In Jimmy Chin and Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi’s Oscar-winning 2018 documentary, “Free Solo,” the world-class rock climber Alex Honnold expresses reservations about being shot by a film crew while he attempts to become the first person ever to scale Yosemite’s El Capitan monolith without ropes or a harness. “The idea of falling off . . . It’s, like, kind of O.K. if it’s just by myself, but, like, I wouldn’t want to fall off right in front of my friends,” he says, explaining that usually, when he free-solos—the high-risk practice of no-supports climbing—he tends not to tell anyone he’s doing it. “The fewer people know anything, the better, really.” For Honnold, the documentary suggests, free soloing isn’t about fame or attention or money. Instead, it’s about the climber’s own need to prove to himself that he can overcome mortal risk as well as his own fears. To bring cameras into the equation might mar the authenticity of this pursuit.
If being watched is portrayed as a tricky proposition in “Free Solo,” watching, too, is shown to be fraught. The animating drama of the documentary doesn’t hinge just on whether Honnold will emerge from climbing El Cap with life and limb intact but, also, on whether documenting his ascent is even appropriate—a question that members of the film crew, who are all climbers themselves, grapple with onscreen. “I’ve always been conflicted about doing a movie about free soloing because it’s so dangerous,” Chin says. “It’s hard to not imagine your friend, Alex, soloing . . . and you’re making a film about it, which might put undue pressure on him to do something and him falling through the frame to his death.” At the movie’s climax, as we see Honnold finally ascending to El Cap’s peak, hanging on the wall’s granite surface by his fingertips or balancing on a slim ridge with his toes, the shot occasionally pans to one of the cameramen, Mikey Schaefer, who keeps turning away from his lens. “I can’t believe you guys actually can watch,” he says to his colleagues at one point.
How far we’ve come. On Saturday night, Alex Honnold was back, but this time the whole world was invited to watch as he climbed not a natural wonder but a man-made one—the Taipei 101, one of the tallest buildings in the world—as part of a special Netflix streaming event, “Skyscraper Live.” The name of the broadcast called to mind one of those nineteen-seventies disaster movies, like “The Towering Inferno” or “Airport,” in which a catastrophe befalls a built environment to harrowing effect. But if part of the pleasure of those films is watching their protagonists’ struggle to just barely escape whatever outlandish calamity has been thrust upon them, in Honnold’s case, the calamity, were it to come, would be self-inflicted. It would also be streamed globally, and in real time, to millions of Netflix subscribers.
“It’s really just sensationalism for the sake of shock and awe, like verging awfully close to Colosseum type entertainment,” a user wrote in a much liked comment on a Reddit climbing thread, and when I watched the special’s promotional trailer, which leaned hard on the event’s critical stakes, I worried that this take wasn’t wrong. (“If you fall,” Honnold says in the promo, as the camera rushes at a dizzying clip down the length of the nearly seventeen-hundred-foot building, “you’re going to die.”) The fact that “Skyscraper Live” was supposed to take place on Friday night but, at the last minute, got postponed because of rainfall in Taipei, was, on the one hand, reassuring, since it indicated that Honnold and Netflix were being at least somewhat sensible by not taking on more risk than they had already signed up for. On the other hand, it reminded me that there was only so much they could control. What if it started to rain while Honnold was climbing? What if the wind picked up? What if there was seismic activity?
Around 8 P.M. Eastern Standard Time on Saturday, with the ascent up Taipei 101 about to commence, these possibilities were all raised by Mark Rober, a popular science YouTuber and one of the special’s presenters. Rober’s peppy manner—“finally, believe it or not, we’re monitoring earthquakes!”—was echoed by the event’s team of commentators, among them the Netflix sports anchor Elle Duncan, the celebrated rock climber Emily Harrington, and the man-bun- and undercut-sporting W.W.E. fighter Seth (Freakin’) Rollins. The trio’s bland, affable chatter—“the goosebumps are goosebumping,” Duncan offered at one point, perkily—reminded me a bit of watching one of the sleepier Olympic sports (dressage? archery?) rather than a harrowing life-and-death event.
Oddly, I found this comforting, as it took things down a notch from the melodramatic, “are you not entertained?” vibe the event’s promotional push suggested. It also seemed to parallel Honnold’s own hyper-controlled geniality. Wearing a red North Face shirt, black pants, and black-and-yellow shoes, with his dark hair cut short, and only a cannister of chalk to dust his hands with attached to his waist, the climber, who is now forty, bid a mild, tearless farewell to Sanni McCandless, his wife and the mother of his two young daughters. (When considering, in a prerecorded segment, if his willingness to risk his life has been affected since becoming a father, Honnold said, “I didn’t want to die in the mountains before I had kids, still don’t want to die now that we have kids,” which sounded like a “no” to me.) As Honnold approached the building with no great fanfare, as if he were about to board a local bus or enter a midtown CVS—this despite the thousands of cheering, screaming spectators crowding around the building, ready to follow his every move—I marvelled at the fact that he wasn’t even carrying a water bottle. (For some reason this seemed especially insane to me, maybe because I personally feel immediate disquiet if I even forget to bring along a glass of water when I go to bed at night.)
Taipei 101 comprises several sections, each with its own repetitive climbing rhythm. The bottom, Harrington explained, was the “warmup” part for Honnold—a vertical, largely non-angled climb, with only two trickier spirally ornaments which are supposed to represent clouds, but which reminded me of large steel ears; then came the so-called bamboo boxes—eight steep, basin-like sections stacked like so many laundry bins, each about a hundred feet tall, and edged with an architectural dragon-style element that Honnold had to hoist himself past; after came the tower, with a series of overhanging ledges that the climber dangled on, one at a time, before using his core and arm strength to swing his legs up; and then, finally, a spindly spire, complete with a flimsy ladder to allow for Honnold’s final ascent to the small dome at the building’s tippy-top. The whole thing was very Charlie Chaplin in “Modern Times” crossed with Tom Cruise in “Mission: Impossible,” with a dash of “Black Mirror.”
In his brief moments of rest on one impossibly tiny window ledge or another, Honnold would occasionally smile and wave at the spectators assembled below, or at people standing inside the building as he passed, eager to capture a picture of the climber on their phones, through the windows. (Some appeared to try and get his attention for the sake of a better photo op by gesturing at him, which struck me as absolutely diabolical.) Equipped with an earpiece through which he was able to listen to heavy-metal music (Tool is a favorite, the panel told us), Honnold was also fitted with a mike, and his intermittent comments remained brightly impersonal. He was variously “psyched” or “pumped,” or impressed by how “beautiful” the day was in Taipei; a couple of times he admitted that he was getting “kind of tired” and that it felt “very windy.” Nonetheless, he assured the panel, “the view was incredible” and the experience of climbing the building was “so cool.” More than once, these wild understatements put me in mind of the comedian Nathan Fielder, whose odd blankness is often used to great effect in his work—although Honnold seemed perfectly sincere.
Amid all the patter, too, it was sometimes easy to forget that we were watching a unique feat: a man clambering with seemingly preternatural ease up an almost inconceivably enormous structure, often literally dangling between life and death. Honnold reportedly received a six-figure sum for his participation, but in an interview he gave before the special, he explained that he would have climbed Taipei 101 for free, just for himself, had he been able to receive permission to do so without Netflix’s involvement. The spectacle set up by the streaming platform, in this sense, was just a vehicle for him to achieve a lifelong dream. The terrifying reality of this dream hit home for me during the moments in the broadcast when the panel would quiet down for a spell, and viewers were able to experience Honnold’s body onscreen, accompanied only by the sounds emerging from his attached mike: his breathing and grunting; the flapping of his shirt in the wind; the thumps and bumps as his hands and feet connected with the building’s steel and glass. This was some real shit, stomach-turning but, also, inarguably amazing, and when Honnold reached the top of the building’s spire and said, “Sick!” I felt like I finally understood what he meant, in more than one sense of the word. ♦














