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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 mountaineering's most epic tragedies. As a child, it was this story and that of one of the climbers in particular, that first captured Simpson's imagination and inspired him to take up mountaineering.

Steven Mackintosh as  Narrator

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Reviews

lisahelenw
2007/10/22

I spent several winters snow camping, going into California's Sierra Nevada on skis, and adored it, but I'm afraid of heights and never gave climbing the briefest consideration. The lure was impossible to grasp. (Women climb a different life-and-death peek in childbirth.) But I love survival stories, and this went further to explain risk-taking than anything I've encountered. Simpson's honesty about fear makes it a spellbinding spiritual epic. He attempts the same route that his inspiration as a lad had failed to complete, and in his narration uses language with the same care as his climbing gear. I get it now. Or maybe I don't - but listening tuo a man who uses English with such power is not a voice I'll soon forget. It's a love story between man and mountain, the bond forged among climbing partners, conquering fear yet knowing when to stop; the awe of death and the horror of loneliness.... I'm so glad he followed his considerable wisdom to find a route off his inner mountain into another rewarding career, He's at the top of his game - as a writer this time, expressing his experiences of loss and grief and passion for life without a drop of sentimentality. It's poetic exactness with Shakespearean depth.(N.B. Improvement in the directing could (will?) make it one of the great documentaries. I wasn't sure at times which team we were following (a helicopter in the 1930's?).and something as simple as a notice saying "50 years later" would have helped. Or I was just being a moron! :o)

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Mario Germani
2007/10/23

In this docu-movie, Joe Simpson shows how to tell a true story in a modern, breathtaking way. He gives a description of events from outside but also from the inside, climbing part of the mountain (the well-known Eiger) himself. He goes deep in the characters feelings, just by comparing their emotions with his own. A story about mountaineers and the man behind the climber.Pretty influenced by the other awarded Simpson's movie "Touching the void", "The Beckoning Silence" is again a great narration about the risk, the hope, and the fragility of life.If you want to understand what climb a mountain means you have to see it. If you want to understand what be human means you have to see it.

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Graham Bentley
2007/10/24

The DVD version of this film also contains a spoiler within the extras ~ although I can forgive the great man himself as Chris Bonningtons interview is as honest and emotional as Joe's. In that interview Chris describes his own experience as photo journalist and reporter on the first 'Eiger Direct' expedition in the early 60's, when a climbing friend, John Harlin dies. This leads onto to some short research to find that John Harlins son makes an attempt on the Eiger himself, 40 years after his fathers death, in a film called 'The Alps' which I haven't seen yet but believe has the most breathtaking footage.Also, within the extras on the DVD is 'the making of', but in a way, whilst its interesting, I feel it kind of detracts from the superb acting and shooting in the the main film.

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Casino-Royale
2007/10/25

Mountaineer Joe Simpson, famous not only for his survival on Siula Grande in Peru, but for his subsequent books including Touching The Void, Storms Of Silence and The Beckoning Silence, takes a journey to the Eiger to re-trace the steps of Bavarian mountaineer Toni Kurz who along with his three companions Andreas Hinterstoisser, Willy Angerer and Edi Rainer attempted a first ascent of the north face of the Eiger in 1936. Although it's not the tallest mountain in the world (4,107 m) or the most difficult the Eiger has a calling to all mountaineers that is hard to describe, but an obsession it can definitely become. On the way up Hinterstoisser found the key to the mountain when he set across an 100' sheer black rock, allowing the rest of the team to climb safely across (later in memory of his brilliant climb it was called the 'Hinterstoisser Traverse'). Unbeknownst to them at the time though to get back across the traverse they should have left the rope in place. After Angerer was hit in the head during a rock/ice fall, they had to abandon the summit and help their injured friend down the face to the safety of the valley. After Hinterstoisser was unable to get back across the traverse they had no choice but to abseil down. When an unexpected avalanche hits them 'like a tsunami' Hinterstossier falls 2000' to his death. Above him Kurz and Angerer also fall from the face but were stopped from falling all the way by the rope secured into the side of the mountain. Angerer, the first of the remaining three to fall off the face, was strangled by his rope, Rainer's diaphragm was crushed by the weight of Kurz and Angerer's bodies and Kurz was left hanging mid-air unable to go up or down and at the mercy of the elements as he waited for rescue. A few hours later, in horrendous stormy conditions, rescuers arrived but they were unable to do anything at that time and told Kurz they would have to come back in the morning. He knew he was being abandoned and his heart breaking cries for them to stay would have lived with them for the rest of their lives. The next morning they came back and this is where the strength and human spirit is so evident in Kurz's determination to live.This is a brilliantly told true story which has added impact due to the similar circumstances of Joe Simpson's near death in the Peruvian mountains where he believes that he 'should have died on a rope.' Superb photography by Jeremy Hewson and unbelievable performances by Roger Schali (Toni Kurz) Simon Anthamatten (Andreas Hinterstoisser) Dres Abegglen (Willy Angerer) and Cyrille Berthod (Edi Rainer) who re-enacted the climb and it's outcome. This is not to be missed and you don't have to be a mountaineer to appreciate the strength of the human spirit, the determination to overcome all odds that is so clearly on display here and the total sadness of the outcome.

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