Kinda figured when they showed the scene at 4:20 of the movie character jumping from one cliff to another and he casually just goes like "oh yeah I've done stuff like that"
Will is truly great. On a technical note the animator confused the technical axes and the mountaineering axe. Probably because they did not have a Nomic in the movie but an older style of axe.
At 11:33 the video editors got the shots of the ice tool mixed up with the general mountaineering axe. The explanation is great, so just know that the pink axe is the general mountaineering axe (it has an adze, which is like a small shovel), and the beige ice tool (with hammer). The stock photos of the tools are correctly matched up though, so that's nice.
What a guy. I've always had my reservations with such scenes based on physics and human body resilience alone but it's great to hear someone experienced spit the facts. Thanks!
I was in Wills workshops once, he's a class act in passion, teaching expertise in one package. He is a gem for the climbing/ice climbing community in Alberta, really the rest of the world, I'd say.
The editors confidently mis-labeling the tools when Will Gadd is describing the difference between technical tools and glacier axes at 11:20 is peak irony
Dude’s knowledge paired with his wit and earnest/ easy going demeanor made this such a fun watch. I belly laughed at his response to the GOT scene “that rope would’ve cut him in half” 😂
This guy is incredible! Y'all do such an awesome job finding experts for these videos. Like y'all really do your research. When I watch these on things i know nothing about (much like this) I'm always enthralled. Kudos! Will, you're awesome!
A very long time ago, when I hadn't used up my body entirely. I loved mountaineering. I ice climbed for fun. It wasn’t anywhere near as evolved as it is now. Every now and again, when I'm feeling nostalgic I’ll dig out a picture of me ice climbing. Typically they’re distant photos of me in a yellow jacket, or a red one, with my crampons dug in, and an ice axe in each hand, a sling of ice screws, a 60 meter wet/dry rope threading down, and a pair of Bausch and Laumb glacier glasses shoved on my face. And the best part? I have this huge smile on my face becauseI'm truly happy! I'm not thinking about a d@mned thing but ice climbing. Not bills, changing my oil, or anything else, just ice climbing. Ice climbing and parachuting worked the same for me. If I was doing either activity, that's the only thing I thought about. Not one other thing. Anyway, thanks, Will Gadd, you also brought up my favorite climbing movie of all time, K2!!!! I love that movie! I even took my daughters to see it at the theater. One reason for that was K2 was my dream climb. But K2 the movie is great, starring Michael Biehn said Matt Craven. Thanks again, Will Gadd. Great video, I've had a lot of fun. And Will, be safe, be well, and be happy!
my dad has done a fair bit of ice climbing in his younger days, and I admire and respect him more than any other person I know, and I also think people who ice climb are completely insane
Will is no joke! I got to climb with both him and Barry Blanchard at Mountainfest 2003 in the Adirondacks. I watched Will climb 90' of ice with only no ice tools, only wool mittens! Frickin Legend! 💪🏽
At 2:42 As a mountaineer myself I've been taught to never dig your toes in if you're wearing crampons as that's a fantastic way to break your ankles and flip over, pushing your knees into the snow instead. I suppose if you're not wearing crampons it's fine but I definitely wouldn't do it with them.
Yep I was taught the same thing, that had me confused too. He also called out the axes in alien v predator, they are Grivel alpwings, i have used them for ages and they are great, not sure what his point was😂
@@freddydorling9548 That's correct if you're glissading down or falling on softer snow. Generally speaking you can raise your feet trying to touch your butt so your front points dont catch, but if you're falling on Neve or worse, ice, you'd rather have the broken ankles than be dead.
That's correct if you're glissading down or falling on softer snow. Generally speaking you can raise your feet trying to touch your butt so your front points dont catch, but if you're falling on Neve or worse, ice, you'd rather have the broken ankles than be dead.
@@Devoted96 Correct me if i'm wrong, but if you dig your tips in and flip onto your back, aren't you even less likely to stop. I personally think we are taught self arresting because it is the best way to stop a fall. In a situation with mature neve or ice, where there is any risk of falling, or it is particularly exposed, I would hope most would rope up up and climb the difficulty as a pitch. I could well be wrong, and I would love to be corrected, as it may save my life next time!
