• THE RESCUE (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

    From Mark Leeper@21:1/5 to All on Sun Nov 7 08:29:13 2021
    THE RESCUE is a documentary about the rescue of a Thai boys' soccer
    team trapped in Tham Luang Cave in June 2018, when an early monsoon
    rainfall blocked many of the entrances and would soon flood the
    cave. The team was trapped behind lower passages that had filled
    with water. The main "narrator" is Vern Unsworth, a British cave
    diver who had mapped a lot of the cave.

    The first step was to assemble a rescue team. These were not
    professionals, but men whose hobby was cave diving, and they were
    acknowledged to be the best in the world. They were also
    introverts, did not play team sports when they were young, and
    often had been bullied as children. Even though they were experts,
    few cave divers have experienced conditions like this where the
    only path out includes extensive underwater navigation in a very
    strong current of murky water.

    Their first dive found three additional trapped workers, men who
    had been working the pumps but had been caught by the rising
    waters. Their rescue gave the cave divers valuable information
    about how to accomplish their main goal.

    The Thai Navy SEALS did some of the original rescue work including
    exploring the cave, then they turned it over to the British cave
    divers. At one point, the British felt it was hopeless--they had
    had great difficulty in bringing the pump workers out in thirty
    seconds under water, and could not see how they could bring
    children out in what would be a multi-hour trip. However, the
    SEALs refused to give up and took back the job until one died. At
    that point, the British realized they could not give up, and
    resumed their task. On Day 10 the dozen soccer players were found
    deep within the cave. Food was brought in, but the oxygen level in
    their section of the cave was down to 15%, below what would sustain
    life for long.

    Having rescued someone from a cave is like no other caving
    experience. No place is the experience valuable except in going
    through the experience for another flooded cave. Because of the
    problems with the pump workers, one suggestion was to sedate the
    boys and bring them out unconscious. Although everyone agreed this
    was a terrible plan, ultimately they agreed this was the only plan
    that had any chance of working. Ultimately, they brought all the
    boys (and their coach) out on Days 15 through 17. And within hours
    of the last rescue, the cave flooded completely.

    The same directors, E. Chai Basarhelyi and Jimmy Chin, previously
    made the documentary FREE SOLO, so they are familiar with filming
    tense outdoor scenes, which here was dramatic cave photography.
    Obviously a lot of the rescue operation footage was obviously
    recreated later, though authentically by the original participants,
    but there were at least fifteen minutes of original footage taken
    from almost 87 hours that the Thai SEALs had captured on cameras
    they carried. There is also an interesting animation style for
    telling of the legend of the cave and the end credits.
    Unfortunately, while the rescue was a momentous rescue, the film
    ended up just average, with perhaps too many scenes of people
    outside the cave that did not convey new information.

    Released theatrically 10/08/2021. Rating: low +2 (-4 to +4), or
    7/10.

    Film Credits:
    <https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9098872/reference>

    What others are saying:
    <https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_rescue_2021>

    --
    Mark R. Leeper

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