Who would dare to climb up the sheer face of a mountain with just their bare hands risking death with every move? Alex Honnold does, and you will hold your breath watching his journey in this spectacular documentary
    “Anyone could die on any given day.” Those are the words of the world’s most famous free solo rock climber, Alex Honnold
 And while of course, that’s true, most of us don’t purposely put ourselves in death defying circumstances, like on the side of a towering 2,900 foot mountain, without any ropes or harness
  Honnold, on the other hand, does do that, when he scales what are virtually sheer mountain faces with just his hands, his shoes and a strapped-on container of chalk
 His most astounding and life challenging feat was becoming the first person ever to free solo climb the infamous 2,900 ft face of the El Capitan rock formation in Yosemite National Park ,in 2017
 That epic accomplishment, arguably the “greatest athletic achievement of all time,” according to Free Solo co-director Jimmy Chin, has been documented in a breathtaking Oscars-contending  film that you must see, and it’s in theaters right now
      Alex Honnold’s quest to make the “the impossible possible,” as co-director, Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi, put it at an NYC screening on Dec
 5th, isn’t just completely riveting to watch, it also raises provocative questions about the purpose of life
  As Alex, who is 33 now, reflects in the doc as he contemplates what seems like an insane mission that he is setting for himself — he in no way ‘feels obligated to maximize’ his lifespan, by giving up what he loves
  And what he loves and has been doing since he was a young teenager, is free solo climbing
 He is exhilarated by scaling mountains without any of the mountain climbing equipment which provides safety if he falls
 He estimates that he has made more than 1,000 solo climbs and each time, one false move could send him hurtling to his death
  “I differentiate between risk and consequence,” he tells a group of rapt students in the film
 “The risk of falling is low,” he insists. (because of his skill and training) “But the consequence is high
” Uh yes. Most of the world’s top free solo climbers have eventually fallen to their deaths
 Honnold nevertheless insists that he does not want to die, and the film follows his journey on what turns out to be two years of training and preparation to make his historic and astounding, SPOILER ALERT — successful — free solo climb up the Freerider route of El Capitan’s face in 3 hours and 56 minutes
   Along the way, filmmakers Vasarhelyi and Chin, who are married, brilliantly capture Honnold’s intelligent and engaging personality, his personal growth as he unexpectedly (for him) develops a true love relationship with his now girlfriend, Sanni McCandless, and his deep commitment to the quest to climb ‘El Cap’
  Chin appears in the film, along with his crew — all of them world class mountain climbers and videographers
 While Honnold climbs El Capitan, roped in with famed mountain climber, Tommy Caldwell, to learn every single inch of the beyond challenging route, Chin and his team meticulously plan how to shoot Alex’s ultimate ascent without risking his safety
      Imagine if they knocked a pebble or dropped a camera lens cap and somehow hit him or distracted him, and they were responsible for him falling to his death? They wrestle with this plus just the morality of simply documenting his dangerous free solo ascent
 Could filming the documentary push him to climb before he’s ready or when he shouldn’t even do it at all, which any sane person would tell him not to do
  And as Vasarhelyi said at the screening, “When you do a non-fiction film, you don’t know what’s going to happen
 And we know that even if Alex fell, we’d still have to finish the film.” Nevertheless, she and Chin persisted, and their filming of his climb is spectacular
 Honnold refuses to give up his quest, confessing that he is, “Seeking perfection
 And free soloing is as close as you can get. It does feel good, to feel perfect… for a moment
”  For most of the rest of us 9 billion people on the planet, death isn’t the absolute only option of us not reaching our goal
 But after watching Free Solo, you will understand why Alex Honnold was willing to dedicate himself to reach his perfection
  And it is delightful, simply delightful.  
