SpencerVT
Member
The documentary about the climber who scaled all of the World’s 8,000 meter mountains in like 7 months.
I am looking forward to watching this!
I am looking forward to watching this!
On? Netflix, Nat Geo, Paramount, other?
The documentary about the climber who scaled all of the World’s 8,000 meter mountains in like 7 months.
I am looking forward to watching this!
Jimmy Chin is a fantastic cinematographer with an impressive resume. Looking forward to this.
We watched it last night and enjoyed it as well. I have to say, however, that either he had one fantastic stroke of luck after another or they simply didn't show the delays, hardships, or turn backs. It also seemed that (most of?) his crew was the same for the endeavor but the spoils are his alone.
Tim
We watched it last night and enjoyed it as well. I have to say, however, that either he had one fantastic stroke of luck after another or they simply didn't show the delays, hardships, or turn backs. It also seemed that (most of?) his crew was the same for the endeavor but the spoils are his alone.
Tim
That is actually pretty common. Climbers and such that play a support role, treat that as a profession in its own. If you looked at a lot of the companies that guide Everest, you would see many of the same names in support roles for many expeditions.
Except, this is different. The underlying theme of the movie was just that: Western & European climbers get the glory while the sherpas do the work. Nims, being Nepalese and being close to the sherpas personally, if any of them HAD done the same peaks I would've expected just as much of the same recognition in this case (That being said, it appears not all of them did so it's a moot point).
I have to say, however, that either he had one fantastic stroke of luck after another or they simply didn't show the delays, hardships, or turn backs.
Tim
I'd imagine it was a function of being a movie versus a miniseries. Even as brief as it was the movie was 1h 41min. I doubt they wanted to waste too much time showing everyone sleeping in an airport, grabbing breakfast in Katmandu, etc. Would have loved to have seen this made into a mini-series where more of the details could be shared but I suppose that wouldn't have been as commercially viable. Just the logistics of planning all the travel and supplies must have been staggering and could have filled an entire movie. Even with the good fortune (which you'd expect is a given to pull of something this crazy) this is still pretty impressive.
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