Subscribe to Outside Magazine
advertisement
Survival Guru

Today's Question
What should you do if you run into a cougar in the backcountry? answer

What is the number one backcountry skill people should learn? answer

Eco Adventurer

Today's Question
What are the five best environmental movies of all time? answer

What are the greenest colleges? answer

Videos Ask Dave
  • What kind of dog will make me look manlier? answer
  • Is there a sport that safely combines my twin passions for guns and kayaks? answer
  • How come most of the world's cultures enjoy eating goat, but Americans don't? answer

Online Favorites

Special Issues

Photo Galleries

save this page print this page email this page
  • share this page

Outside Magazine, March 2007

Media: Film
Push the Envelope Please
It's Oscar time in Hollywood, and at Outside, too. But we're skipping the Academy darlings to salute the little guys: six flicks that wowed us with their small-scale spectacle, and one—on global warming—of epic magnitude.

By Megan Michelson


Best Movies
(Erik T. Johnson)

Best on Belay: First Ascent
With virgin climbs from Thailand to the high-rises of Hollywood, the latest from Return2Sender director Peter Mortimer includes rock porn and a storyline. The film follows Switzerland's Didier Berthod on his quest to send a long-standing project, British Columbia's Cobra Crack, considered one of the hardest crack climbs in the world. In the end, will rock beat man, leaving us to taste the failure? $30; senderfilms.com

Coming Soon
Open Water director Chris Kentis is ready for a bigger boat—and Warner Bros. is giving it to him. The company has nabbed Kentis to direct Indianapolis, based on Doug Stanton's 2001 book In Harm's Way, the true story of the survivors of a World War II vessel that sank in (you guessed it) shark-infested waters in the Philippine Sea. Meanwhile, We Are Marshall's Anthony Mackie is lacing up his track shoes to headline Milkshake Films' Jesse, about African-American Jesse Owens, who took four gold medals in the 1936 Berlin Olympics. And let's hope David Duchovny has taken a few funny pills since his 2004 lemon House of D. The X Files hero is co-writing Yoga Man, a Showtime comedy series in development that's been described as Shampoo in a yoga studio. —ANTHONY CERRETANI

Best Buddy Flick: Old Joy
When Kurt (Will Oldham) and Mark (Daniel London), former high school pals who haven't seen each other in years, spend a weekend camping in Oregon's Cascade Range, their connection grows as thick as the old-growth forest around them. A critics' favorite since it premiered at Sundance in 2006, this one's part Seinfeld (funny, but nothing really happens), part A River Runs Through It (thanks to stellar cinematography and fraternal bonding). Coming soon on DVD; kino.com/oldjoy

Best Movie About Figs: The Queen of Trees
British filmmakers Mark Deeble and Victoria Stone spent two years camped in the Kenyan outback, using custom-made cameras to film life in and around a giant sycamore fig tree. Sounds sleepy, but it's not, thanks to close-ups of the nearly microscopic fig wasps, which live, mate, and die inside the grape-size fruit, and on which the tree—and nearly the entire ecosystem—depends. $20; shopthirteen.org

Best Supporting Agronomist: The Real Dirt on Farmer John
Documentary filmmaker Taggart Siegel explores the life of John Peterson, a flamboyant farmer who saves his Illinois fields from financial ruin by going organic—and then convincing nearby Chicagoans to invest and enjoy the harvest. It's a quirky tale of man vs. the locals (who at first think Peterson's a crackpot) and the beauty of community-supported agriculture, with a happy, pesticide-free ending. For DVD release information, visit angelicorganics.com

Best Reason to Free Your Heels: PW06
With a $15,000 budget—roughly what a slicker ski-porn outfit would spend for one morning's helicopter rental—Utah-based Powderwhore shot a telemark movie that stands out for its simplicity: human-powered ascents and frighteningly steep descents on couloirs in Alaska and Colorado. These skiers prove there's more to dropping a knee than killer quads. $22; powderwhore.com

Best Motivation to Buy a Hybrid: An Inconvenient Truth
Al Gore's global-warming doc grossed more than $23 million—proof that millions of Americans are willing to sit through a slide show to learn, for better or worse, about the state of the planet. That alone gives us hope for the future. $20; climatecrisis.net




 Subscribe to Outside and get a FREE Gift!
 Give the gift of Outside Magazine!
 Subscribe to Outside Online's free weekly e-mail newsletter featuring gear reviews, fitness advice, galleries, podcasts, and more.