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The Endurance

Original title: The Endurance: Shackleton's Legendary Antarctic Expedition
  • 2000
  • G
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
2.4K
YOUR RATING
The Endurance (2000)
DocumentaryHistory

In December, 1914, the Endurance encountered ice packs before reaching 60º South - 400 miles north of Antarctica; an omen. The plan was to land at Vahsel Bay, which had never been done.In December, 1914, the Endurance encountered ice packs before reaching 60º South - 400 miles north of Antarctica; an omen. The plan was to land at Vahsel Bay, which had never been done.In December, 1914, the Endurance encountered ice packs before reaching 60º South - 400 miles north of Antarctica; an omen. The plan was to land at Vahsel Bay, which had never been done.

  • Director
    • George Butler
  • Writers
    • Caroline Alexander
    • Joseph Dorman
  • Stars
    • Liam Neeson
    • Julian Ayer
    • John Blackborow
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    2.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • George Butler
    • Writers
      • Caroline Alexander
      • Joseph Dorman
    • Stars
      • Liam Neeson
      • Julian Ayer
      • John Blackborow
    • 29User reviews
    • 43Critic reviews
    • 85Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 BAFTA Awards
      • 8 wins & 8 nominations total

    Photos5

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    Top cast25

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    Liam Neeson
    Liam Neeson
    • Self - Narrator
    • (voice)
    Julian Ayer
    • Self (Grandson of expedition member)
    John Blackborow
    • Self (Grandson of expedition member)
    David Cale
    David Cale
    • Hubert Hudson
    • (voice)
    John Henry Cox
    • William Bakewell
    • (voice)
    Mary Crean O'Brien
    • Self (daughter of Tom Crean)
    Tom Crean
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Steven Crossley
    • Alexander Macklin
    • (voice)
    • …
    Brian d'Arcy James
    Brian d'Arcy James
    • Frank Wild
    • (voice)
    • (as Brian Darcy James)
    Jeffrey Dallas
    • Crewman
    Drew De Carvalho
    • Frank Hurley
    • (voice)
    Dominic Hawksley
    • Thomas Orde-Lees
    • (voice)
    Walter How
    • Self
    Roland Huntford
    • Self (historian)
    Leonard D.A. Hussey
    • Self
    Ron Keith
    • Walter How
    • (voice)
    Tom McNeish
    • Self (Grandson of McNish)
    Simon Prebble
    • Ernest Shackleton
    • (voice)
    • Director
      • George Butler
    • Writers
      • Caroline Alexander
      • Joseph Dorman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews29

    7.82.3K
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    Featured reviews

    chaos-rampant

    Stand high in the base of your mountain

    Shackleton's third and last journey to the Pole in this documentary. We avoid talking heads and instead immerse ourselves in the arduous experience of traversing icy wastes. It has all the staples of polar exploits as have seeped into the popular imagination; valiant human endeavor, pitilessly harsh nature that cares none for our feeble attempts to cross it, scenes of increasing despair and privation, endured nonetheless with stoic composure.

    They were the moon landings of their time. Crews setting out with lofty aims of expanding the map of human knowledge, broadening horizons. What captivated audiences back home was either more prosaic or more poetic; will they make it alive, human bravery in an alien cosmos, the attending mystery of venturing in uncharted territory.

    One part of the film comprises actual footage of the expedition shot by a cameraman who was among the crew, really exciting (silent film) footage of the ship being crunched by the ice, desperately futile attempts to haul it out, playing with their trusted dogs, their makeshift camps as they have to go out on foot. The second part shows modern enactments, presumably captures views like they would have stumbled through, whether or not the very same locales. It's actually South Georgia later. But how different the visual regions when charged with knowledge that we're actually seeing into things as they happened.

    I remember being enthralled as a kid by a book on polar misadventures. It was about an earlier expedition - the Discovery - but very much the same grimly claustrophobic experience. (What I couldn't know as a kid was that so much of my book's power came from the notion that these were things that actually happened.) It was the kind of story that makes you freeze simply to read, glad for home.

    I have a quite different response these days than simply being aghast at what a cold universe it is out there.

    See, these people ventured full of dreams. They were broken just as they were starting, shipwrecked in the early stages. Can you imagine the kind of disappointment that shakes you to your core? To know your dreams are quashed, your expedition is a complete failure. The same tortuous effort you expected to muster in the course of making history will now have to be spent just making it back alive.

