There is no website. Potential runners must figure out how to find the "correct" email address and submit a "Why I should be allowed to run" essay.
The film isn't just about running; it's a study of human obsession. Critics from Variety note that the documentary finds "plenty of rooting interest and colorful characters" among the participants—often high-achieving individuals with graduate degrees seeking a challenge where failure is the most likely outcome. subtitle The.Barkley.Marathons.The.Race.That.Ea...
In the dense, unforgiving woods of Tennessee’s Frozen Head State Park, a conch shell bellows into the damp air at an ungodly hour. One hour later, an eccentric man named Gary “Lazarus Lake” Cantrell lights a single cigarette. This is not the start of a typical race—it is the beginning of the , a 100-mile odyssey designed specifically to ensure that almost everyone who enters will fail. A Legacy of Failure There is no website
In the documentary The Barkley Marathons: The Race That Eats Its Young , directors Annika Iltis and Timothy Kane pull back the curtain on this secretive event. In its first 25 years of existence, only 10 people managed to finish. The Absurd Logistics Critics from Variety note that the documentary finds
Participants must complete five loops through treacherous, unmarked terrain with elevation gains equivalent to climbing Mount Everest twice. To prove they followed the route, they must find hidden books in the woods and tear out pages corresponding to their bib numbers. Why Subject Yourself to This?
While the 2014 documentary captured a specific era of the race, the legend has only grown. In 2024, became the first woman ever to complete the full five loops of the Barkley Marathons, finishing with just 99 seconds to spare before the 60-hour cutoff.
Everything about the Barkley is designed to be difficult, from the application process to the course itself: