Brilliant and touching
... View MoreSimple and well acted, it has tension enough to knot the stomach.
... View MoreI wanted to like it more than I actually did... But much of the humor totally escaped me and I walked out only mildly impressed.
... View MoreIt’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.
... View MoreGreat documentary and lesson on never giving up!! Lance has passion and is determined to overcome any obstacle.
... View MoreThis film is a great film about survival, about working dogs who are the are on average 10x more physically and psychologically healthy than pet dogs.Please ignore the sole detracting review from a person who lives in Florida and runs a one person effort to ban dog sledding and who knows nothing about it. Really three dozen dogs have died running the Iditarod since 1993? OMG! But in fact some 10,000 dogs have run that race. Statistically they are safer running that race than in a the urban dog park in Florida! Iditarod dogs have a lower death rate and lower injury rate than human marathon runnersThe person running this one person effort admits she has never even been to Alaska to witness an iditorod and is an expert?Her rantings have been thoroughly debunked. See tinyurl.com/yet89gm and tinyurl.com/y8y9brqd
... View MoreThis documentary chronicles the story of Lance Mackey, to date the only winner of the Iditarod dog sled race four consecutive years (2007 thru 2010). The Iditarod race is held every March and is over 1.000 grueling miles through the Artic wilderness, beginning in Anchorage and ending in Nome, Alaska, and can take some 8 to 15 days to complete.Mackey was smitten with the dog sled racing bug ever since he was very young, and especially after seeing his father Dick Mackey win the Iditarod in dramatic fashion, in 1978. However, he would have to overcome a lot of obstacles along the way including his rebellious youth and drug use, the divorce of his parents, and being given little chance to survive a throat cancer operation. Eventually, he would overcome them all and become a champion musher, while achieving lots of notoriety whether he welcomed it or not.As far as the film itself, it can be disjointed, at times, but does contain some superb cinematography, and, of course, I'm always enamored by those wonderful and loyal sled dogs, to whom Mackey clearly gives much love and attention to.All in all, I thought this documentary has some drawbacks, but it illustrates the remarkable determination of a man to overcome many challenges, and to be successful at what he loves to do.
... View MoreThis movie was by far one of the most touching films I have seen. It takes you into the mind and life of a dog loving sled champion.If you are an animal lover you will love this, but if you aren't and simply love a great documentary.... Either way you will win if you watch. For those minutes I became Lance Mackey. Not only did it help me understand this amazing sport.... But it also let me feel as if I stepped into his shoes and for an hour or so.... I too was a dog sledding champion. Thanks for making this film and sharing your world with me. By the way, I found this gem in good ol' Netflix. I seriously would have paid to see this in a movie theater. It kept me at the edge of my seat.... It made me laugh.... Even made me tear up. MUST-SEE!
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