![]() According to Vice, in the ’40s and ’50s quicksand became an easy way to generate sexual tension in a conservative era, as hunky heroes grabbed on to damsels in distress. In 1909, quicksand first appeared on screen in a 12-minute melodrama, Saved from the Quicksand, in which a young woman is rescued by hooded monks. In Jeremiah 38, the eponymous prophet is thrown into a well where he “ down into the mud” before being rescued with ropes. Quicksand was first a crucial plot device in the Bible. Yet if Osmun’s experiences are so different from what we see on screen, why is it that quicksand was once such a popular trope? And why has the plotline now sunk out of sight?Īrguably, God started it. He waited through the night for rescuers during a snowstorm, his life endangered not by suffocation but by exposure. Instead, his right leg sank up to his thigh and he found himself unable to pull it out. Nor did he sink up to his chin as Robin Williams did in 1995’s Jumanji. The Arizona photographer wasn’t sucked under the sand in seconds as Buttercup was in 1987’s The Princess Bride. It was so prominent in children’s entertainment that roughly two people every single day now tweet a variation of the comic John Mulaney’s gag: “As a kid, I always thought that quicksand was going to be a much bigger problem than it turned out to be.”įor Osmun, quicksand turned out to be a very big problem, but, as with most things, it wasn’t quite like the movies. From Flash Gordon’s narrow escape from a swamp in 1980, to Artax’s harrowing death in The NeverEnding Story in 1984, quicksand was once a pop culture staple. ![]() ![]() But after 11 hours, with no sign of rescue, his clothes frozen solid, and his body aching from exhaustion, he wasn’t certain he would survive.Īs a child of the ’80s and ’90s, Osmun was no stranger to the perils of quicksand before his ordeal. “It was sunny out, at first it wasn’t too bad,” he says. Fifty minutes after sinking, Osmun still felt optimistic. “I pretty much thought it was mud,” Osmun says now, six months after he sank in a freezing puddle at Utah’s Zion National Park on February 17, 2019. For the first 20 minutes that 34-year-old hiker Ryan Osmun was stuck in quicksand, he thought everything would be all right.
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