@@Devoted96 I agree, in the worst case you do what you can to survive, however I can imagine that it is near impossible to keep yourself upright when braking with your toes at higher speeds so the danger of flipping is still there. I've never tried it though, and I really hope I don't have to😅
I love Shivaaya. The whole movie was cool... I know it's impossivle for that mountain descent to happen, but it's a really entertaining to watch. The storyline isn't half bad either.
@@voster77hh Well, he's been doing it for 40 years, and is one of the best. I've been doing it for over 40 years (but I'm no Will Gadd). I ain't dead yet.
One of the most fun things I have ever done was when I was up in the North Cascades on the PCT, we did a little Avalanche class and man was it a BLAST flying down those glaciers practicing Self Arrests!
In ice climbing, you HAVE to be brutally critical. It truly is a 'do not fall' kind of sport. The rope may save you, but your tools and falling ice and ledges below to snap an ankle will do you in really fast.
This is one of those categories that illustrates the enormous chasm between Hollywood and reality. It’s so hard to make something as technical and plodding as ice climbing into something cinematically compelling without leaving reality behind.
Every time I watch anything about mountain climbing, ice climbing, caving, scuba diving etc I just think but why??? 😣😳 but hey power to those brave enough to do those things for fun! And I will just watch from the safety of my couch and freak out haha.
Not to nitpick, but when he was talking about self arresting during the clips of Vertical Limit, you DO NOT want to dig your toes in. You’re meant to firmly grab your ice tool with both hands and put as much weight over that point of contact as you can. If you dig your feet into the ice you risk your momentum flipping you over your feet and going from being on your stomach to your back….
I once had a friend chop a small car size block lose in Rjukan Norway. His ice tool stuck in the block was leashed to his wrist. He pressed his head with his helmet against it to keep it in place. He totally cool grabbed an ice screw from his harness and drilled it into the ice to secure himself. Then he yanked the tool free and let that ice block go. It fell for like 60 feet down where I was belaying him on the rope an crashed into a thousand melon sized chunks flying really fast. I was dived for cover behind a table sized ledge. Qute a few chunks hit the top of my helmet hard while I was securing my buddy. You basically never get any good ice climbing scenes on video or GoPro. This happens mostly off camera. So ice climbing is kind of a mystery sport. Only a very few people ever do it and the utterly logistics are insane to be in the right place at the right time for a freeze-melt-cycle. Training in gyms on wood is feasible but to really git gud you need to live near some apline scale mountains with a deep winter. So it isn't really an accessible sport in any way.
Rjukan is how you spell it, but if you had been hearing it pronounced by locals I can totally understand why you would add that 'y' since the sound isn't that far off. (My family lived there for 8 years and we've had several different mountain cabins in the area since 1967.)
@@TerjeMathisen Made the effort to correct it out of respect. It was 12 years ago. However, I have seen different spellings for it - the origin from Old Norse has been transcribed differently to German and English and other languages if I remember correctly. At least with a y or j. It would be quite hard to pronounce correctly. I can only recommend a visit and the friendly locals.
@@voster77hh when we drove down the road to Rjukan last Sunday there were ice climbers belaying on the roadside railing several places as they were finishing their climbs out of the gorge. :-)
Hi Will! I could never watch these scenes lol! Causes too much anxiety. I miss Canmore. Keep well it was nice to see you here. It brought me some good laughs sitting here by myself.😂
Depends on what breaks first, the tie strap or the tendons. Survivability basically zero. Generally speaking tendons or straps have very little bungee effect. Means fall of 2 or 3 feet is good enough to rip ones arm out of the shoulders and off. The only option is you already hand on that single tool with 1 tool and 2 feet coming off. once you accelerate only a dynmaic climbing rope can bungee cord you. On your great-grandparents hemp rope anything more than 2 to 5 feet snags either the rope or breaks body parts. it would only catch a short slip and slide. If you see olympic artists swing on bars then the bars do flex a lot and absorb most of the energy and help convert it into rotation. Crash landing with a braking distance close to zero isn't a very healthy idea. Even if you don't rip your arms out, your climbing day is immediately over. Probably your climbing days for life. Plus your troubles only start there. Shock, dehydration, hypothermia... You need to be heli rescued out or carried / rappled out on a stretcher. You move absolutely nowhere on your own anymore in vertical territory totally hostile to human life. Rope rescue on a vertical face of thousands of feet is a multi-people ardous time consuming effort.
