- Nanga Parbat Facts
- Nanga Parbat Mountain
- Nanga Parbat Film Trailer Ita
- Nanga Parbat Messner Film Italiano
- Nanga Parbat Film Trailer Italiano
The film Nanga Parbat, directed by Joseph Vilsmaier, has been showing in German cinemas since the 14th of January. It is the story of the fateful ascent of Nanga Parbat by the famous climber Reinhold Messner, on which his brother Günther tragically dies.
Title: NANGA PARBAT EXPEDITION 1938 Allocated Title Film Number: MGH 5203 Other titles: AMATEUR FILM BY AUSTIN FLOWER (MAC) MCKENNA Alternative Title Summary: Amateur film shot by Flight Lieutenant McKenna (later Squadron Leader), while serving as liaison officer to German expedition investigating effects of high altitude for aviation research. This is 'Nanga Parbat winter expedition 2016 - ita' by Simone Moro on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them. The Chief Secretary of Gilgit-Baltistan, Younis Dagha, announced that among the arrested on August 19, 2013, was the terrorist Qaribullah ('Hasan'), a former Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan leader of the Chilas unit, who might be the mastermind of the Nanga Parbat attack, as well as M Nabi (Qari Husnain), who was a suspect in the murder of. Nanga Parbat is a 2010 German biographical drama film based on the tragic mountaineering expedition of Messner brothers to one of the tallest mountains in the world, Nanga Parbat.
It is now around 40 years ago that the expedition took place and since that time it has been the cause of passionate arguments and even legal action. Given the provocative and slanderous nature of the film in regard to some of the now deceased team members, this new version of the story won't restore any peace for those climbers who were involved.
'The dramatisation is unconvincing, the dialogue is shallow, and so is the performance of most of the actors.'
To put it succinctly, the film about the 1970 first ascent of the 4500 metre high Rupal face on Nanga Parbat is simply poor. The dramatisation is unconvincing, the dialogue is shallow, and so is the performance of most of the actors. Messner is the 'hero' of the film and is played, quite badly, by the actor Florian Stetter, who manages to keep a single facial expression for most of the film. One could think his arrogant, condescending smirk had been frozen in place by the cold of the mountain.
Since Cliffhanger, Vertical Limit and the like, it is well known that mountaineering films do not necessarily excel in portraying reality. Nanga Parbat, too, features some slip ups. In the very beginning, Messner climbs the Heiligkreuzkofel Central Pillar in the Dolomites wearing modern rock boots, however on the summit - hey presto - he wears heavy leather mountain boots. Plus of course - in 1968, rock boots as we know them today did not yet exist.
'To impute this kind of unproven behaviour to two now deceased persons, is simply unacceptable.'
The same goes for the Gore-Tex jackets that Felix Kuen und Peter Scholz are shown to wear in 1970 on the summit of Nanga Parbat. Or, take the scene after Günther Messner has been buried by an avalanche (poorly recreated in the film) - One moment, Reinhold Messner is lying completely exhausted on a glacial moraine at the bottom of the wall, and the next moment he is back in the middle of a steep wall, searching for his brother in the avalanche debris. Convert string to date in sql. Add to this that even non-alpinists might wonder whether it wouldn't make sense to zip up the collar and put up the hood of your jacket when fighting for survival in the icy cold of a Himalayan snow-storm and you have a catalogue of unconvincing technical errors.
However, these rather minor mistakes pale when compared to some other scenes. Hwk support suite setup latest version.
Unbelievably crass is the moment when Felix Kuen and Peter Scholz reach the summit, one day after the Messner brothers. There they find a discarded glove. Their joyous conversation follows: 'The Messners are dead! We are the victorious summiteers!' Cheering, the mountaineers embrace each other.
To impute this kind of unproven behaviour to two now deceased persons, is simply unacceptable.
'Vilsmaier doesn't succeed in inspiring any sympathy for his heroes'
Nanga Parbat Facts
Similarly out of place is the characterisation of expedition leader Herrligkoffer. Portrayed as a tyrant using unspeakable Nazi rhetoric, he likes to show off, but then is incompetent and helpless, and has constantly to refer to Messner for advice. Reinhold Messner however always knows what to do.
When the expedition is financially touch and go, he convinces the sponsor with his wit and charisma to issue a blank cheque; on the mountain he always leads the way, knows what the weather does, and so forth. This kind of platitudinous black and white picture smacks of bad US propaganda movies - but falls short of accelerating the drama of the film. Vilsmaier doesn't succeed in inspiring any sympathy for his 'heroes', leaving the viewer, even whilst watching the demise of Günther Messner, coldly untouched.
With his film Nanga Parbat, Joseph Vilsmaier has done no favour to the genre of mountain films. And given the crass characterisation evident throughout the feature, it comes as no surprise that, with the obvious exception of Messner, all other members of the expedition, plus their descendants, protest strongly against the distortion of facts and the slight upon the characters of the climbers who are unjustly portrayed.
