Maidentrip
Maidentrip
| 17 January 2014 (USA)
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14-year-old Laura Dekker sets out on a two-year voyage in pursuit of her dream to become the youngest person ever to sail around the world alone.

Reviews
Maidgethma

Wonderfully offbeat film!

Kailansorac

Clever, believable, and super fun to watch. It totally has replay value.

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Kimball

Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.

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Yazmin

Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.

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Jonathan C

Maidentrip is a beautiful documentary about Laura Dekker's year and a half voyage to be the youngest person ever to sail around the world. Dekker, who is Dutch, set sail from Gibraltar in 2010 and made the journey in a year and half, finishing a few months after her 16th birthday. Her route took her to St. Martins, Panama, the Galapagos Islands, Austrailia, the Cape of Good Hope, and back to St. Martins.This movie is amazing first because of the premise--that a girl, 14, would even try such an amazing task. We learn that Laura is no ordinary girl--from an early age she loved sailing, and in fact would sail all over Holland by herself by the age of 10. In 2009, only 13 years old, she sailed across the English Channel from Holland and back by herself. When it became known that she intended to sail around the world, Dutch authorities attempted to remove her from her father's custody to keep her from making the trip. After a court victory, the way was cleared for her.As we follow Laura on her journey, what we realize is that, however young she is, this is a remarkable person with a vision. The trip becomes something of a work of art--she photographs it all herself-- and so is really a sort of view of the entire world through her lens. Additionally, we get to know a story of her tumultuous past and how her voyage potentially can liberate her, and the story is compelling. Laura is involved in an immense but joyful struggle to see the world, show us her experience, and even fully create herself as a person. It is an amazing story.

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Kevin Dahlen

My family and I enjoyed this film; it's very unique in the manner in which the story unfolds. However, I'm not sure I've ever invested 90 minutes watching a film where I liked the main character less and less as the film unfolds. This is not a criticism of the Julian Schlesinger, but a compliment in telling the story true to form. Laura Decker transforms from a likable young pre-teen to a fairly unlikable teenager that believes she has "earned" everything, and is completely self sufficient seemingly blind to all of the contributions by her Father, sponsors, and a boat that sails itself.Schlesinger creates a very interesting documentary, and for me, watching a film where the documentarian makes it seemingly obvious of their disdain for the primary character.

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steve-t-duffy

I thoroughly enjoyed this film. As others have mentioned this movie is about the maturing of a young teenager into a young woman through her sailing journey. What I've enjoyed most about this film is the genuine aspect of her journey, she wasn't handed a million dollar sailing yacht with enough tech to sail itself around the world. Laura and her father picked up a relatively inexpensive and broken down boat and fixed it up themselves. At her launch there was only a handful of people seeing her off and her own mother didn't make it. There was no huge fanfare and you had the feeling that the general public never thought she would make it. Laura didn't have a camera crew or support boats following her around. The at sea filming was done by herself and very insightful as to what was going through her head at various stages of the journey. This film is a coming of age film and challenges us to rethink what is possible when we set our minds to a particular task.I've watched the Abby Sunderland and just couldn't compare the two. This film was inspiring as it was a great story.

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Windsun33

I actually watched this reluctantly because someone wanted to see it, and ended up loving it. Not for the plot - there really is no plot (documentaries do that at times) except for her voyage, and the events leading up to it. To me it was just amazing that a young girl could do such an adventure alone, while others of her age were much more worried about how many followers they had on Twitter. Much of the photography sucks (not like a cell phone is a real professional camera) - but that also adds to the feeling of realism, and pushes home the fact that there were no followers, no camera crews around - she was totally on her own. Unlike so many of the pseudo-documentaries this one is not filled with fake drama.

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