4:15 - I wanted to do a comedy parody of this scene, back when the movie was fresh, but never got around to it. Was going to film angles that suggest a far jump, but after the character makes it to the other side, his friend steps over the (only) 1' gap and walks right past him.
Where's the granddaddy, Eiger Sanction? Not exactly prolific ice climbing per se but definitely worth looking at in the context of some of these other (mostly silly) more recent excerpts.
I'd say it was really the first true full movie that used very accurate gear and climbing technique,, besides being almost a perfect account of what happened on the Eiger North Face back in the late 30's and has been written about in many books.
They had Alex Honnold do the Eiger Sanction in another one of these videos. He gave it a pretty good rating for showing accurate climbing techniques for the time period (early 70s?)
Awesome video, just one small correction. You do not want to be putting your toes into the ground when self-arresting with crampons (until you slow down). You will get flipped backwards and absolutely destroy your Achilles' tendons.
I feel if you're flying laterally mid air and try to stick a knife into ice, newton's laws means you're more likely to just throw yourself backwards into thin air than plant the knife in solid right?
A bit--a small of the force will be absorbed by the ice and even more if you actually get it to go in, but because it's a knife, you're likely to just bounce right out of the hole the knife made. That's why real tools are little jagged scythes. Taking them out requires lifting and turning--they go down and into the surface in a curved way.
@@Jingoa A small amount of force will be exerted in the ice sure, but most of the energy would be pushing you away from the ice as there is very little resistance holding you in place.
I think he chose to leave out the REAL movies, the ones done very well, and based on historic events. Even the climbing in the Clint Eastwood movie back in '85 on the Eiger, was filmed and done very well with accurate gear and movements for the era,,as part of a spy thriller movie. Think Tom Cruise was influenced by Eastwood to take on the Mission Impossible climbing stunts?
I work at an indie outdoor gear store in VT and a friend tried to get me to go ice climbing years ago. The problem is, he started by telling me about the Screaming Barfies...
"it's ok. It's pretty good...
3\10"
I love this man. Brutal. He's fun, he knows his stuff, and has no mercy lol.
Yeah, none deserved anywhere near a 5' on his scale.
Well, he certainly wants to nip misconceptions of climbing in the bud; shit's dangerous.
I think he misheard that he was spposed to rate on a scale of 10, not a scale of 5...
For those that are unfamiliar, Will Gadd is like the Roger Federer of ice climbing. He's an absolute legend.
Thanks! I didn't know him before, now I do, and how great he is.
Kinda figured when they showed the scene at 4:20 of the movie character jumping from one cliff to another and he casually just goes like "oh yeah I've done stuff like that"
Is Roger Federer somebody like Will Gadd just not in ice climbing?
I don't know who Roger is except that his name is half R's
@@Dayvit78 He's one of the top tennis players in the world, you probably saw him on TV and didn't know who he was.
Will is truly great. On a technical note the animator confused the technical axes and the mountaineering axe. Probably because they did not have a Nomic in the movie but an older style of axe.
Yeah haha i noticed that
Was one of the older ones a Stubai hammer?
Animator?
Animator in this case means: the person who put the arrow indicators on the screen.
You guys do a great job at getting people with the proper information and conveying it so well.
A very witty and humourous fellow. Please, more of him. My favourite: "You'd see 2 arms hanging"
More Will Gadd please! Absolute legend
And less Red Bull please!!!
“She seems really nice, but she is going to die” had my dying.
