Watched: 11/10/2024
Format: Disney+
Viewing: First
Director: Jimmy Chin, Natalie Hewit, Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi
If you have any passing interest in the the Shackleton expedition, this is both a good summary of what happened - giving the viewer a pretty good idea how Shackleton's expedition to cross Antarctica did not, in fact, work out - but somehow the crew survived two years of nightmare conditions after their ship was first iced-in and then sank.
The story is paralleled by the contemporary search for The Endurance - lost in the ocean at almost 2 miles down.
The doc is Nat Geo-worthy, and therefore very watchable. But here's the thing - Shackleton's expedition was launched in 1914 (it's amazing how small the world got in a 100 years) - and so he was smart enough to bring a filmographer and photographer. So! Get ready to see actual filmed footage of the expedition.
Perhaps more controversial - because everyone survived, they were interviewed later. And so we get snippets of their interviews (not an issue) but excerpts from their diaries are then read by AI versions of those people's voices derived from the interviews. Which... I guess we can do that now?
It's a good effect - especially mixed with the silent footage an some re-creations of the events that couldn't be filmed.
I'm gonna try to let all of that pass without too judgment. We're in a new era of media, and I'm not sure that didn't have an interesting effect. I know we're all supposed to be mad at AI all the time, but it's an interesting use of the technology.
There is a moment in the doc that left me dumbfounded where the scientists say "hey, we ran this program to guess the drift of the Endurance based on some details in the original logs" - and if you're me, you're staring goggle-eyed that they mounted this whole expedition and are more than 10 days in when they thought this up. Like - not to be a dick, but I literally *assumed* they'd done this just to get funding.
All's well that ends well, and the film does wrap up with nice footage of the Endurance at the bottom of the Antarctic waters
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