• AP
    AP
    Hindustan Times

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    The truly breathtaking spectacle and technical achievements can make you feel like you too are on a vertical slope at 29,000 feet. But this awe-inspiring movie is also one that’s laced with dread, little triumph and even less perspective as you wait, with a knotted stomach, for the disasters to manifest.

  • There isn’t a single line of corny dialogue, which is a far cry from blockbuster Hollywood. The acting is universally excellent, with Clarke continuing to impress with his range and a New Zealand twang that never feels out of place. This visually breath-taking film will make you want to go to Nepal…

  • Criselle Lobo
    Criselle Lobo
    BookMyShow

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    A film with exceptional visuals and many edge­-of-­the-­seat moments…

  • Everest takes us right to the top but is in such a hurry to get back to base camp that it ignores a question posed by travel journalist Jon Krakauer’s character to the summiteers: why is scaling Mount Everest so important? The struggle between human will and the mountain’s unbending nature is conveyed in the most basic and obvious terms. The movie shows us how the climbers reached the top, but isn’t interested in understanding why some of them died.