So glad to see this back up. This film and "I Just Want to Ride" combined to inspire me to ride 1100 miles from my hometown in Oregon to the start line in Banff, and then 2700 miles to the finish at Antelope Wells on the 2022 TD. Thanks for making a creative work that endeavors to expand awareness of this sport and this event, and moves people like myself (and I think many others) to try big things.
So glad to watch this documentary again years after, and still stoked with these wonderful images. This documentary is so photographical. Btw, at 21:32 I can’t take this picture out of my mind !
Total respect on the ride. This film was so well done, from the content to cinematography to the background music. Exceptional! I particularly enjoyed the B & W scenes. Most could never understand why you would do a ride like this. They're missing out. I've never done a ride to this extreme, but have done a few up to 500 miles. The time alone and the self sufficiency is incredible.
As a female who has completed miles on a bike long distance, I can honestly say I don't feel free. It is a form of meditation since I no longer run. I don't see anything free about riding. I do enjoy riding but it's not free.
I agree. Confusing. I could not figure if you were in the truck or not and could not understand it’s context in the film until, go figure, it’s your film crew. Almost threw me off watching. Supremely happy I stayed to the end..
@@wtyssen Yeah, it took me a while to figure that out as well. I swear there is a shot of Josh in the car. I thought maybe Josh had scratched and there was a time jump thing going on in the narration. So happy videos like this exist. I think it is silly that they penalize-even disqualify-"racers" for having film crews. Glad to see that Josh didn't have to fight with any of that controversy (like Lael and Lachlan, etc.) In fact, Lael willingly scratched that same year (as everyone knows who's watched her documentary). I do have to wonder if "the guy with a film crew" that wasn't getting the same flack that she mentions in her film might have been Josh. No way to know. Someone could make a solid argument that there are very long segments of this film where the stabilization and distance of the shots would suggest Josh was getting a serious draft benefit from the photographer vehicle.
So glad to see this back up. This film and "I Just Want to Ride" combined to inspire me to ride 1100 miles from my hometown in Oregon to the start line in Banff, and then 2700 miles to the finish at Antelope Wells on the 2022 TD. Thanks for making a creative work that endeavors to expand awareness of this sport and this event, and moves people like myself (and I think many others) to try big things.
Such a great documentary, loved a every moment of it. Rarerlly have I experienced such beauty in a film. Thanks!!
Wow Ernesto! This means a lot to me! Thank you!
Superb - too many amazing shots to mention, beautifully put together Ryan. Josh's reflections are great - honest & thoughtful.
Just watched this again Ryan…..LOVED. Did the 2019 edition too. Time to head back for 2024…..hope Josh is there 🙏🏾
Hey Ross! Thanks so much! Wish we had met there and then! It will happen tho’
So glad to watch this documentary again years after, and still stoked with these wonderful images. This documentary is so photographical.
Btw, at 21:32 I can’t take this picture out of my mind !
Loved this...another beautiful film!
Thanks dude!
Total respect on the ride. This film was so well done, from the content to cinematography to the background music. Exceptional! I particularly enjoyed the B & W scenes. Most could never understand why you would do a ride like this. They're missing out. I've never done a ride to this extreme, but have done a few up to 500 miles. The time alone and the self sufficiency is incredible.
Nicely done!👍I really enjoyed that!!!
Excited... 45 more minutes to wait.
Une petite merveille. Comme d'hab.
Lovely stuff although audio levels were often problematic. At 1:02:54 there's a date error in titling you may want to fix (June 1st?).
great film!
thanks dude
Magnifique 😅😊
Merci!
As a female who has completed miles on a bike long distance, I can honestly say I don't feel free. It is a form of meditation since I no longer run. I don't see anything free about riding. I do enjoy riding but it's not free.
@@anneliesevoelker2502 thanks for your feedback. I am not sure I understand what you mean tho’…
Why was you in a truck so many times?
To
Make
The
Film
?
🤷🏻♂️
@@Ryanlegarrec cool thanks. I thought I missed something like mechanical issues or something. Thanks for the reply 👍
I agree. Confusing. I could not figure if you were in the truck or not and could not understand it’s context in the film until, go figure, it’s your film crew. Almost threw me off watching. Supremely happy I stayed to the end..
@@wtyssen Yeah, it took me a while to figure that out as well. I swear there is a shot of Josh in the car. I thought maybe Josh had scratched and there was a time jump thing going on in the narration. So happy videos like this exist. I think it is silly that they penalize-even disqualify-"racers" for having film crews. Glad to see that Josh didn't have to fight with any of that controversy (like Lael and Lachlan, etc.) In fact, Lael willingly scratched that same year (as everyone knows who's watched her documentary). I do have to wonder if "the guy with a film crew" that wasn't getting the same flack that she mentions in her film might have been Josh. No way to know. Someone could make a solid argument that there are very long segments of this film where the stabilization and distance of the shots would suggest Josh was getting a serious draft benefit from the photographer vehicle.
Stoked about this.