Carl Boenish, Cecilie BullGenre: DocumentaryDuration: 100 minutes
The length of his headline achievement was inventing UNDERLYING PART jumping — that extra-crazy offshoot of all skydiving that involves jumping from architecture, antennas, spans (bridges) and ground (cliffs) — but surely Carl Boenish also broke some kind of evidence for feet of film snapshot by a private citizen in the '70s. With the exception of the mysterious accident the fact takes up the film's last warm up, there doesn't seem to be a get out or off of anything that proving didn't film from at least about three angles.
This footage is a bit to a blessing and a curse for documentarian Marah Strauch, who stuffs the girl exploration of Boenish's life so containing more his homemade derring-do that it some times feels like it should be sponsored by Huge batch Dew. The footage is frequently impressive, even after all these years of extreme sport, but there's also enough this that it feels like padding, and the bit away from Boenish's incredible legend.
Obviously a fair bit of a daredevil, Boenish has some fascinating undercurrents, including a noticeably aw-shucks libertarian streak (no any will keep him from jumping down construction sites), the evangelist's enthusiasm for promoting his budding significance and religious bedrock that generally underline everything — and enhances his fatal final jump.
Boenish is a fascinating cocktail of a particular person, and he took some breathtaking sh0ow of his exploits, but the three sides of the documentary more often happen to be alongside each other, rather than supporting people. Still, especially for people who aren't usually throwing out chutes any time soon, a thrilling ride.
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