Highline (2020) Poster

(2020)

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9/10
Highline to great scenery
outlandpub29 January 2020
As an author of High Uintas Backcountry, I had to see this movie when it came to SLC. I enjoyed seeing many of the places I have been, as well as some I have not. The camera work is stunning, and the movie is a "must see" for any fan of the High Uinta mountains. I wished the hikers would have spent some time fishing which a reason many hikers visit these remote lakes. The trout are also a great food source.
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9/10
Not what I expected , better
trumankayak3 February 2020
I came out to the Knoxville premiere expecting a hiking movie. What I got was glimpse into the lives of 5 different people , and an epic adventure. The film was beautifully shot , well edited and heartfelt. Enjoyed it very much. Truman
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10/10
Great movie!
emailelyk27 January 2020
I enjoyed the adventure of course. The character building was done well and didnt just do an introduction at the begining but spun it into the movie with side trips.

The history of the Uintah mountains was great and Informative. I do wish they could have snuck some "gear talk" into the movie. Did the hail break anything? How did that crisco looking stuff hold up on his feet?

The production and editing was excellent. High quality imho.
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10/10
A great hiking documentary
ahirschman17 March 2020
This is a great movie that mixes history, natural beauty, personal stories and more into a very enjoyable and beautiful documentary. We learn about the history of the Uinta trail, while seeing the beauty in the trail and learning about a little group of hikers and their background. The mix kept the whole story balanced and interesting.

Thanks.
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10/10
Like The Trail A Little Known Gem
drned-5091929 January 2020
It's a movie about 5 friends who hike the Highline and their personal redemption that has come through hiking, with a some history of the Uintas and the Highline Trail.

Being a local and having hiked the Highline I have a personal attachment to it, so my favorite parts were the sublime vistas and stories from the trail.

If you like the Uinta mountains, stories of redemption or American history, you'll like Highline.
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10/10
Aspire with Highline!
Traillover4life29 January 2020
I loved the well done character development of the hikers, as well as the presentation of the Highline topography and history. And the mission of Outmersive Films is to get people in the outdoors. Opt outside and go big with the Highline!
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10/10
A breath of fresh air
justingray-3789816 April 2020
In today's world of the endless "reality" based, over scripted, and product laden content. Highline was a breath of fresh air. Amzaing scenery and a hike of epic proportions take a back seat when you meet the cast. They each tell us a far better story about the journey of life, friendships, family, and triumph.

There is something for everyone in here. Especially if like many, you have ever faced a difficult obstacle in your life.

A well shot and executed production that leaves you eager to take a journey of your own.
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10/10
I'll Take the "Highline": A Great Film About a Wilderness Gem
bboggess-333567 April 2020
Never before, it seems, have so many been afflicted with so much. Ours seems to be the age of the psychic trauma: PTSD, ADHD, depression, anxiety, addiction, suicidal ideation, and a general malaise toward life, among many, many others. Why is this era, renowned for its many technological and medical marvels, becoming known almost as much for its epidemic of mental, emotional or psychological broken-ness? Many answers have been suggested, from modern humanity's greater understanding of the maladies to the relentless and high-stakes pace of modern life. Perhaps the answer is far more simple, and has been in front of our noses all along. Perhaps this rise of existential unhappiness is a result of our separation from wild places.

That is one of the key themes in Chris Smead's excellent new film, Highline, newly released by Outmersive Films. Using the backdrop of northeastern Utah's majestic Uinta Mountains, Smead weaves a tale of five friends (all veterans of the Appalachian Trail, the Pacific Coast Trail and many other "long-trail" excursions) tackling the Highline Trail, a seldom-hiked traverse along the Uinta Mountain crest. The film, like the trail it follows, is massive in scope and splendor.

All long-trail hikes are episodes in endurance, but the Highline Trail is especially daunting. The entire hike covers approximately 104 miles from end to end, most of it over 10,000 feet. It presents no fewer than nine passes over 11,000 feet (and some as high as 12,600 feet), and the total vertical feet climbed is off the charts. Hikers face the constant threat of afternoon thunderstorms which, when caught above tree-line, create a significant risk of deadly lightning strikes to all exposed. The remoteness of the trail means that hikers are never comfortably close to civilization, and exit strategies are rare and risky.