The review was written by Steffen Kern, translated by Sarah Burmester and edited by Jack Geldard.
This review goes with the UKC Editorial: Nanga Parbat, The Fury Continues. The game like father like son free mp3 download mp3.
A French high-altitude climber | |
Born | |
---|---|
Nationality | French |
Occupation | Mountaineer |
Élisabeth Revol (born April 29, 1979) is a French high-altitude climber. In January 2018 Revol became the first woman to have climbed Nanga Parbat in Pakistan in winter; on the descent she was heroically rescued, while her teammate Tomasz Mackiewicz died, an event which was widely covered by the mainstream press. Having narrowly avoided amputation of her left foot she traversed consecutively Mount Everest and Lhotse in May 2019.
Early life[edit]
Revol was born in the Drôme area, France and her parents introduced her to mountaineering in the Ecrins massif. She began climbing at age of 19 and became a physical education teacher.[1]
Career and expeditions[edit]
In 2007 Revol went on her first expedition to Nepal. In 2008, she made a solo ascent of the three Himalayan mountains Broad Peak – Gasherbrum I – Gasherbrum II – within a 16-day period and without the aid of oxygen; her climbing partner Antoine Girard had fallen ill. In 2009, she attempted the Annapurna with Martin Minarik, but retreated in a storm on Roc Noir (7,485 m); her climbing partner died.[1]
In 2012, she participated in the Adventure Racing World Championships in France, which includes navigation, trekking, mountain biking, paddling and climbing.[1] Revol joined Daniele Nardi in the winter of 2013, and Polish climber Tomasz Mackiewicz in the winter of 2015 to climb Nanga Parbat, known as the 'Killer Mountain', in Pakistan; in 2015 Mackiewicz and Revol reached 7800m, and turned back because of bad weather. In January 2018, they succeeded to climb the Nanga Parbat in winter as the second team ever. Revol became the first woman to have climbed Nanga Parbat in winter.[2]
On 23 May 2019, she reached the summit of Mount Everest using oxygen from 8500m onward and climbed the adjacent Lhotse the following day.[3]
Rescue[edit]
On 25 January 2018, during her fourth attempt of a winter ascent of Nanga Parbat, and Mackiewicz's seventh attempt, they reached the summit from the Diamer side.[4][5] Revol noticed Mackiewicz's bad condition and started taking him down. According to Revol, he could not walk, see or communicate and was bleeding profusely from his mouth and nose; he had developed severe frostbite and snow blindness. She secured him from the wind in a crevasse, called for help and started the long descent.[5][6]
Another Polish team which attempted the nearby summit of K2 was called for rescue. On 27 January 2018 the rescue team, including Denis Urubko and Adam Bielecki, were dropped off by a helicopter of the Pakistani military[7] at 4,900 m (16,100 ft) on the mountain, and climbed 1,200m through the night rescuing Revol at 6,026 m (19,770 ft). Mackiewicz, who was believed to be in his tent at around 7,400 m (24,300 ft), could not be rescued due to bad weather and a snowstorm.[8][5] She weighed just 45 kg when the rescue team managed to evacuate her, and suffered from severe frostbite to her hands and left foot.[9] Revol was later carried to Islamabad for treatment,[8] but was able to avoid any amputations.[10]
Nanga Parbat Mountain
Personal life[edit]
Revol's partner is Jean-Christophe.[11] She is employed by Valandré, a high altitude down equipment manufacturer in Belcaire.[3]
References[edit]
- ^ abc'Portrait of Elisabeth Revol'. Blue Ice. 4 January 2017. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
- ^Stefan Nestler (9 February 2018). 'Adventure Sports - DW.COM'. Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
- ^ abMontagnes (8 June 2019). 'Élisabeth Revol à l'Everest : Valandré rectifie le tir sur l'oxygène'. Montagnes Magazine (in French). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
- ^'Stranded French climber flown from Pakistan's 'Killer Mountain''. BBC.
- ^ abc'Polish rescue team finds French climber on Pakistan's 'Killer Mountain''. Reuters. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
- ^'The Killer Mountain May Kill Aagain'. dreamwanderlust.com. 31 January 2018.
- ^'Climbers rescue French woman stranded on Pakistan's 'Killer Mountain'. The Guardian. 28 January 2018.
- ^ ab'Killer Mountain' Strands Climber as Another Is Rescued'. National Geographic. 29 January 2018.
- ^Martin Walsh (5 February 2019). 'Elisabeth Revol Describes Nanga Parbat Rescue'. Explorersweb. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
- ^'Élisabeth Revol gravit l'Everest un an après avoir failli perdre la vie dans l'Himalaya'. La Depeche (in French). 24 May 2019. Retrieved 24 September 2019.
