What makes a great documentary? It needs action, soul, and some seriously mind-boggling images that stay with you long after the credits have rolled. We polled the members of our 听on Facebook to hear their thoughts on the films every adventurer should see. Here鈥檚 what they said.
鈥180掳 South鈥
Director Chris Malloy Jeff Johnson as he recreates Patagonia founder听Yvon Chouinard and The North Face founder Doug Tompkins鈥 1968 journey from Ventura, California, to Patagonia. Lots of you expressed affection for this one:
鈥淚t鈥檚 beautiful, for starters, and gives me a real sense of wanderlust every time I watch it.鈥 鈥擟onagher Haun
鈥淚 could watch 180掳 South every night of the week with no complaint. Great soundtrack, too.鈥 鈥擬ichael Crowe
鈥淚 watch it at least once a year and then obsess about dropping everything to head South in a van.鈥 鈥擣ern Harmon
鈥楳别谤耻鈥
Power directing team Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin were behind this deeper-than-most sufferfest documentary. Chin, Conrad Anker, and Renan Ozturk set out to climb Meru Peak in the Himalayas starting in 2008, and fail at least one time.
鈥淪o compelling鈥攖hree climbers at the top of their craft struggling to complete the climb after much adversity. Filmed with care and heart.鈥 鈥擝rett Thompson
鈥楤濒补肠办蹿颈蝉丑鈥
鈥淚 don't know that any documentary has ever impacted me quite the way Blackfish did the first time I saw it. I remember finishing it and then immediately restarting it, because I wanted to absorb everything I had just seen more fully. The backlash from it was swift and still resonates today, showing just how powerful this medium can be. If you haven't read them yet, I highly recommend the two 国产吃瓜黑料 features Blackfish was inspired by, 鈥The Killer in the Pool鈥 and 鈥Blood in the Water.鈥欌 鈥擜bbey Gingras, assistant audience engagement editor and book club moderator听
鈥楨ncounters at the End of the World鈥櫶
Werner Herzog meets the people who live and work in Antarctica, like maintenance workers at McMurdo Station and volcanologists. Grizzly Man, another Herzog classic about Timothy Treadwell, a man who lived among Alaska鈥檚 bears, also got an honorable mention.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not exactly about outdoor sports, but this movie depicts a harsh and isolated locale that is still magical, and it captures the spirit of exploration that has driven a diverse group of individuals to create a unique community in the most unexpected of places.鈥 鈥擬arika Robak听
鈥楩ree Solo鈥
鈥淥苍濒测 Alex Honnold, it seems, could deliver a documentary premise that would get the entire world talking about climbing. Free Solo听presented a feat that anybody would find astonishing鈥攃limbing El Capitan! Thousands of feet! Attached to no ropes! And with Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin directing, the film had the heart and humor to do justice to the story every climber was already talking about. No wonder it won an Oscar.鈥 鈥擡rin Berger, senior听editor and book club moderator
鈥楽tep into Liquid鈥
鈥淭he documentary chronicles a love of surfing all over the world, with profiles of classic pros and footage of unique spots like Ireland and Wisconsin. Shows the diversity of the sport and lifestyle. Shot beautifully, and the soundtrack is fun. Saw it for the first time as a kid and it really encouraged me to get out there!鈥 鈥擬ackensie DuPont Crowley听
鈥楾he Endless Summer鈥
This 1964 documentary follows surfers Mike Hynson and Robert August on a surf trip from north to south as they chase summer around the world.
鈥淭he ultimate classic. Bruce Brown鈥檚 narration, late 1960s surfing, a surf-rock soundtrack鈥攊t鈥檚 definitely dated and some portions aged better than others, but I can鈥檛 help but to see its influence throughout adventure-minded documentaries from that point on. I could easily watch it a hundred times (and probably have).鈥 鈥擩ennifer Dustin
鈥楾he Barkley Marathons: The Race That Eats Its Young鈥
Directors Annika Iltis and Timothy James Kane听give the cult Barkley Marathons the offbeat documentation it deserves.
鈥淎苍 ultramarathon in the Tennessee woods that costs a pair of socks with no announced start time… loved it. It鈥檚 a must-watch even if you鈥檙e not a runner.鈥 鈥擬egan Redford
鈥楾he Dawn Wall鈥
Behind the scenes of the feat we all remember: the first free ascent of the Dawn Wall on El Capitan.听
鈥The Dawn Wall is probably my favorite climbing movie so far. Tommy Caldwell and Kevin Jorgeson are two very talented and charismatic climbers, and the contrast of experience between these two when they started to team up brought an interesting perspective. We have the chance to witness through the documentary the growth of their friendship and it makes us feel like we are a little part of it. I recommended this movie to many non-climber friends and they all loved it.鈥澨擲alom茅 Aubert
鈥楳ile鈥 Mile and a Half鈥
Five film-savvy friends set out on the John Muir Trail and capture a fun little slice of hiking culture over 211 miles.
鈥淚 stumbled upon Mile… Mile and a Half听when听I was only about 17. I had always used backpacking before then as a detox from all technology, but I loved how they showed you can include technology into your hikes without it detracting from them (and possibly even getting to use the technology to motivate others!) Also, I had never heard of the John Muir Trail听before seeing it and now I鈥檓 working on planning my thru-hike of it for 2020!鈥 鈥擬aria Arguelles
鈥榁alley Uprising鈥
鈥済ave us the definitive climbing history of Yosemite in all its goofy and legendary glory, from Royal Robbins and Warren Harding to Alex Honnold and Lynn Hill. It also embraced a dynamic and immediately recognizable style of animating old photos to give them new life, which is now used in so many outdoor documentaries that it feels like our new Ken Burns Effect.鈥 鈥擡.B.