Even knowing the happy outcome, Butler masterfully keeps us on the edge of our seats, and communicates the full horror and seeming hopelessness of the crew's situation every step of the way.
100
San Francisco ChronicleMick LaSalle
San Francisco ChronicleMick LaSalle
A remarkable documentary about an almost unfathomable ordeal.
The film is a pleasure, which the real thing was not. It's also a chilling adventure and a compelling story from beginning to end.
90
Wall Street JournalJoe Morgenstern
Wall Street JournalJoe Morgenstern
A marvelous story.
88
Chicago Sun-TimesRoger Ebert
Chicago Sun-TimesRoger Ebert
What made Shackleton's adventure so immediate to later generations was that he took along a photographer, Frank Hurley, who shot motion picture film and stills.
Documentarian George Butler ("Pumping Iron") wisely opted to stick to the cold, hard facts of the expedition's tale while layering in warmer material, like interviews with historians and descendants of the crew and narrator Liam Neeson's lilting bedtime-story delivery.
Makes for the most thrilling action movie of the year.
60
Village Voice
Village Voice
Still enigmatic is the figure of Shackleton himself. The film conveys his remarkable leadership without explaining (beyond a because-it's-there romanticism) what would compel such a journey in the first place.
50
Film ThreatPhil Hall
Film ThreatPhil Hall
This is a curious example of taking a hair-raising story and draining the drama from every corner, leaving it a bit flat and ultimately forgettable.