- ^'Rescuers call off efforts to save Polish climber missing on 'killer mountain' Nanga Parbat'. Dawn.com. 29 January 2018.
Nanga Parbat Film Trailer Ita
External links[edit]
Nanga Parbat Messner Film Italiano
- Elisabeth Revol, sauvetage au sommet 8 February 2018 (TV France 2) 28 min, interview with and broadcast about Revol´s rescue.
Title: NANGA PARBAT EXPEDITION 1938 Allocated Title Film Number: MGH 5203 Other titles: AMATEUR FILM BY AUSTIN FLOWER (MAC) MCKENNA Alternative Title Summary: Amateur film shot by Flight Lieutenant McKenna (later Squadron Leader), while serving as liaison officer to German expedition investigating effects of high altitude for aviation research. This is 'Nanga Parbat winter expedition 2016 - ita' by Simone Moro on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them. The Chief Secretary of Gilgit-Baltistan, Younis Dagha, announced that among the arrested on August 19, 2013, was the terrorist Qaribullah ('Hasan'), a former Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan leader of the Chilas unit, who might be the mastermind of the Nanga Parbat attack, as well as M Nabi (Qari Husnain), who was a suspect in the murder of. Nanga Parbat is a 2010 German biographical drama film based on the tragic mountaineering expedition of Messner brothers to one of the tallest mountains in the world, Nanga Parbat.
It is now around 40 years ago that the expedition took place and since that time it has been the cause of passionate arguments and even legal action. Given the provocative and slanderous nature of the film in regard to some of the now deceased team members, this new version of the story won't restore any peace for those climbers who were involved.
'The dramatisation is unconvincing, the dialogue is shallow, and so is the performance of most of the actors.'
To put it succinctly, the film about the 1970 first ascent of the 4500 metre high Rupal face on Nanga Parbat is simply poor. The dramatisation is unconvincing, the dialogue is shallow, and so is the performance of most of the actors. Messner is the 'hero' of the film and is played, quite badly, by the actor Florian Stetter, who manages to keep a single facial expression for most of the film. One could think his arrogant, condescending smirk had been frozen in place by the cold of the mountain.
Since Cliffhanger, Vertical Limit and the like, it is well known that mountaineering films do not necessarily excel in portraying reality. Nanga Parbat, too, features some slip ups. In the very beginning, Messner climbs the Heiligkreuzkofel Central Pillar in the Dolomites wearing modern rock boots, however on the summit - hey presto - he wears heavy leather mountain boots. Plus of course - in 1968, rock boots as we know them today did not yet exist.
'To impute this kind of unproven behaviour to two now deceased persons, is simply unacceptable.'
The same goes for the Gore-Tex jackets that Felix Kuen und Peter Scholz are shown to wear in 1970 on the summit of Nanga Parbat. Or, take the scene after Günther Messner has been buried by an avalanche (poorly recreated in the film) - One moment, Reinhold Messner is lying completely exhausted on a glacial moraine at the bottom of the wall, and the next moment he is back in the middle of a steep wall, searching for his brother in the avalanche debris. Convert string to date in sql. Add to this that even non-alpinists might wonder whether it wouldn't make sense to zip up the collar and put up the hood of your jacket when fighting for survival in the icy cold of a Himalayan snow-storm and you have a catalogue of unconvincing technical errors.
However, these rather minor mistakes pale when compared to some other scenes. Hwk support suite setup latest version.
Unbelievably crass is the moment when Felix Kuen and Peter Scholz reach the summit, one day after the Messner brothers. There they find a discarded glove. Their joyous conversation follows: 'The Messners are dead! We are the victorious summiteers!' Cheering, the mountaineers embrace each other.
To impute this kind of unproven behaviour to two now deceased persons, is simply unacceptable.
'Vilsmaier doesn't succeed in inspiring any sympathy for his heroes'
Nanga Parbat Facts
Similarly out of place is the characterisation of expedition leader Herrligkoffer. Portrayed as a tyrant using unspeakable Nazi rhetoric, he likes to show off, but then is incompetent and helpless, and has constantly to refer to Messner for advice. Reinhold Messner however always knows what to do.
When the expedition is financially touch and go, he convinces the sponsor with his wit and charisma to issue a blank cheque; on the mountain he always leads the way, knows what the weather does, and so forth. This kind of platitudinous black and white picture smacks of bad US propaganda movies - but falls short of accelerating the drama of the film. Vilsmaier doesn't succeed in inspiring any sympathy for his 'heroes', leaving the viewer, even whilst watching the demise of Günther Messner, coldly untouched.
With his film Nanga Parbat, Joseph Vilsmaier has done no favour to the genre of mountain films. And given the crass characterisation evident throughout the feature, it comes as no surprise that, with the obvious exception of Messner, all other members of the expedition, plus their descendants, protest strongly against the distortion of facts and the slight upon the characters of the climbers who are unjustly portrayed.