My fav mountain climbing movie K2 👍
"Look at all that metal she is wearing", Um yeah her plot armor is showing, wardrobe should have done a better job hiding it. 😆
Me too 💀💀💀
Someone forgot to tell Will that elves are immortal
At 11:33 the video editors got the shots of the ice tool mixed up with the general mountaineering axe. The explanation is great, so just know that the pink axe is the general mountaineering axe (it has an adze, which is like a small shovel), and the beige ice tool (with hammer). The stock photos of the tools are correctly matched up though, so that's nice.
Noticed this and went to the comments to ensure I wasn't the only one hahaha.
except that the "Ice Tool" is from like the 60's (1960's at least) so laughable as a real tool these days.
@@CanyoneeringUSA More like the 80s/90s.
What a guy. I've always had my reservations with such scenes based on physics and human body resilience alone but it's great to hear someone experienced spit the facts. Thanks!
I was in Wills workshops once, he's a class act in passion, teaching expertise in one package. He is a gem for the climbing/ice climbing community in Alberta, really the rest of the world, I'd say.
The editors confidently mis-labeling the tools when Will Gadd is describing the difference between technical tools and glacier axes at 11:20 is peak irony
You've really nailed it with the experts lately. Keep up the good work!
It is great how he can find important concepts and situations from real ice climbing in the very unrealistic scenes.
Dude’s knowledge paired with his wit and earnest/ easy going demeanor made this such a fun watch. I belly laughed at his response to the GOT scene “that rope would’ve cut him in half” 😂
This guy is incredible! Y'all do such an awesome job finding experts for these videos. Like y'all really do your research. When I watch these on things i know nothing about (much like this) I'm always enthralled. Kudos! Will, you're awesome!
2:29 I never thought anyone would have so much fun giving a rating, especially a low one. This is a priceless moment right there.
A very long time ago, when I hadn't used up my body entirely. I loved mountaineering. I ice climbed for fun. It wasn’t anywhere near as evolved as it is now. Every now and again, when I'm feeling nostalgic I’ll dig out a picture of me ice climbing. Typically they’re distant photos of me in a yellow jacket, or a red one, with my crampons dug in, and an ice axe in each hand, a sling of ice screws, a 60 meter wet/dry rope threading down, and a pair of Bausch and Laumb glacier glasses shoved on my face. And the best part? I have this huge smile on my face becauseI'm truly happy! I'm not thinking about a d@mned thing but ice climbing. Not bills, changing my oil, or anything else, just ice climbing.
Ice climbing and parachuting worked the same for me. If I was doing either activity, that's the only thing I thought about. Not one other thing. Anyway, thanks, Will Gadd, you also brought up my favorite climbing movie of all time, K2!!!! I love that movie! I even took my daughters to see it at the theater. One reason for that was K2 was my dream climb. But K2 the movie is great, starring Michael Biehn said Matt Craven.
Thanks again, Will Gadd. Great video, I've had a lot of fun. And Will, be safe, be well, and be happy!
Will Gadd-the absolute best-obviously as a climber, but also as an analyst.
"She seems very nice but she is gonna die" one of the greatest lines of all time
Probably one of my favorite series on UA-cam, love these
my dad has done a fair bit of ice climbing in his younger days, and I admire and respect him more than any other person I know, and I also think people who ice climb are completely insane
Will is no joke! I got to climb with both him and Barry Blanchard at Mountainfest 2003 in the Adirondacks. I watched Will climb 90' of ice with only no ice tools, only wool mittens! Frickin Legend! 💪🏽
At 2:42
As a mountaineer myself I've been taught to never dig your toes in if you're wearing crampons as that's a fantastic way to break your ankles and flip over, pushing your knees into the snow instead. I suppose if you're not wearing crampons it's fine but I definitely wouldn't do it with them.
Yep I was taught the same thing, that had me confused too. He also called out the axes in alien v predator, they are Grivel alpwings, i have used them for ages and they are great, not sure what his point was😂
@@freddydorling9548 That's correct if you're glissading down or falling on softer snow. Generally speaking you can raise your feet trying to touch your butt so your front points dont catch, but if you're falling on Neve or worse, ice, you'd rather have the broken ankles than be dead.
