K2: Siren of the Himalayas | |
---|---|
Directed by | Dave Ohlson |
Written by | Darren Lund Andy McDonough Dave Ohlson Jason Reid |
Produced by | Andy McDonough Dave Ohlson Jason Reid |
Starring | Fabrizio Zangrilli Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner Jake Meyer Chris Szymiec |
Narrated by | Simone Leorin |
Cinematography | Dave Ohlson |
Edited by | Darren Lund Dave Ohlson Jason Reid |
Music by | Jonathan Haidle |
Production companies | Ursus Films Roped In Productions 2R Productions Lucid Visual Media Mind Vise |
Distributed by | First Run Features XTreme Video |
Release dates |
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Running time | 75 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
K2: Siren of the Himalayas is a 2012 American documentary film directed by Dave Ohlson. The film follows a group of climbers during their 2009 attempt to climb K2, chronicling the climbers' attempt to surmount the peak on the 100th anniversary of the Duke of Abruzzi's landmark K2 expedition in 1909. The film also delves into the history and geography of the Karakoram mountain region.
The film was shot in Pakistan in the summer of 2009. [1] Director Dave Ohlson made the trek to climb K2 with elite alpinists Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner (2012 National Geographic Explorer of the Year), Fabrizio Zangrilli, Jake Meyer and Chris Szymiec. [2]
Upon returning to Seattle from his K2 expedition, Ohlson partnered with filmmaker Jason Reid, who brought in his post-production team to co-produce, edit and finish the documentary. [3]
As the film takes place on the 100th anniversary of the Duke of Abruzzi and Vittorio Sella's landmark Italian expedition to the same peak in 1909, the filmmakers licensed rare archival footage, written commentary and vintage photos from the Duke's century-old summit attempt to provide a historical perspective on extreme mountaineering expeditions throughout the past century. [4] [5] [6]
K2: Siren of the Himalayas world premiered at the Banff Mountain Film Festival on November 2, 2012, [7] followed by its U.S. premiere at Mountainfilm in Telluride, CO on May 25, 2013. [8]
The film had a successful worldwide festival run in 2013, [9] and U.S. distributor First Run Features picked up North American rights for the film in 2014. First Run Features gave K2 a limited theatrical release in 2014, opening in New York City on August 22 and playing in select cities across the country. [10]
The film launched on DVD in North America via First Run Features in August 2014, [11] and it is now available digitally on iTunes, Netflix, Xbox, PlayStation, Vudu and Google Play. It was the Number One movie on iTunes in both the Sports and Documentary categories in late 2014. [12]
Following the film's domestic success, worldwide distributor XTreme Video picked up international VOD rights, and K2 launched on the international platforms of iTunes, Google Play, Vimeo, Steep Edge, Garage Entertainment and Reelhouse on May 6, 2015. [13]
The film has received acclaim by critics collectively, earning a combined rating of 100 percent on Rotten Tomatoes [14] and a Metacritic score of 63. [15]
The Village Voice called it "a trek as thrilling as any Hollywood summer blockbuster, with real-life plot twists of death, unexpected heroism, and surprise endings…", [16] and The Hollywood Reporter deemed K2 "an account of one modern expedition that draws fruitfully upon the lore of another." [17]
Film Journal International wrote, "K2: Siren of the Himalayas captures courage, hardship and at times defeat, but above all Ohlson and his crew document the mountain itself, in all its staggering majesty. Some of the shots here are astonishing..." [18] The National Review wrote, "The climbers viewed amazing sights, and they brought back something worthwhile — something worth seeing on as big a screen as possible.” [19]
Some reviews of the movie were mixed, with The New York Times saying, "The documentary’s biggest highlight is its climbing footage...; the film gets in close, with snow on the lens, and captures the sound of piercing winds at high altitude”, but adding that "shedding light on the filmmaking process would have only enriched this well-wrought but limited extreme-sports portrait." [20] The Dissolve also critiqued that "in this 75-minute straight shot of Discovery Channel cinema, no emotional crests are peaked, but viewers will come away informed." [21]
The film was won numerous film festival awards including:
K2, at 8,611 metres (28,251 ft) above sea level, is the second-highest mountain on Earth, after Mount Everest. It lies in the Karakoram range, partially in the Gilgit-Baltistan region of Pakistan-administered Kashmir and partially in a China-administered territory of the Kashmir region included in the Taxkorgan Tajik Autonomous County of Xinjiang.
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Reinhold Andreas Messner is an Italian mountaineer, explorer, and author from South Tyrol. He made the first solo ascent of Mount Everest and, along with Peter Habeler, the first ascent of Everest without supplemental oxygen. He was the first climber to ascend all fourteen peaks over 8,000 metres (26,000 ft) above sea level. Messner was the first to cross Antarctica and Greenland with neither snowmobiles nor dog sleds. He also crossed the Gobi Desert alone. He is widely considered one of the greatest mountaineers of all time.
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The 1953 American Karakoram expedition was a mountaineering expedition to K2, at 8,611 metres the second highest mountain on Earth. It was the fifth expedition to attempt K2, and the first since the Second World War. Led by Charles Houston, a mainly American team attempted the mountain's South-East Spur in a style which was unusually lightweight for the time. The team reached a high point of 7750 m, but were trapped by a storm in their high camp, where a team member, Art Gilkey, became seriously ill. A desperate retreat down the mountain followed, during which all but one of the climbers were nearly killed in a fall arrested by Pete Schoening, and Gilkey later died in an apparent avalanche. The expedition has been widely praised for the courage shown by the climbers in their attempt to save Gilkey, and for the team spirit and the bonds of friendship it fostered.
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