In the final two episodes, Dean Potter’s dream of pushing free solo climbing beyond anything seen before collides with the arrival of Alex Honnold, a younger climber capable of taking the sport into terrifying new territory. As both men circle the impossible challenge of El Capitan, Dean is forced to confront not only a rival, but the fear that his place at the edge of climbing history may be slipping away. What begins as a battle for greatness becomes something far more personal: A struggle with ego, identity, isolation and the dangerous need to keep proving himself when the world is already watching. As Dean’s mental health declines and some of his closest supporters begin to drift away, he takes a risky job in China and seems to move even closer to the edge. But a new relationship gives him a fragile sense of grounding, and his lifelong dream of flight finally comes into focus through the radical world of wingsuit flying. The final chapters become both breathtaking and haunting, following a man who searched for freedom in the air, in the mountains and in the spaces where fear becomes almost spiritual. Intimate, tense and deeply emotional, they reveal the beauty and tragedy of a life lived in pursuit of the impossible.
This high-stakes documentary follows climber Alex Honnold as he attempts the unthinkable: scaling Taipei 101, one of the tallest skyscrapers on Earth, without ropes or safety gear—and doing it live. With cameras rolling in real time, every movement becomes a moment of tension, turning a feat of athletic precision into a global spectacle where a single mistake could be fatal. As the climb unfolds, the film pulls viewers inside Honnold’s mindset, revealing the discipline, focus, and psychological control required to face extreme exposure hundreds of meters above the city. Blending vertigo-inducing visuals with the immediacy of live broadcast, it becomes a gripping meditation on risk, human limits, and what drives someone to push beyond fear in front of the world.
Marc-André Leclerc climbs alone, far from the limelight. On remote alpine faces, the free-spirited 23-year-old Canadian makes some of the boldest solo ascents in history. Yet, he draws scant attention. With no cameras, no rope, and no margin for error, Leclerc's approach is the essence of solo adventure. Nomadic and publicity shy, he doesn't own a phone or car, and is reluctant to let a film crew in on his pure vision of climbing. Filmmaker Peter Mortimer sets out to make a film about Leclerc but struggles to keep up with his elusive subject. Then, Leclerc embarks on a historic adventure in Patagonia that will redefine what is possible in solo climbing.
Follow Alex Honnold as he becomes the first person to ever free solo climb Yosemite's 3,000ft high El Capitan Wall. With no ropes or safety gear, he completed arguably the greatest feat in rock climbing history.
Dean Potter emerges as one of the most daring and controversial figures in modern adventure, a climber, highline walker and BASE jumper driven by an almost mystical need to move toward fear. Through breathtaking footage, personal reflections and the voices of those who knew him, this documentary explores how he turned cliffs, voids and impossible lines into places of freedom, beauty and danger. But behind the legendary ascents and world records lies a more fragile and divided man, struggling with relationships, identity, obsession and the heavy cost of living as if every boundary were meant to be broken. In the first two episodes, Dean finds escape and joy in extreme climbing, pushing himself through bold ascents, speed records and free-solo feats that make him both admired and misunderstood. As his rebellious image grows, so do the pressures around his personal life and the risks he is willing to take. He searches for peace in highlining, BASE jumping and the terrifying purity of climbing without a rope, while his “Dark Wizard” persona attracts devoted followers and fierce criticism. Then a new force enters the climbing world: Alex Honnold, whose arrival threatens Dean’s place at the edge of the sport and turns admiration, rivalry and fear into a powerful new chapter.
As Dean’s mental health declines and some of his closest supporters begin to drift away, he takes a risky job in China and seems to move even closer to the edge. But a new relationship gives him a fragile sense of grounding, and his lifelong dream of flight finally comes into focus through the radical world of wingsuit flying. The final chapters become both breathtaking and haunting, following a man who searched for freedom in the air, in the mountains and in the spaces where fear becomes almost spiritual. Intimate, tense and deeply emotional, they reveal the beauty and tragedy of a life lived in pursuit of the impossible.