That's correct if you're glissading down or falling on softer snow. Generally speaking you can raise your feet trying to touch your butt so your front points dont catch, but if you're falling on Neve or worse, ice, you'd rather have the broken ankles than be dead.
@@Devoted96 Correct me if i'm wrong, but if you dig your tips in and flip onto your back, aren't you even less likely to stop. I personally think we are taught self arresting because it is the best way to stop a fall. In a situation with mature neve or ice, where there is any risk of falling, or it is particularly exposed, I would hope most would rope up up and climb the difficulty as a pitch.
I could well be wrong, and I would love to be corrected, as it may save my life next time!
@@Devoted96 I agree, in the worst case you do what you can to survive, however I can imagine that it is near impossible to keep yourself upright when braking with your toes at higher speeds so the danger of flipping is still there. I've never tried it though, and I really hope I don't have to😅
So fun! Thanks Will. And Insider - excellent choice of talent!
This dude is so much fun with his personality, haha I could watch him talk and laugh about stuff all day hahaha
U know you made it in your field when u can go on insider to rate movies
Love Will, super knowledgable and funny at the same time.
I love Shivaaya. The whole movie was cool... I know it's impossivle for that mountain descent to happen, but it's a really entertaining to watch. The storyline isn't half bad either.
Would love to see him discuss "The Eiger Sanction" starring Clint Eastwood. There is some mad ice climbing stuff in there.
Loved this guy ❤ couldn't stop laughing.... Fell of my chair when he said i climed ice with steak knife
I love his comments: harsh and educational!
BS people don't live long in ice climbing. That's the people who got bored of rock climbing and survived.
@@voster77hh Well, he's been doing it for 40 years, and is one of the best. I've been doing it for over 40 years (but I'm no Will Gadd). I ain't dead yet.
One of the most fun things I have ever done was when I was up in the North Cascades on the PCT, we did a little Avalanche class and man was it a BLAST flying down those glaciers practicing Self Arrests!
He is bitterly critical yet also really fun.
In ice climbing, you HAVE to be brutally critical. It truly is a 'do not fall' kind of sport. The rope may save you, but your tools and falling ice and ledges below to snap an ankle will do you in really fast.
15:48 His Harness is on backwards! hahahhahhaha!!!
It doesn't have straps either. He had a ballet session in front of the greenscreen
🤣🤣
😆😆
This is one of those categories that illustrates the enormous chasm between Hollywood and reality. It’s so hard to make something as technical and plodding as ice climbing into something cinematically compelling without leaving reality behind.
That Lord of the Rings ice climbing scene is a real place . . . Inside a computer.
They actually built that wall. It's a real set
4:15 came to mind before I even saw the video, hilarious take did not disappoint 😂👏🤣👌
Every time I watch anything about mountain climbing, ice climbing, caving, scuba diving etc I just think but why??? 😣😳 but hey power to those brave enough to do those things for fun! And I will just watch from the safety of my couch and freak out haha.
Great video! Super entertaining and Will was a pleasure
5:08 one of the random frozen waterfall around Wye Creek near Queenstown, new zealand
this guy is absolutely nuts. love him
Not to nitpick, but when he was talking about self arresting during the clips of Vertical Limit, you DO NOT want to dig your toes in. You’re meant to firmly grab your ice tool with both hands and put as much weight over that point of contact as you can.
If you dig your feet into the ice you risk your momentum flipping you over your feet and going from being on your stomach to your back….
This is epic Will!
This was a fun video Will is a legend. Vertical limit is absolutely ridiculous but pure entertainment.
