Ultimate Survival Alaska

2013

Seasons & Episodes

  • 3
  • 2
  • 1
  • 0

7.9| 0h30m| TV-PG| en
Synopsis

They are some of the toughest, most extreme survivalists from across the nation. In the second season of Ultimate Survival Alaska, four teams - woodsmen, mountaineers, military veterans, and endurance athletes go head-to-head in an epic arctic competition that only National Geographic could inspire.

Cast

Director

Producted By

Brian Catalina Entertainment

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Reviews

Evengyny Thanks for the memories!
Invaderbank The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.
FirstWitch A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.
Zandra The movie turns out to be a little better than the average. Starting from a romantic formula often seen in the cinema, it ends in the most predictable (and somewhat bland) way.
Elcaminosoldier Wow...i watched half an episode of this garbage and i cant get those precious minutes of my life back to do more constructive things with my time like start a cult, put lit cigarettes out on the back of my neck or the very least inject black tar heroin directly into my testicles i don't think its scripted its more like the thought process of each person on the show thinks to themselves "what would make for dramatic TV? I know I'm gonna slip into water for a fee feet and act like I've been in subzero temperature water for 45 minutes" and yet every person has the same thought process its like an LSD ridden hive mind has taken over the airwaves of America
n-m-bertin The first season was quite enjoyable, until you realize it's all fake. People can't hike the distances announced in such a short period of time, they don't have that many close encounters with bears, they don't paddle down a glacier stream and stop a couple of meters before a moulin... The worst was the 2nd season, with soldiers lying through their teeth "I'm doing it for my country" yeah right... mountaineers claiming you have to respect the wilderness, while they're doing a blatant staged show, acting as if they ignored danger and all, taking ridiculous routes and risks, not eating enough... Tyler's disappearance was pathetic, with hours in freezing water (allegedly of course) and a "lucky" (staged) rescue. This kind of show is dangerous : it makes young people think you can survive by being absolutely reckless in the wilderness, all these guys are Bear Grylls on steroids, and there's NO warning telling people to not reproduce this, that this is staged and over the top. They could have done a good show by making it 100% real, instead they chose the showy fake entertainment path. Just by looking at Alaskan maps you can see the distances announced are fake, and when danger arise, the cameramen stay still, clearly in the know that this was gonna happen, as it's scripted. Please avoid watching this, or we'll have countless clones, and uneducated kids and teens will try to replicate this and many accidents will occur...
elwingdior I live here near Augustine which is only one of four active volcanoes around me ... Spur, Redoubt and Iliamna. this is the way things are here. Go five miles out of town and this is what you find. I don't believe this is scripted. I have been that cold and stuck. Its the real deal but I guess if you live Outside in settled territory you won't know that. I don't so I do.Come here and go into the wilderness. Try and do what they do. You will find that its just what it is.Go, Endurance, Military and Mountaineers.As for the Lower 48 team, that old man can go back home.
don-brown-945-840115 I realize reality shows are scripted, but this one is disingenuous and insulting to real outdoorsmen. In one episode the "mountaineers" catch a 200 pound halibut from over 100 feet underwater with nothing more than a fishing line and an old wood ski. I'm an outdoorsman, an avid fisherman, and I've been halibut fishing off the coast of Alaska when I was in the US Navy. A fish that size would be difficult to catch, let alone reel in, even with all the down-riggers we had on our boat. I once caught a 30 lb. Salmon while fishing Lake Superior as a teenager and it took me over an hour to reel him in on a pretty nice "big water" rod & reel. I'm insulted that they act like this guy reeled that fish in with his hands. An episode or so later one of the teams fashioned a "gun" from a shotgun shell and a snowshoe in order to kill a squirrel. A firing pin needs to precisely hit the primer in order for it to fire (I was a Gunner's Mate in the Navy prior becoming a SAR Swimmer). No way they were able to line that up. Again insulted! Then it's the ridiculous photo-shop that was done in the second to the last episode when the military guys are going down the glacier luge. Finally there is the last episode where "coincidentally" all three teams converge at the river at the same exact time at the same exact spot 15 hours into the journey (ideal if you're the cameraman). Then, somehow, even though a military guy capsized and was stranded up-river for well over an hour while the endurance team was paddling down river, the military guys caught up with them and all three teams made it to the base of the "volcano" at the same exact time. You couldn't script it any better even if you scripted.... wait a minute, we've been bamboozled!I realize the producers don't care because I actually watched the whole season, but it truly became something my wife and I watched as a comedy to make fun of more than there was any suspense or like these guys were in actual danger. My wife would say (sarcastically) "oh my god, do you think he's going to make it?" and I'd laugh because at the most perilous moments, in the most treacherous conditions, the cameraman and the boom- mic guy seemed to be able to endure just fine. One time the endurance guys were baffled at how they could cross the raging river, I said to my wife "why don't they just ask the cameraman, who is clearly standing on the other side of the river filming, how he got over there!" Most often the camera man was filming from in front of the team while these "Endurance Athletes", "Mountaineers", "Woodsman" and "Military" guys struggled up the hill or down a ravine or across a river. You know who is the Ultimate Alaskan Survivor? It's not the Military Team, or the Endurance Athletes, or the Mountaineers, or the Woodsmen! It's the cameraman and the boom-mic guy! I told my wife I'd love to offer up a reward for these four groups to do this again, for real, without a dead halibut being put on a line, without photo-shopped pack-rafts going down a luge or without a Kodiak Bear charging a bird on a branch that they simulate to seem as if the bear was going after one of the guys about 200 yards further down the river. I do see Dallas Seavey won the 2014 Iditarod. Nice to see him actually win something real! I'm not saying these guys aren't fit and didn't get a workout during the show, but it's a bit like watching Pro Wrestling. You might be the Ultimate Alaskan Survivor, but that's like saying you're the WWF Heavyweight Champion of the World. The only difference (Dallas) is you didn't get paid millions and didn't have to do it in your underwear.P.S. As a SAR Swimmer (Search and Rescue) in the US NAVY… FACT: it takes a bit more than 10 minutes to recover from stage-1 hypothermia fellas. All I'm saying is the demographic your gearing your show towards are people like me (outdoors guys/gals). Remove the BS and silliness from it and it would have actually been a pretty entertaining show.