In front of nature, human beings are insignificant

Lilla 2022-03-21 09:01:38

When people are lonely, they probably like movies the most.
This movie has a lot to offer. For example, it is adapted from real events, for example, the rhythm of the narrative, the opening dialogue of a large part of the film, the introduction of the characters. Tell a mountaineering story clearly without being dull. After they climbed Mount Everest, the situation took a turn for the worse, and the film focuses on people's struggles in difficult circumstances. The fragility of human nature, the family, and the insignificance of fighting with nature.
For some people who have just climbed Mount Everest, this is the honor of a lifetime, which can be achieved even at the expense of life. On the road to the limit, the smoother it is, the more it will indicate the troubles in the future. In the end, the protagonist misses the time to go back in order to fulfill the dreams of others. The body also stayed on the mountain. The Chinese always say that it is safe to go into the earth, but they also gave their body to Mount Everest.
A small detail on Mount Everest may be magnified countless times and eventually become human death. Harsh environment, many things are accomplished overnight.
The insignificance of human beings is fully revealed in front of nature, and even advanced equipment, such as technology to detect climate, cannot fully guarantee the arrival of the climate. People should know how to respect nature, rather than conquer nature, which is probably the theme.

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Extended Reading

Everest quotes

  • Title Card: Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay became the first climbers to summit Everest. Over the next 40 years, only top professional climbers attempted the same feat. One in four died.

    Title Card: 1992: New Zealander Rob Hall pioneered the concept of commercial guiding on Everest for amateur climbers. Over the next four years his team, Adventure Consultants, successfully led 19 clients to summit without a single fatality.

    Title Card: 1996: Other commercial operators follow Rob Hall's lead, including Scott Fischer's Mountain Madness. More than 20 expeditions compete to summit Everest in the same two week window.

  • [first lines]

    Rob Hall: Can you just listen up? Guys? We got 2,000 feet, 600 vertical meters to Camp Four. It's roped all the way, so I know you can make it. Now, once we get to the yellow band we're gonna regroup, put on the masks, turn on the gas. Make sense?