Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaForty runners compete in the most grueling race on earth, the Badwater. The film documents the trials and tribulations of these athletes as they run 135 miles through Death Valley in July an... Ler tudoForty runners compete in the most grueling race on earth, the Badwater. The film documents the trials and tribulations of these athletes as they run 135 miles through Death Valley in July and explores the motivations behind this seemingly masochistic contest. A celebration of the... Ler tudoForty runners compete in the most grueling race on earth, the Badwater. The film documents the trials and tribulations of these athletes as they run 135 miles through Death Valley in July and explores the motivations behind this seemingly masochistic contest. A celebration of the perseverance of the human will beyond the limits of the human body.
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This event also has something special that no other sports event of this caliber has; a total absence of TV cameras, throngs of crowds waving flags and balloons, and the usual billboards and signs advertising everything from shoes to beverages. The course is mostly barren road and desert, and the finish line looks like a trail of toilet paper with a couple dozen people standing around clapping. The prize is a belt buckle for everyone who can complete the course within 60 hours (the record at date is around 27 1/2 hours). I can think of no other setting that would make me so proud to run such a race. The documentary manages to keep our interest peaked throughout by focusing on several of the runners, not the least of whom is a British bloke named Chris Moon who as far as I'm concerned, won the race. His time was twice that of the 'winner', but he was running a one-legged, one-armed race (he'd lost his leg and arm while clearing land mines in war-torn countries). The next time you hear someone refer to pro-sports players as 'heroes', tell them the real definition by referring them to this film.
If you're undeterred by the above, then this is a truly unique movie on the subject of pushing the human body and mind to its limits. The results are seemingly random; people you are sure won't finish do while others who seem strong drop out with less than ten miles to go. Still, the documentarian focuses more on the experience and the process rather than on "winners" and "losers." Anyone who has ever pushed themselves to their limits (most everyone on earth, really) will likely find inspiration from these courageous individuals. I'm still not sure I understand why some of these people undertake this event (a lot of time is spent at the end examining this central issue and the theme of pushing the body to its limits), but the drama and emotion of their efforts is real, and that is this movie's greatest strength.
Here's another that had me wondering - the race was originally designed to run from the lowest point to the highest point in the continental US. They never said that because the race doesn't quite reach those goals any more. The last ten miles to the peak of Whitney is inside a park which doesn't allow racing. Thus, the original 145 became shorted to 135. That's why it appears to end in the middle of nowhere. Contests may go on to complete the 145 on their own. Hey - they're already half dead - what's another 10 miles uphill?
Nonetheless, it's a GREAT film. (Just don't try to eat anything while you're watching it.)
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- Running on the Sun
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- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 2.464
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 2.464
- 1 de out. de 2000