I once had a friend chop a small car size block lose in Rjukan Norway. His ice tool stuck in the block was leashed to his wrist. He pressed his head with his helmet against it to keep it in place. He totally cool grabbed an ice screw from his harness and drilled it into the ice to secure himself. Then he yanked the tool free and let that ice block go. It fell for like 60 feet down where I was belaying him on the rope an crashed into a thousand melon sized chunks flying really fast. I was dived for cover behind a table sized ledge. Qute a few chunks hit the top of my helmet hard while I was securing my buddy. You basically never get any good ice climbing scenes on video or GoPro. This happens mostly off camera. So ice climbing is kind of a mystery sport. Only a very few people ever do it and the utterly logistics are insane to be in the right place at the right time for a freeze-melt-cycle. Training in gyms on wood is feasible but to really git gud you need to live near some apline scale mountains with a deep winter. So it isn't really an accessible sport in any way.
Rjukan is how you spell it, but if you had been hearing it pronounced by locals I can totally understand why you would add that 'y' since the sound isn't that far off. (My family lived there for 8 years and we've had several different mountain cabins in the area since 1967.)
@@TerjeMathisen Made the effort to correct it out of respect. It was 12 years ago. However, I have seen different spellings for it - the origin from Old Norse has been transcribed differently to German and English and other languages if I remember correctly. At least with a y or j. It would be quite hard to pronounce correctly. I can only recommend a visit and the friendly locals.
@@voster77hh when we drove down the road to Rjukan last Sunday there were ice climbers belaying on the roadside railing several places as they were finishing their climbs out of the gorge. :-)
Dude could be Owen Wilson's stunt double in a future ice climbing movie!
Omg the crack effect in the HBO climbing looked so wrong, it was like a concrete wall was cracking not a wall of ice
Wow, 40 years of ice climbing ?! That’s so cool ! And at 05:15 - 05:20 thats cute 😂
I dont give a fu bout climbing, but its real pleasure to hear that guy
"She's got chain mail on her head... She's gonna get frostbite" hahahaha
So glad linus tech tips got into ice climbing, seems pretty interesting
1:30 LOL, recently I watched a lot of climbing videos related to this topic and already knew what he was about to say 😂
talking about simul climbing and an ancient pic of mountaineers short roping flashes on the screen. Way to confuse everyone even more haha
I Love how he is saying ,,this is the biggest hazard in iceclimbing"
everytime a new scene comes up.😅😎
Was kinda hoping to see a Touching the Void reaction video. More of a documentary movie but always enjoyed it.
i have been waiting for this video to happen ever since that game of thrones scene lol
"If you can climb a ladder, you can ice climb!"
Bro is amazing
9/10 Great video. Thanks
I learned so much about ice climbing from this video.
7:40 Jim West (''wild wild west'' 70s TV show) lent him his knife-boots😂
“She seems nice, but…she’s gonna die.” 😂😂
4:17 "Good luck mate, I'll see you on the far side."
Hi Will! I could never watch these scenes lol! Causes too much anxiety. I miss Canmore. Keep well it was nice to see you here. It brought me some good laughs sitting here by myself.😂
Would’ve loved to see him comment on cliffhanger Mw2
Nothing really to say, but I enjoyed this video. Thanks for making and sharing it.
I live like an hours from calgary and two from canmore how have I not heard of this guy?
Vertical Limit...is definitely a guilty pleasure of mine
Love it, realism.
Those movies are nice entertainment but nothing another, just entertainment.
me watching a movie: oh I know that Actor.
this dude watching a movie: Hey look, that's my friend there.
LOL
I only clicked to see if y’all actually made him put on all his ice climbing gear for this video 😂
Wow! I can't be the only one that thinks Will looks a bit like Owen Wilson, right?
I was scrolling looking for this comment!!
@@carrotsgirl1D Not all the time, but certain angles... it helps that he's wearing a hat. His hairstyle could totally change my perception.
4:40 ikr. as far as he fell, if the ice tool were tied to his wrists, would his arms tear off?
