[go: up one dir, main page]

    Calendario de lanzamientosTop 250 películasPelículas más popularesBuscar películas por géneroTaquilla superiorHorarios y entradasNoticias sobre películasPelículas de la India destacadas
    Programas de televisión y streamingLas 250 mejores seriesSeries más popularesBuscar series por géneroNoticias de TV
    Qué verÚltimos trailersTítulos originales de IMDbSelecciones de IMDbDestacado de IMDbGuía de entretenimiento familiarPodcasts de IMDb
    OscarsEmmysToronto Int'l Film FestivalIMDb Stars to WatchPremios STARmeterInformación sobre premiosInformación sobre festivalesTodos los eventos
    Nacidos un día como hoyCelebridades más popularesNoticias sobre celebridades
    Centro de ayudaZona de colaboradoresEncuestas
Para profesionales de la industria
  • Idioma
  • Totalmente compatible
  • English (United States)
    Parcialmente compatible
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Lista de visualización
Iniciar sesión
  • Totalmente compatible
  • English (United States)
    Parcialmente compatible
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Usar app
  • Elenco y equipo
  • Opiniones de usuarios
IMDbPro

Beyond Limits: Into the ADHD Mind: Rising Above Failure

  • 2025
  • 56min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.2/10
766
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Simon Blair in Beyond Limits: Into the ADHD Mind: Rising Above Failure (2025)
Ver Official Trailer
Reproducir trailer1:11
1 video
5 fotos
Aventura en el desiertoAventura

Recientemente diagnosticado con TDAH, Simon Blair enfrenta dudas y fracasos pasados en la maratón des Sables. Mientras el desierto pone a prueba su mente y cuerpo, ¿podrá convertir su diagnó... Leer todoRecientemente diagnosticado con TDAH, Simon Blair enfrenta dudas y fracasos pasados en la maratón des Sables. Mientras el desierto pone a prueba su mente y cuerpo, ¿podrá convertir su diagnóstico en una ventaja o lo frenará?Recientemente diagnosticado con TDAH, Simon Blair enfrenta dudas y fracasos pasados en la maratón des Sables. Mientras el desierto pone a prueba su mente y cuerpo, ¿podrá convertir su diagnóstico en una ventaja o lo frenará?

  • Dirección
    • Ryan Lovejoy
  • Elenco
    • Simon Blair
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.2/10
    766
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Ryan Lovejoy
    • Elenco
      • Simon Blair
    • 59Opiniones de los usuarios
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:11
    Official Trailer

    Fotos4

    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel

    Elenco principal1

    Editar
    Simon Blair
    Simon Blair
    • Self
    • Dirección
      • Ryan Lovejoy
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios59

    6.2766
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    6
    7
    8
    9
    10

    Opiniones destacadas

    RanD-83

    This film should come with a trigger warning: for secondhand embarrassment and irreversible boredom

    There are bad films. Then there are catastrophes. And then, at the bottom of the cinematic sewer, lies Beyond Limits: Into the ADHD Mind: Rising Above Failure - a film so insufferable, so deluded, and so utterly void of purpose, it makes you question how we, as a society, allowed it to exist.

    This isn't a documentary. It's a 90-minute hostage situation.

    Simon Blair, our self-appointed hero, takes us on a torturous expedition through the desert - not of sand, but of self-obsession. Armed with a half-baked ADHD diagnosis and the ego of a TED Talk addict, Blair transforms a generic endurance race into an unbearable, ego-stroking pity parade. You'll learn nothing about ADHD. You'll learn nothing about resilience. The only thing you'll learn is how long the human brain can endure pure cinematic suffering before it begs for mercy.

    The film opens with slow-mo sand and some half-philosophical voiceover that sounds like it was generated by ChatGPT on a bad day. From there, it gets worse. Every line is drenched in melodrama, every shot screams "look at me", and every moment is so painfully contrived it feels like performance art for narcissists.

    This film uses ADHD the way influencers use mental health hashtags: as a prop. There's no depth. No honesty. No effort to educate or illuminate. Just a man jogging through the desert, stopping every few minutes to remind you that he's "struggling," as if being tired while running in 40-degree heat is a unique revelation. You'd get more meaningful insight into ADHD from a cereal box.

    And let's talk production. It's visually offensive. Recycled drone footage, randomly spliced crying montages, and a soundtrack so manipulative it should be illegal. It's like someone tried to shoot Lawrence of Arabia with an iPhone and no sense of shame.

    This isn't just bad. It's embarrassing. It's the cinematic version of someone interrupting a support group to make it all about them. It's what happens when delusion meets a GoPro and a midlife identity crisis.

