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The French-animated adaptation of Jiro Taniguchi‘s climbing manga follows two men obsessed with Mt. Everest: a mountaineer and a journalist seeking to discover what happened to a lost expedition. Together they’ll face the unrelenting brutality of one of Earth’s highest peaks in this beautifully animated drama.
This movie is streaming on Netflix
You can read our full length review of the film here and an interview with the director here.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the participants in this chatlog are not the views of Anime News Network.
Spoiler Warning for discussion of the film ahead.
Bonjour Nicky et bienvenue dans “Cette Semaine en Animation Française!”
TL Note: That’s French for “are you ready to get high?”
Steve, spare me, I can barely speak Spanish. But while romance languages aren’t my strong suit, there’s some languages that speak for themselves. One of those being animation. It’s highly accessible. Just look for yourself and hear the beauty of the wind as it braces against cold hard rock. This week, we’re translating The Summit of the Gods.
Not anime per se, but they do know a thing or two about animation in other countries.
After all, the big world of art, film, and animation can sometimes feel super intimidating! So consider us your guides as we travel through them.
Why, back in the old days, they had to make their collaborative anime discussion columns by emailing a .txt file back and forth. We don’t know how lucky we’ve got it.
Man I’m sweating again just looking at that second image.
But also, this film displays many real beautiful and notoriously difficult mountains that are pretty dangerous to film on. I don’t think the studio picked up this story simply because animation is cheaper and safer for certain locations. It just brings you into the moment a lot easier than what’s possible for live-action.
Part of what really sold me is the soundtrack. While the climbers make their ascent you can really feel the tension in the strings as some of the climbers hold onto dear life with only pieces of rope. There’s many humming synths for the cityscapes, or the clattering of drums while both Habu and Fukamachi pack up their respective equipment for the road, or the gawping sound of a deep cavern. Lots of clever emphasis via the instrumentation!
Basically, I realized mountaineering is actually just what sporty people do instead of speedrunning Mario games.
On the sincere side of things, I can’t say that I don’t relate as someone who’s totally tied to their obsession with animation.
Incidentally, I don’t think I ever thought much about how the conditions on top of Everest would almost perfectly preserve most of the climbers who fall victim to it. That is hella gnarly.
They also did actually find Mallory’s body for real a year after the original novel was published. Go figure.
That’s great and also horrifying to know. I can always count on you, Steve.
I don’t even get vertigo! The stuff in this film is just that raw.
Clearly not a metaphor about a man who struggles with interpersonal relationships.
This kid is like 12 years old, he should be climbing a jungle gym, not this.
That’s one line in the film that speaks more metaphorically to me and not so much for the actual circumstances. Either way, Buntaro committed suicide and it becomes very hard for the living to cope with that, even if their interpretation isn’t 100% perfect.
I also like how, as their climb progresses, the line between the two blurs further, with Fukamachi sporting similar-looking stubble and even finding himself in more or less same situation that cost Habu two of his fingers.
Honestly, if it wasn’t for the fact that they have different jackets, I don’t think I would’ve been able to tell them apart at some points.
That’s smart filmmaking!
And the result is just real intimacy.
It’s a sign of Habu’s maturity too, which ironically runs tandem with an acceptance of his own forthcoming death. Like, a different story would have had Habu go back down with Fukamachi, but Habu presses onward instead, making a more complicated and tragic ending. I think it’s the right one for the film too. The death-defying allure of mountain climbing can be found in plenty of stories, but Summit strikes a much more measured tone. You could walk away from this film with an itch to hit a climbing wall, or you could walk away determined to avoid anything steeper than a 30 degree incline. Both reactions are correct.
Because that’s ultimately what the film is about. It’s not about climbing a single peak, solving a single mystery, mastering a single skill, or anything that neat and simple.
A very open-ended and kind of bittersweet note for this story to end on, but that’s how I like my movies.
Yeah, it’s a great little film and I’m excited to see if I can make time to catch it in a (very empty) theater permitting everything. But it was still pretty satisfying watching it at home. Plus, I actually watched the English dub after switching tracks a bit and I found it to be pretty good and keeping with the naturalism.
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