    So, you expected life to go one way, it went another. What now? Now dust yourself off and come back to us with a story of making a full return from the edge.
    futures-1

    You'll never EVER whine again

    "The Endurance" (2000): Documentary. "In 1914, Sir Ernest Shackleton set sail on the Expedition with 27 men aboard, aiming to cross Antarctica. But when the vessel became stranded in frigid, deep waters, the crew began a battle of the human spirit, testing the limits of endurance as they strove to overcome the debilitating setback. Miraculously, they succeeded, even capturing the experience in pictures and on film." What is MOST profound about this story is what you learn from the mouths and diaries of survivors & their families. Their story leaves you gasping for air, and feeling you can NEVER EVER AGAIN WHINE ABOUT A SINGLE THING in your cushy, little, safe, easy, pampered life. This is one of the most difficult, torturous trials of life of all time. These men were the toughest, bravest, most steadfast humans to walk the Earth. It BOGGLES my mind to think of what they faced, and what they did to survive. Wow. See this! Get some perspective.
    9occupant-1

    magnificent

    At any point in this expedition, many would have given up or run out of ideas, but Ernest Shackleton's attitude reminds one of the Apollo 13 support crews in that failure was not an option. Everything great about the human species is seen in the efforts to discover an escape route from the pack ice, to find food in an almost lunar landscape and to send at least a few sailors to an island near the shipping lanes hundreds of miles from camp, the last chance for anyone to discover that Endurance's crew was still alive. Shackleton's refusal to give up, as well as resourcefulness in making unwasteful decisions, was the main reason for the rescue of the entire crew. Other than sled dogs, the antarctic didn't claim a single life - from this crew, anyway.
    8Xstal

    Incredible, Brave & Courageous...

    If you need something to remind you how incredible, brave and courageous people can be under the most impossible conditions, there are few better places to explore than the hell on earth experienced by Shackleton and his band of adventurers and how they escaped its frozen grasp.
    10Danusha_Goska

    Riveting. Moving. Thrilling. Disturbing. A Must See.

    "The Endurance" is one of the most amazing, unforgettable movies I've ever seen (and I've seen a lot of movies.) I wish I could require everyone to see it. "The Endurance" makes a mockery of most of what passes for action-adventure. It leaves comic book movies like 2008's "The Dark Knight," in its dust.

    "The Endurance" tells the story of Ernest Shackleton's alternately miraculous and disastrous Antarctic expedition of 1914. For the bulk of the film's runtime, I was on the edge of my seat, gasping, overwhelmed by the horror and magnitude of the nightmarish conditions Shackleton and his men confronted. The men, stuck in Antarctica, watch their ship, their sole sure escape, crushed into a pile of toothpicks by heaving chunks of ice. A man wakes in the middle of the night to realize that the ice under his tent has shifted; he plunges, in his sleeping bag, into Antarctic Ocean. Sled dogs go from being trusted allies and team members to something starving men debate eating. These conditions didn't last for an hour or a day or a month, but for over a year.

    Bad luck is followed by almost miraculous momentary deliverance. At one desperate point, the fate of his men hanging on his ability to carry out an almost impossible task – walking non-stop for 36 hours across unmapped cliffs, mountains, and glaciers, after months of malnutrition and under-using the muscles in his legs – Shackleton is convinced that a supernatural companion accompanies him. Mary Crean O'Brien, daughter of Tom Crean, who also made this trek with Shackleton, insists that that ghostly companion had been sent by "the man upstairs." One may scoff, but in this trek, Shackleton just missed a blizzard that, had he had to walk through it, would have certainly killed him. But what about all the bad luck that damned Shackleton and his men to their icy prison? This is a film that has you asking the big questions. Why do men do these crazy things? What does suffering mean, especially given how hard some people seek it out? Are these men greater than the rest of us, or merely mad? Where are frontiers, and heroes like this today? "Endurance" gets you thinking about culture. The British Empire gets a bad rap, but it did train its men to be honorable, and to live up to a code of conduct. Shackleton and his men were stoic, self-sacrificing, and learned to transcend class and ethnic differences. I had to wonder how a group of youths trained by our current values of whining, victimization, selfishness, identity politics and deviance would have responded under a similar catastrophe.

    The film is beautiful to look at. The filmmakers traveled to the Antarctic and complement Frank Hurley's, antique, black-and-white film footage and still photographs with modern, color footage. The effect is mesmerizing. The modern film footage plunges you into the Antarctic; you will feel cold. You will contemplate turquoise shadows on pure white icebergs, ice-choked sea, and blizzards as aesthetic phenomena, as guardians of the last frontier, and as enemies who want to stop the blood in your veins and suck your body several fathoms down.

    I have to confess that I found this film hard to watch. And I couldn't stop watching it. After it was done, I really needed time to decompress. Moment after moment juggles human lives and fates. I'll never forget this film, though, and its demonstration of the power of the human spirit.

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    Related interests

    Dziga Vertov in Man with a Movie Camera (1929)
    Documentary
    Liam Neeson in Schindler's List (1993)
    History

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Quotes

      Himself - Narrator: Optimism was at the very core of Ernest Shackleton's personality. Known to all as the "boss", he was a born leader who was from his youth driven by the romantic quest for adventure.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: Novocaine/In the Bedroom/Tape/Sidewalks of New York/The Endurance (2001)

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 21, 2001 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Germany
      • Sweden
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Endurance: Shackleton's Legendary Antarctic Expedition
    • Filming locations
      • Elephant Island, Antarctica
    • Production companies
      • Discovery Channel Pictures
      • FilmFour
      • Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,453,083
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $18,931
      • Oct 7, 2001
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,453,083
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 37m(97 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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