    If this film was meant to inspire, it failed. If it was meant to inform, it failed. If it was meant to do anything other than make the audience regret every second of their lives they spent watching it - it failed. Spectacularly.

    Final verdict?

    Burn the footage. Apologize to the ADHD community. And for the love of cinema, never let this man near a camera again.
    HanyF-49

    Makes eating dry sand seem emotionally rich.

    There are bad films. There are embarrassing films. And then there's Beyond Limits - a cinematic endurance test so excruciating, so hollow, and so offensively tone-deaf, it feels less like watching a documentary and more like being force-fed someone's unfinished therapy session while strapped to a chair in a desert.

    Let's be clear: this film is an insult - to ADHD, to documentary filmmaking, to the audience, and most of all, to the concept of storytelling itself.

    Simon Blair stumbles through the Marathon des Sables with the weight of the world - or rather, the weight of his own unchecked ego - on his shoulders. We're told this is a film about struggle, about rising above failure, about the mind of someone newly diagnosed with ADHD. But what we get is a man whispering generic pseudo-profundities into the camera like he's auditioning to be the face of a self-help cult.

    The ADHD narrative is a cheap emotional gimmick, barely explored and entirely misunderstood. It's treated not with nuance or compassion but with exploitative simplicity - an accessory to justify endless shots of Blair crying into sandstorms like a budget Messiah. At no point does the film even attempt to inform, challenge, or humanize the condition. Instead, it slaps the ADHD label onto a montage of suffering and hopes the audience confuses that for depth.

    The cinematography is a war crime. Endless drone shots of nothing. Overexposed close-ups of sweat-drenched anguish. And editing so disjointed, it feels like someone blindly shuffled footage in Premiere and called it art. The score? A manipulative dirge of swelling strings over scenes that don't deserve a single note of drama.

    If Blair had actually eaten dry sand for 90 minutes, it would have been more meaningful. Because unlike this film, sand doesn't lie to you. Sand doesn't pretend to be something it's not. Sand doesn't cloak mediocrity in faux-inspiration and emotional blackmail.

    And yet here we are - a film that somehow manages to be both exhaustingly narcissistic and emotionally bankrupt. It's not that it fails. It's that it never tried to do anything more than glorify one man's desperate attempt to brand his personal crisis as universal truth.

    Watching Beyond Limits is like being stuck in a sauna with a motivational speaker who won't stop crying. You want to care. You want to feel something. But all you're left with is suffocating discomfort and a creeping sense of shame that you ever pressed play.

    Burn the footage. Apologize to the audience. And if there's any justice left in the world, make sure this never reaches another screen.
    LewisB-49

    Makes eating dry sand seem emotionally rich.

    ÑThere are documentaries that explore the human condition... and then there's Beyond Limits, which feels like someone accidentally filmed their midlife crisis with a GoPro and decided it was profound.

    Simon Blair embarks on the Marathon des Sables to "rise above failure" and explore his ADHD diagnosis. Bold move. Unfortunately, somewhere between the drone shots of beige dunes and the slow-motion footage of tying shoelaces, the film forgets to have a point. Or a soul. Or a budget that wasn't spent entirely on desert footage and royalty-free inspirational music.

    This film treats ADHD like a trendy buzzword you slap onto a smoothie to sell it at Whole Foods. We get vague monologues, some desert jogging, and about as much psychological insight as a fortune cookie. If ADHD is a chaotic symphony of thoughts, this film is a single kazoo playing out of tune for 90 minutes.

    And let's talk visuals: yes, the desert is vast and merciless-just like the runtime. Every time a gust of wind blew sand in Simon's face, I hoped it would knock some narrative structure into the film. No such luck.

    Emotionally manipulative music? Check. Meaningless voiceovers? Check. Slow-mo shots of a man staring at his feet like they're about to reveal the meaning of life? Big check.

    In the end, this isn't a documentary. It's a motivational poster stretched into a movie, and not even a good one-the kind you find in the clearance bin with a faded sunset and the word "GRIT" spelled wrong.

    Verdict: If your idea of a good time is watching a man sweat while pondering the vague concept of perseverance, this is your Citizen Kane. For everyone else: hydrate, go outside, and avoid this sand trap of cinema.
    NicoleH-00

    A mirage of meaning in a desert of disappointment.

    Watching Beyond Limits: Into the ADHD Mind feels like being promised a gritty emotional adventure and instead getting a TED Talk with a sunburn.

    The premise sounds compelling: a man recently diagnosed with ADHD confronts inner demons while tackling one of the world's harshest ultramarathons. But what unfolds is a painfully drawn-out montage of sand, sweat, and sentimentality that never quite earns its emotion.

