Pure - a mini review

I'm at work and need to catch up on email, so here's my quick and dirty review of "Pure" -- a climbing flick from Chuck Fryberger.  I've not yet read some other reviews I know are out there, so hopefully my opinions here are ... pure.

The Good


  • Great footage -- the climbs were on stage and they performed well

  • Unique angles -- obviously, lots of time spent getting everything framed well, and yes, I did notice a lot of depth to the shots (foreground and background blurred ... very pretty)

  • Not afraid to experiment -- lots of the action was placed in the upper thirds of the shot.  I haven't seen a lot of this recently, and it's nice to see someone thinking ahead.  It's a risky thing to do, because you can sometimes lose your subject off the screen if they do something big and unexpected.

  • Despite the over-use of what I'm sure is a $200 Final Cut video filter, whatever the video filter was, it looked great.  Darkened corners with some de-saturated colors gave it a clean look overall.


The Bad


  • As stated before in a tweet, the computerized Mac voice was annoying.

  • There was little to no story line

  • The Rocklands footage was very blown out

  • The title graphics for each climb were very hard to read.  The broken-up font made some of the grades completely illegible.

  • There was more footage of Fred Nicole walking around with his crash pad than there was of him actually climbing

  • The emotional arc of the film went flat.  It started out very high energy, came down in the middle, then...stayed at 50% until the end.  I actually started getting sleepy during the Switzerland segment.

  • The film was basically all about Nalle Hukkataival.

  • ...and suddenly?  The film was over.  A very abrupt ending.


The Bottom Line

Overall, what the film lacked in content, it made up for in sheen.  It was one of the prettiest climbing films of late and I certainly respect the filmmaker's eye for getting the good shot.  As stated previously, the film spent far too much time on a single climber and had a very abrupt ending.  I would have liked to see some other climbers, and I would have liked a "finale" of sorts.  If the film had really completed an arc and brought back the engergy level ... or if there was a proper ending to the film -- I'd be able to give it a better review.  Minus those two biggies?  I'll give it a B-.

...can't wait for the next one.

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Posted 1 year ago

"Mirando" - climbing film from Bishop

I wrapped up the editing of my new climbing film, Mirando.  Check it out:

http://www.fractionfilm.com/2009/02/mirando/

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Posted 1 year ago