Meru

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Documentary about the journey of three climbers who set out to scale Meru, one of the most challenging mountains in the Himalayas. After a failed attempt in 2008, Conrad Anker, Jimmy Chin and Renan Ozturk embarked upon a second try of the Shark's Fin route on the Meru Peak. (Universal Pictures UK)

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POMO 

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English Meru is not only about the first ascent of an extremely difficult Himalayan mountain, but primarily about the journey of a dream shared between three climbers who returned to the mountain despite a devastatingly unsuccessful first attempt and with a minimum chance of success due to the deteriorating health of one of them. At the same time, it is a film about the loss of loved ones and the determination to fulfil the team’s dream, even though “surviving your own death” clearly suggests “that’s enough of that!”. Shot in the craziest of places in luxurious image quality courtesy of Jimmy Chin. ()

kaylin 

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English Well yeah, it's a documentary that tells a quite powerful story and interestingly shows where the possibilities of a person lie and what their body can endure. Those testimonies are very intense and are delivered in a way that allows you to really empathize with different events. But still, I can't help it, it just didn't manage to impact me that much. ()

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DaViD´82 

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English A two-round duel with probably the most complex and difficult climbing challenge ever (Holeček and Kreisinger could tell); one of the peaks of Mount Meru Shark’s fin. This documentary is not so impressive because it shows the first successful ascent, but rather because it portrays both attempts of climbers in a way that you have a feeling you are standing right next to them. But even so, it is not the most impressive sequence. The most impressive one is the second third of the documentary, which covers approximately three years between the attempts and which describes the life of the central trio. And a lot happened during these three years, that is for sure. If it had been a fiction, no one would believe screenwriters, because you would think something like that simply cannot happen. What ultimately prevents Meru from being an unforgettable experience is, surprisingly, the final history of mountaineering that rewrites the ascent, which also offers one extremely interesting and controversial dilemma. It's hard to say if they had little material about this ascent or if it seemed similar to the first attempt, but it's portrayed way too quickly much and coldly that it's detrimental to it. ()

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