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Steep: Glorifying extreme risk taking?
- Daniel_G
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- Bigtree
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- Bandit
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From what I read online I thought the documentary Steep was going to focus on the realities and historical aspects of big mountain ski mountaineering. If the trailer on Youtube is representitive of the movie, I must be wrong.
I don't think there's anything wrong with this trailer, but it's not what I expected.
You're mixing two totally different sports.
1. Big Mountain Skiing=Heli Skiing, Dropped off from the heli
2. Ski Mountaineering=Climbing and then skiing.
This movie looks like it will be about Big Mountain Skiing. Shane McConkey, Ingrid Backstrom, Seth Morrison all sponsored skiiers, not really considered mountaineers.
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- Lowell_Skoog
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I noticed a review of the film on the NY Times website. It's interesting to see how the film is perceived by somebody who has no stake in the modern ski scene:
Talk About Slippery Slopes
By STEPHEN HOLDEN
Published: December 21, 2007
One of the daredevils in "Steep," a documentary about extreme skiing, insists he is not hooked on the adrenaline rush of this death-defying sport. His denial is hard to believe.
In one scene after another of this movie, written and directed by Mark Obenhaus, skiers hurtle down slopes at angles of 55 degrees or greater and leap off precipices into the unknown. The tiniest miscalculation, we are repeatedly told, could result in death.
The sport's practitioners -- addicts might be a better word -- would rather talk about how extreme skiing puts them totally in the moment and gives them an appreciation of life so acute it makes this sport, which has a high fatality rate, worth pursuing at all costs. There is a lot of mystical mumbo jumbo about how mountains are living, breathing things whose moods must be gauged before you venture onto their slopes; on a bad day a grouchy mountain can bite back.
Behind it all is the same competitive spirit that disciples of religious cults dish out to the uninitiated. The proselytizer fervently believes that he or she (but usually he) has a richer life than his unenlightened audience. That may be why "Steep" so often sounds like a promotional film.
Stephen Holden scores a bullseye!
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- RG
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- Gregg_C
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I enjoyed the sections with Briggs, the sections on skiing steep alpine lines in the alps and Dawson's sections. The rest of it just seemed like another ski porn movie. The was an attempt to weave in Doug Coomb's story to personalize it but it didn't work for me.
It was a visually enjoyable film but wasn't that emotionally compelling. I would like to see it on the big screen.
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