But the travails of the Highline Trail are overwhelmed by the spectacular beauty of the High Uintas. The altitude takes one's breath away, but then so do the views of towering peaks and vast river basins. One of the technical achievements of the Highline film is the way Smead conveys the beauty and grandeur of the Uintas with limited camera options. Unable to use drones (a designated wilderness rule), Smead and his fellow film makers had no choice but to make the hike with the five cast members, and to put in extra miles to get the perfect shot angles. It is often said that pictures do not do wild places justice, but Smead and company do a remarkable job of visually presenting the indescribable.

The Uintas are an underrated treasure in the mountaineering community. They are the most prominent east-west mountain range in the lower 48 states, and this vast swath of alpine acreage comes as a surprise to most who investigate them for the first time. But the Uintas also play an important role in the history of the American West, from the original post-ice age tribes, to fur-trapping mountain men, to enterprising business dreamers, to wilderness afficionados. Smead does a good job weaving this history into the majestic nature of the mountains themselves.

Due disclosure: I am a Uinta Mountain addict. I abscond to the Uintas every chance I get, and it never seems to be enough. I love the wild, untrammeled sections of that mountain range with my whole soul, and I have hiked much of the Highline Trail (but not all . . . yet) depicted in the film. It was fun to watch as the hikers move along the entire trail from east to west, and to share with my sons the familiar sections we have previously hiked. The views from passes we know brought back cherished memories of 50-milers past, and so a sense of nostalgia gripped me as I watched my Uintas being discovered through fresh eyes (along with weary feet and backs).

But where Highline really transcends typical backpacking/outdoor films is in its treatment of the five hikers. Just enough of their individual stories are included to make us care for each of them, and to notice a common thread. Each of these hiking legends (Joe Valesco, Matt Favero, Steve Kaiser, Will Wood and Benny Braden) has logged thousands of miles across some of the most storied trails in the world. Several of them make their living in the outdoor industry. But each man has, in some way, been broken at some point by life, by circumstance, or by individual choice. And each has turned to the mountains to find healing. Their stories, including their dark times and the light they have found on the trail, turn a glorious travel film into something much more engaging and meaningful.

A growing body of scientific evidence is proving what backpackers and mountaineers have always instinctively known: time spent in wild places heals spirits, resets minds and strengthens resolves. The sights, sounds and rhythms of the trail reach human beings in ways that modern medicine and psychiatry cannot (as important as the contributions of those disciplines continue to be). In his Audubon Award-winning book, Last Child in the Woods, Richard Louv coined the phrase "Nature-Deficit Disorder" to present what he considers to be a major cause of mental and emotional distress in 21st century human beings. Louv argues that our societal disconnect with wild places, starting as children in our hyper-scheduled, e-mail, text and video-game-addicted world, has robbed us of the healing and developmental benefits of outdoor time. In her thought-provoking podcast, Florence Williams compiles more recent research that demonstrates what she and other researchers call "The Three Day Effect," in which three consecutive days in the wilderness has been shown to calm and even reset the brain. New studies seem to come out every month confirming these hypotheses.

The Highline film doesn't tackle this science, nor should it. Instead, Highline gives us unmistakable anecdotal evidence of nature's healing power as testified by our five hikers, along with fascinating geological and historical context surrounding a truly unique mountain range. And the film conveys that information amidst the backdrop of unmatched, seldom-visited, awe-inspiring alpine beauty. This film will fuel rather than quench your cabin fever. Indeed, you cannot watch Highline without longing to see the Uinta Mountains in person (for either the first or the hundredth time). Highline is as well-made and deeply moving a film as I have seen in a long, long time.
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So boring
radtravel27 January 2020
I'm an avid hiker who was expecting this film to be about the Uinta Highline trail but what I got instead was a movie about a group of men and their personal stories. Each of us has a story and that's great, but what about the actual trail that this whole movie is supposedly based on? If you want to watch this movie for stories about their personal life, then this is the right movie for you. If you're like me, and would like to watch this film for education about the actual Uinta Highline trail then don't bother. There is zero trail or gear info. This movie is all about the men themselves... boring! Thanks for wasting my time.
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