12 opiniones
The Barkley Marathons is about a race based on a prison escape that only ten people have finished in the last twenty-five years. This is a documentary where the mere concept of it excites you and believe me, it delivers. It's crazy how something as weird and obscure as this has been going on for so long and people just began to hear about it. It has some nice looking shots which some documentaries don't have at all. It's informational and entertaining at the same time which is a plus. My only flaw with it was how hard it was to remember who was who while watching. With fifty different racers it's hard to keep track and I feel like a better job could've been done.
8/10 -- Great. Please give this film a watch. It hurts me to see movies like this get no attention whatsoever. You can buy it on Amazon, Vudu, Google Play, and iTunes for like five dollars digitally and on their website, you can but it for twenty-five bucks on Blu-Ray. I wouldn't recommend torrenting it because a film like this needs all the attention it can get.
8/10 -- Great. Please give this film a watch. It hurts me to see movies like this get no attention whatsoever. You can buy it on Amazon, Vudu, Google Play, and iTunes for like five dollars digitally and on their website, you can but it for twenty-five bucks on Blu-Ray. I wouldn't recommend torrenting it because a film like this needs all the attention it can get.
- theepurplepanda
- 6 feb 2016
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A fun, warm look at the weirdos and Weirdo In Chief orbiting the enigmatic Barkley Marathon. Well worth the watch, especially if you're looking for something that has nuance and psychology but is also not a hard watch.
- christopher_langer
- 12 jul 2018
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I've heard of The Barkley Marathons before, but this doc really nails it. Low-fi homespun logistics tying together possibly the nuttiest and toughest course on the planet. Invite only and limited to 40 entrants per year, to tackle a 130(ish) mile course, across mind bogglingly hard terrain that you have to navigate yourself, with map/compass, no GPS. 5 laps, in daylight and at night, going opposite directions on each loop. Most people don't complete 1 Lap, never mind all 5. Completely solo, no help, no markers, no water stations, intentionally fluid organisation, even no set start time... but you only have 60 hours to complete it. With no markers and no GPS, can't you cheat? No, there are books at various points in the woods and you have to find them all, tear out the page that matches your race number (that changes each loop) and get a full set. It is awe inspiring. It is heart breaking and it makes for gripping viewing. Not a chance in hell I'd try it myself though.
- TakeTwoReviews
- 19 jun 2019
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- sdm-10771
- 8 feb 2016
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This is a documentary about pushing your limits and never giving up. It follows the lives of untraditional people (at least in the world of sports) for 3 days and really gets you to care about their journey. You root for these people to accomplish this crazy marathon, not because of the marathon in itself, but because of the accomplishment it represents for them!
- laurasomia
- 14 sep 2019
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I am not a sporting man. I am also not a fan of sports films, generally. I don't run. However, I am a connoisseur of stories about obsessions, particularly unhealthy ones that could be detrimental to people's mental and physical well-being. And that makes this movie RIGHT down my alley.
The true story of a determinedly obscure marathon, one that has select entrants, an absurd level of endurance, and a strange way of keeping track of people's progress, it is clearly designed with the intent of only attracting the oddest of of endurance participants. It's both the total inverse and somehow the spiritual twin of the documentary Hands On a Hard Body, as both of them plumb the depths of seemingly normal people's endurance to understand their drives and motivations.
Does it answer that? Maybe, maybe not. But the journey is worth it regardless.
The true story of a determinedly obscure marathon, one that has select entrants, an absurd level of endurance, and a strange way of keeping track of people's progress, it is clearly designed with the intent of only attracting the oddest of of endurance participants. It's both the total inverse and somehow the spiritual twin of the documentary Hands On a Hard Body, as both of them plumb the depths of seemingly normal people's endurance to understand their drives and motivations.
Does it answer that? Maybe, maybe not. But the journey is worth it regardless.
- anatomyoffear
- 2 mar 2023
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Tennessee is the location, the backwoods are the course, and time is the enemy. Footage is a fantastic documentary of what people can or cannot endure. The organizer is hilariously wry, the camera work is great, and there is no aspect that suggests this to be staged" like so much reality survival footage.
The film includes background re. how and why the race began, its history, and personal asides The modicum of foul language further clarifies this as a true presentation.
I would love to be chosen for such a race yet know that if I even made it through the first five miles, I would have to buck up to walk five miles to to get back the where I started: even that would be victory for me.
Hats off and Hurrahs for all involved in this film.
The film includes background re. how and why the race began, its history, and personal asides The modicum of foul language further clarifies this as a true presentation.
I would love to be chosen for such a race yet know that if I even made it through the first five miles, I would have to buck up to walk five miles to to get back the where I started: even that would be victory for me.
Hats off and Hurrahs for all involved in this film.
- scihde
- 11 ago 2016
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I enjoyed this documentary, which follows the 2012 race of Barkley Marathon, one of the toughest and wildest ultramarathons.
This movie reminded me of "Safety to Nome" about Iditarod Trail, another tough ultra marathon occurring in Alaska, in that the participants' persistence and strength were equally impressive. But this one took a lighter and less tense stance, featuring each key attendee's journey in a less dramatic (more abstract?) way, blended well with the narrative by the organizer. It was much easier to follow it, rather than keeping my palm sweated all throughout.
Nevertheless, it was not boring at all! The last few minutes were indeed full of a good drama and a small suspense.
I recommend it!
This movie reminded me of "Safety to Nome" about Iditarod Trail, another tough ultra marathon occurring in Alaska, in that the participants' persistence and strength were equally impressive. But this one took a lighter and less tense stance, featuring each key attendee's journey in a less dramatic (more abstract?) way, blended well with the narrative by the organizer. It was much easier to follow it, rather than keeping my palm sweated all throughout.
Nevertheless, it was not boring at all! The last few minutes were indeed full of a good drama and a small suspense.
I recommend it!
- jennniindia
- 13 may 2022
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It's amazing that it was filmed when we first have 3 finishers in the history of the race, and I can't resist the feeling that Jared and Brett are real characters like the ones we see in a Marvel production. Great job, and Lazarus is a real legend!
- emirovich
- 11 jul 2021
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A friend told me about this. It's not a topic I would normally find interesting, but I was mesmerized from the first scene. Its homespun, down-home interviews with a professional film crew and engaging set of stories, along with plenty of scenes giving tastes of how very, very hard this event is. Unlike so many documentaries that get dull with an oppressive amount of detail and back-story, the film doesn't show you everything and tell you everything. This is a good thing. It left me wanting to know more, but feeling good with what the film delivered. I couldn't find one flaw with the film, and plenty of extras I didn't expect.
- stantims2
- 11 mar 2021
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I like running, like I do loads every week and run ultras, so this movie was right up my alley. The race that the movie is focused on is pretty legendary so I was quite keen to see the movie. While it was worth the watch and interesting, it's certainly not 7.8!
- adityakes-35741
- 30 oct 2019
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I have watched and re-watched this documentary multiple times. And have purchased the DVD from the movie's homepage. This is a fascinating view of what is unarguably the toughest trail race in the world. Since it's inception in 1986 ONLY 20 PEOPLE have EVER finished this 100 + mile race. This year, 3/22/24 the 1st female (Jasmine Paris from England) was among the Fierce Five Finishers on the race. Although the documentary was made 12 years ago, the information about the race is still current. If you are a runner or an running enthusiast I urge you to watch this award winning documentary on this awesome race!
- expressomax
- 23 mar 2024
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