpson crawled five miles across a glacier and moraines. He reached base camp in the middle of the night, just hours before Yates and Hawking were scheduled to leave.







  • The Ethics of the Rope: The decision to cut the rope remains a controversial and studied topic in climbing circles. Simpson has famously defended Yates, stating that Yates had no other choice and that any other decision would have killed them both.

  • Atheism in the Face of Death: Simpson notably reflects on his lack of a "deathbed conversion." As a former Catholic, he realized during his ordeal that he truly believed death was the end, viewing the "void" as literal annihilation.

  • The Power of Small Goals: Simpson describes surviving by breaking his journey into tiny, manageable tasks—reaching a specific rock in 20 minutes—rather than looking at the impossible distance ahead








Critical Reception and Awards

The film was a massive success, becoming one of the most successful documentaries in British cinema history.

  • BAFTA: Won the Alexander Korda Award for Best British Film (2004).

  • Rotten Tomatoes: Holds a 93% approval rating, with critics praising its "excruciating tension."

  • Impact: It is widely considered the definitive mountaineering film, often cited for its realism and for avoiding the "Hollywood-ized" tropes of the genre.






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