| EVEREST
OBSERVATIONS AND REFLECTIONS
Background
information for the film, “Everest: The Other Side.”
While we were actually at Everest Base Camp, a good deal of the
downtime was spent thinking about the film and what we would try
to say about the experience. Great attention was given to filming
as much of the expedition as possible; we never tried to put our
focus on any single type of experience or event. The result is 80
hours of footage that, in our opinion, gives a very well rounded
look into just what goes into climbing the world’s tallest
peak. There have been several theatrical films and television specials
about Everest, and many have been very well produced. That being
said, we’ve donned our critical hats and have found issue
with the formula most filmmakers use to portray what it is like
to climb this famous mountain. We’ve seen that there are many
misconceptions about an Everest expedition, and we feel these can
be summarized as follows:
1. Everest is nothing but a savage, man-eating mountain
2. All Everest climbers are extreme athletes, and
3. Climbing Everest is an every-man-for-himself pursuit
4. The goal of attaining the summit is the only reason for partaking
in an expedition on Mount Everest.
We have a great desire to produce a film that is engrossing and
entertaining for the audience. Of course, many Everest filmmakers
have done exactly that by showing only the “D” side
of the experience: Danger, Death and Disrespect. These films are
engaging, but they perpetuate the misconceptions listed above. This
is not our goal.
When you take the list as fact, it makes it very difficult for
the average person to understand why anyone would even try to climb
Everest. Can you blame them? There’s very little there for
anyone to relate to their own life and experiences. Now, certainly,
climbing has been used as a metaphor for life, and in essence it
can be a good one: one step at a time, one small achievement after
another incrementally moving forward towards a goal. Unfortunately,
the reality of climbing Everest can seem much more difficult for
the layperson to relate to. This is understandable. Most everyone
has seen the pictures of high-altitude climbers, and with their
Down suits, oxygen masks and geographical remoteness, they can seem
much more like astronauts than hikers.
Our goal for the film, our challenge, is to tell the story of our
expedition, and in the process give the audience an understanding
of just why someone would travel halfway around the globe to try
and stand on top of it. Our experience (and the footage to back
it up) challenges the misconceptions about Everest and can easily
be understood and digested by an audience. Let’s shed some
light as to why we feel our experience can overcome the stated misconceptions.
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