    Simon Blair, the central figure, is clearly enduring a physical trial. But the documentary fails to turn his personal struggle into anything more than surface-level inspiration fluff. The ADHD aspect is name-dropped, not explored. Viewers expecting depth or psychological insight will find themselves stranded like a broken GPS signal in the Sahara.

    The editing meanders, the voiceover tries too hard to be profound ("The real desert is the one inside me"), and the pacing is as uneven as running on dunes in crocs. It's all sand, no substance.

    By the end, you'll be left wondering whether the film was about ADHD, endurance, or simply just... existing in a desert while a drone follows you.

    Beyond Limits wanted to motivate. Instead, it left me questioning how I just lost 94 minutes of my life to inspirational beige.
    TeoC-19

    I feel unclean after watching this.

    Some films move you. Some films challenge you.

    This one? It made me want to shower. Twice.

    Beyond Limits is less a documentary and more a grotesque exercise in self-congratulation masquerading as mental health advocacy. I didn't just dislike it - I was repulsed by it. The sheer level of delusion on display is stomach-turning.

    Simon Blair's "journey" - if we can call 90 minutes of narcissistic rambling and slow-motion jogging a journey - is so drenched in fake depth and Instagrammable tragedy that it feels like watching someone audition for sympathy points. Constantly. With no self-awareness. The film parades his ADHD diagnosis around like a golden ticket to emotional validation, yet never once treats the condition with honesty, humility, or respect.

    This isn't representation. It's exploitation. And it's ugly.

    The way this film weaponizes struggle for attention is frankly offensive. We're supposed to be inspired by Simon running through the desert - but all I could think about was how hollow and contrived it all felt. His every line is delivered with the over-serious gravitas of a man who's convinced the world is watching a life-changing moment. In reality, we're just watching a guy sweat, moan, and stare blankly at the horizon, searching for a metaphor that never arrives.

    The editing is a disaster. The pacing is non-existent. And the music? Cheap, manipulative, and utterly undeserved. It's as if they tried to wrap a turd in silk ribbon and expected us to call it art.

    What's truly sickening is how this film treats ADHD not as a condition, but as a marketing gimmick. No expert voices. No context. No care. Just Simon, inserting it into every sentence like a brand deal he can't wait to cash in on.

    By the end, I didn't feel moved. I didn't feel educated. I felt used. Like the film had tried to force-feed me meaning it never earned, and expected applause for the effort.

    Beyond Limits doesn't rise above anything - it sinks into a pit of self-indulgent, virtue-signaling sludge.

    It left me emotionally numb, mentally exhausted, and deeply grossed out.

    Don't just skip it. Scrub it from your memory.

    Más como esto

    Asombrosa Elisa
    4.0
    Asombrosa Elisa
    Americart 2019
    7.4
    Americart 2019
    Samson: A Savior Will Rise
    8.5
    Samson: A Savior Will Rise
    The Girl in the Backseat
    5.8
    The Girl in the Backseat
    Bozzo in the woods
    7.8
    Bozzo in the woods
    The Housemaid
    4.7
    The Housemaid
    Stag
    4.6
    Stag
    Journey to You
    6.4
    Journey to You
    Cold Blows the Wind
    5.7
    Cold Blows the Wind
    Crazy Texas
    4.7
    Crazy Texas
    Clone Cops
    5.2
    Clone Cops
    The Atlantis Conspiracy
    5.6
    The Atlantis Conspiracy

    Intereses relacionados

    Brendan Fraser, John Hannah, and Rachel Weisz in La momia (1999)
    Aventura en el desierto
    Still frame
    Aventura

    Argumento

    Editar

    Selecciones populares

    Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
    Iniciar sesión

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 23 de marzo de 2025 (Reino Unido)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Sitio oficial
      • The website of the films production company
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Sahara Desert, Morocco(Marathon Des Sables)
    • Productora
      • Outpost 9 Films
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • GBP 20,000 (estimado)
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 56min
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.39

    Contribuir a esta página

    Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta
    • Obtén más información acerca de cómo contribuir
    Editar página

    Más para explorar

    Visto recientemente

    Habilita las cookies del navegador para usar esta función. Más información.
    Obtener la aplicación de IMDb
    Inicia sesión para obtener más accesoInicia sesión para obtener más acceso
    Sigue a IMDb en las redes sociales
    Obtener la aplicación de IMDb
    Para Android e iOS
    Obtener la aplicación de IMDb
    • Ayuda
    • Índice del sitio
    • IMDbPro
    • Box Office Mojo
    • Licencia de datos de IMDb
    • Sala de prensa
    • Publicidad
    • Trabaja con nosotros
    • Condiciones de uso
    • Política de privacidad
    • Your Ads Privacy Choices
    IMDb, una compañía de Amazon

    © 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.