Depends on what breaks first, the tie strap or the tendons. Survivability basically zero. Generally speaking tendons or straps have very little bungee effect. Means fall of 2 or 3 feet is good enough to rip ones arm out of the shoulders and off. The only option is you already hand on that single tool with 1 tool and 2 feet coming off. once you accelerate only a dynmaic climbing rope can bungee cord you. On your great-grandparents hemp rope anything more than 2 to 5 feet snags either the rope or breaks body parts. it would only catch a short slip and slide. If you see olympic artists swing on bars then the bars do flex a lot and absorb most of the energy and help convert it into rotation. Crash landing with a braking distance close to zero isn't a very healthy idea. Even if you don't rip your arms out, your climbing day is immediately over. Probably your climbing days for life. Plus your troubles only start there. Shock, dehydration, hypothermia... You need to be heli rescued out or carried / rappled out on a stretcher. You move absolutely nowhere on your own anymore in vertical territory totally hostile to human life. Rope rescue on a vertical face of thousands of feet is a multi-people ardous time consuming effort.
Love this guy’s perspective
As soon as I saw that Bollywood action movie at the end, I started rubbing my hands with glee.
4:15 - I wanted to do a comedy parody of this scene, back when the movie was fresh, but never got around to it. Was going to film angles that suggest a far jump, but after the character makes it to the other side, his friend steps over the (only) 1' gap and walks right past him.
I was expecting "Everest" to be mentioned here...
A section of K2 is actually a near vertical climb up a wall of mixed rock/ice/snow.
Next vid: Professional Ice Climber Rates IC Combos in Smash Bros Melee
I love this series.
Such an amazing guy, love his personality, he kinda reminds me of Owen Wilson.
Where's the granddaddy, Eiger Sanction? Not exactly prolific ice climbing per se but definitely worth looking at in the context of some of these other (mostly silly) more recent excerpts.
I'd say it was really the first true full movie that used very accurate gear and climbing technique,, besides being almost a perfect account of what happened on the Eiger North Face back in the late 30's and has been written about in many books.
They had Alex Honnold do the Eiger Sanction in another one of these videos. He gave it a pretty good rating for showing accurate climbing techniques for the time period (early 70s?)
I came to see whether game of thrones and shivaay had made the list, and it didn't disappoint!
I've seen Will climb a few times in Ouray and Telluride. He's the real deal and comes across exactly like this video.
Great breakdown!
Awesome video, just one small correction. You do not want to be putting your toes into the ground when self-arresting with crampons (until you slow down). You will get flipped backwards and absolutely destroy your Achilles' tendons.
Seeing shivay on the list threw me off😂😂
14:40
Shivaay ... that's a Bollywood movie...
Wonder why Touching the Void wasn't included. It's the best mountaineering movie ever, though more a recreated documentary.
Great video Thank you
Alex Honnold has these thick fingers, as all free solo rock climbers do.
Will Gadd's come a close second.
I feel if you're flying laterally mid air and try to stick a knife into ice, newton's laws means you're more likely to just throw yourself backwards into thin air than plant the knife in solid right?
A bit--a small of the force will be absorbed by the ice and even more if you actually get it to go in, but because it's a knife, you're likely to just bounce right out of the hole the knife made. That's why real tools are little jagged scythes. Taking them out requires lifting and turning--they go down and into the surface in a curved way.
@@Jingoa A small amount of force will be exerted in the ice sure, but most of the energy would be pushing you away from the ice as there is very little resistance holding you in place.
I think that not falling off is the main goal of every kind of mountain climb.
Will’s brother Toby was my high school English teacher 20 years ago near Prescott, AZ
I cannot believe that "North Face" (2008)
is not included in this list.
I think he chose to leave out the REAL movies, the ones done very well, and based on historic events. Even the climbing in the Clint Eastwood movie back in '85 on the Eiger, was filmed and done very well with accurate gear and movements for the era,,as part of a spy thriller movie. Think Tom Cruise was influenced by Eastwood to take on the Mission Impossible climbing stunts?
Really cool and interesting person, great video!
Our definitions of fun are not the same.
this guy rules
I work at an indie outdoor gear store in VT and a friend tried to get me to go ice climbing years ago. The problem is, he started by telling me about the Screaming Barfies...
That random inclusion of Shivaay was funny lol
Damn I love This channel.
Binge watching it all