Review: "Free Solo" Performs at the Highest Level

Lauren Miller ‘22 / Emertainment Monthly Staff Writer
Alex Honnold is the only person in human history to free solo climb Yosemite’s El Capitan. That means climbing without a partner, without a rope, with nothing guaranteeing your safety but your own ability and concentration. It is, many would say, the greatest athletic feat ever performed and it requires a perfect performance. In Honnold’s eyes, there’s nothing in the world better than the feeling of performing perfection.
Free Solo, the documentary that follows Honnold through two years of preparation for that historic climb, understands this entirely. There’s nothing human beings crave more than excellence than achieving the impossible by climbing whatever mountains there may be. But directors Jimmy Chin and Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi aren’t just interested in that performance; they’re interested in the life that’s built around it.
But the film is also a character study of Alex Honnold. It examines his life, his girlfriend, Sanni McCandless, his family, and his relationships with everyone around him. It digs, quite literally, into his brain in ways you’d never expect. Some moments are so personal, it feels like watching someone’s personal life through their front porch window. Certain personal scenes can induce as much heart-pounding and face-covering intensity as any shot of Honnold several thousand feet in the air. But all of it is in service of answering the burning question most of us have when confronted with free solo climbing: Why the hell would anyone do that?
There’s so much to praise about Free Solo. Filmed predominantly in Yosemite, perhaps the most beautiful place in the world, with inventive angles and drone cameras, it’s a gorgeous film. Even the tensest shots of Honnold wedged between rocks on the face of the mountain are breathtaking. It handles tension as well as any horror film, alternating between the rising personal stakes in Honnold’s relationships and the life-and-death stakes of him on the mountain. You can’t help be invested not just in his well-being on the climb, but in his well-being once it’s all over.
At one point in the film, Honnold says that it’s not enough for him to be happy and cozy in life. No one ever achieved anything by being happy and cozy, after all. And though the film is about the height of human achievement and the ultimate satisfaction of performing at your best, it’s also about the importance of having people in your life that you love. Maybe you can be happy and cozy and climb mountains. It’s certainly worth it to try.
Overall Grade: A-
Watch The Trailer:
[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=urRVZ4SW7WU[/embedyt]