VERTICAL LIMIT
Written by Linda
April 17, 2010
| Genre | Action & Adventure |
| Year | 2000 |
| Country | USA |
| Director | Martin Campbell |
| Actors | Chris O’Donnell, Bill Paxton, Robin Tunney, Nicholas Lea, Alexander Siddig, Scott Glenn, Izabella Scorupco, Steve Le Marquand, Ben Mendelsohn |
| MPAA Rating | PG-13 |
Vertical Limit is one of those films that all you need to do is sit back, open your eyes wide, hold on to your chair, and enjoy the ride.After the first 20 minutes or so of harrowing scenes, multiple-character introductions, and mumbling mountain-climbing mumbo-jumbo, I leaned over to my Japanese friend, who sat wide-eyed, enthralled, yet confused, and asked her if she knew what was going on. She shook her head no, so I wrapped it up for her: "There is a brother and a sister. They both climb mountains. After a few years of not seeing each other after a bad accident, they meet at one of the tallest mountains in the world. The sister is there to bring a very rich man to the top of the mountain, because he wants to make a TV commercial for his new business. There is an accident, so the brother and others must go save his sister and the rich man at the top of the mountain." Aaaah... OK... that is really all my friend needed to know, because other than those plot basics, Vertical Limit is one of those films that all you need to do is sit back, open your eyes wide, hold on to your chair, and enjoy the ride.
Chris O'Donnell (with lovely, fluffy, growing-out hair) and Robin Tunney (who kicks butt, but has odd eyes that are too close together, in a way that kind of distracts me) are the estranged siblings, Peter and Annie Garrett. Bill Paxton, one of the worst actors in the world, plays the rich man Elliot Vaughn, who I think is loosely modeled on Richard Branson, the British über-successful businessman who tried to fly around the world in a hot-air balloon (among other adventurous things that only rich people can afford). Except Paxton is an ass, and of course has a dark side. Let's just say that he is not a millionaire (billionaire?) that you want to be stuck in a crevasse with at 26,000 feet. After the botched ascent, where Annie, Vaughn, and leader Tom (Nicolas Lea from The X-Files) get trapped in said crevasse, brother Peter is the only one who refuses to just let them die on the mountain. So he and his rag-tag group of rescuers go up K2, hauling along cylinders of nitroglycerine strapped to their backs to blow the survivors out of the ice (not kidding! remember, you need explosions in an action movie!).
Now, I've heard others criticize Vertical Limit for having a lack of character development. But for an action movie, I could actually tell these people apart, and kind of cared about them, even though I knew that most of them were going to die dramatically... You don't go to a movie like this for the actors to pensively stare off in the distance and flashback to a softer-focus time. You want a big piece of ice to fall on their head! Yeah! And Vertical Limit totally delivered in that sense. There is really no time wasted in this film, as just when one character survives a physical test, another one or two gets swept down the mountain by an avalanche.
Vertical Limit is the most fun, stressful, and edge-of-your-seat time that I've had at a big-budget Hollywood flick in quite awhile, and that's nothing to shake an ice-axe at!
movie*pie Staff review
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Pointy mountains, nitroglycerin, freezing cold temperatures, eternal regret and reoccurring themes, what more could you ask for in a mountain rescue movie? Can you imaging being one of those people who feels the need to force themselves up a mountain? I’m not talking the weekend hikers here, I’m talking 26,000 feet up the side of a frozen monster. I would be the first to suggest staying in the lodge and sitting by the warm cozy fire. Would you like a cuppa hot chocolate? (With the little marshmallows, please.)
Ok, the first scene of Vertical Limit was, I think, one of the most stressful couple of minutes I have spent in a movie theatre. Not only does this scene make you cringe, it sets the underlying tone for the entire movie. Peter Garrett (Chris O’Donnell) makes a decision that changes everything in his and his sister’s life. (Trauma!)
Years later, Peter’s sister, Annie (Robin Tunney) is commissioned to bring billionaire Elliot Vaughn (Bill Paxton) to the top of K2. Vaughn is some big tycoon, with money pouring out of his ears and little regard for safe climbing practices. This would be Vaughn’s second attempt up the mountain and at least one local, Montgomery Wick (Scott Glenn), has doubt as to what actually happened his first time up. It seems that there was the need to rescue him and anyone else still alive.
As you would expect, Vaughn’s second trip runs into major difficulties after persuading the climbing leader, Tom McLaren (Nicholas Lea), to press on, even though they were headed into a major storm. This, of course, leads to most of the climbing party being swept away by an avalanche and three being spit into a large ice crack. Action flicks are good at providing a way for a few people to survive something horrible like that.
The desperate situation on the mountain leads to a heroic rescue attempt. After gathering a party of five others to join him, Peter heads up the big pointy ice cube to bring his sister and the rest of the survivors home. Along the way, we get to see some very tense moments having to do with hanging off the side of the mountain, walking on cracking ice, avalanches, jumping from one peak to another and a particularly grueling helicopter scene. Those pesky sudden down drafts can play hell on the hovering abilities of a helicopter…
I would say that anyone who likes a lot of action in their movie with a side of dialogue, go see this one. I was impressed with how much I actually like it. There’s nothing like being able to go into the theatre and being entertained for 2+ hours.
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