The review was written by Steffen Kern, translated by Sarah Burmester and edited by Jack Geldard.
This review goes with the UKC Editorial: Nanga Parbat, The Fury Continues. The game like father like son free mp3 download mp3.
A French high-altitude climber | |
Born | |
---|---|
Nationality | French |
Occupation | Mountaineer |
Élisabeth Revol (born April 29, 1979) is a French high-altitude climber. In January 2018 Revol became the first woman to have climbed Nanga Parbat in Pakistan in winter; on the descent she was heroically rescued, while her teammate Tomasz Mackiewicz died, an event which was widely covered by the mainstream press. Having narrowly avoided amputation of her left foot she traversed consecutively Mount Everest and Lhotse in May 2019.
Early life[edit]
Revol was born in the Drôme area, France and her parents introduced her to mountaineering in the Ecrins massif. She began climbing at age of 19 and became a physical education teacher.[1]
Career and expeditions[edit]
In 2007 Revol went on her first expedition to Nepal. In 2008, she made a solo ascent of the three Himalayan mountains Broad Peak – Gasherbrum I – Gasherbrum II – within a 16-day period and without the aid of oxygen; her climbing partner Antoine Girard had fallen ill. In 2009, she attempted the Annapurna with Martin Minarik, but retreated in a storm on Roc Noir (7,485 m); her climbing partner died.[1]
In 2012, she participated in the Adventure Racing World Championships in France, which includes navigation, trekking, mountain biking, paddling and climbing.[1] Revol joined Daniele Nardi in the winter of 2013, and Polish climber Tomasz Mackiewicz in the winter of 2015 to climb Nanga Parbat, known as the 'Killer Mountain', in Pakistan; in 2015 Mackiewicz and Revol reached 7800m, and turned back because of bad weather. In January 2018, they succeeded to climb the Nanga Parbat in winter as the second team ever. Revol became the first woman to have climbed Nanga Parbat in winter.[2]
On 23 May 2019, she reached the summit of Mount Everest using oxygen from 8500m onward and climbed the adjacent Lhotse the following day.[3]
Rescue[edit]
On 25 January 2018, during her fourth attempt of a winter ascent of Nanga Parbat, and Mackiewicz's seventh attempt, they reached the summit from the Diamer side.[4][5] Revol noticed Mackiewicz's bad condition and started taking him down. According to Revol, he could not walk, see or communicate and was bleeding profusely from his mouth and nose; he had developed severe frostbite and snow blindness. She secured him from the wind in a crevasse, called for help and started the long descent.[5][6]
Another Polish team which attempted the nearby summit of K2 was called for rescue. On 27 January 2018 the rescue team, including Denis Urubko and Adam Bielecki, were dropped off by a helicopter of the Pakistani military[7] at 4,900 m (16,100 ft) on the mountain, and climbed 1,200m through the night rescuing Revol at 6,026 m (19,770 ft). Mackiewicz, who was believed to be in his tent at around 7,400 m (24,300 ft), could not be rescued due to bad weather and a snowstorm.[8][5] She weighed just 45 kg when the rescue team managed to evacuate her, and suffered from severe frostbite to her hands and left foot.[9] Revol was later carried to Islamabad for treatment,[8] but was able to avoid any amputations.[10]
Nanga Parbat Mountain
Personal life[edit]
Revol's partner is Jean-Christophe.[11] She is employed by Valandré, a high altitude down equipment manufacturer in Belcaire.[3]
References[edit]
- ^ abc'Portrait of Elisabeth Revol'. Blue Ice. 4 January 2017. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
- ^Stefan Nestler (9 February 2018). 'Adventure Sports - DW.COM'. Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
- ^ abMontagnes (8 June 2019). 'Élisabeth Revol à l'Everest : Valandré rectifie le tir sur l'oxygène'. Montagnes Magazine (in French). Retrieved 22 September 2019.
- ^'Stranded French climber flown from Pakistan's 'Killer Mountain''. BBC.
- ^ abc'Polish rescue team finds French climber on Pakistan's 'Killer Mountain''. Reuters. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
- ^'The Killer Mountain May Kill Aagain'. dreamwanderlust.com. 31 January 2018.
- ^'Climbers rescue French woman stranded on Pakistan's 'Killer Mountain'. The Guardian. 28 January 2018.
- ^ ab'Killer Mountain' Strands Climber as Another Is Rescued'. National Geographic. 29 January 2018.
- ^Martin Walsh (5 February 2019). 'Elisabeth Revol Describes Nanga Parbat Rescue'. Explorersweb. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
- ^'Élisabeth Revol gravit l'Everest un an après avoir failli perdre la vie dans l'Himalaya'. La Depeche (in French). 24 May 2019. Retrieved 24 September 2019.
- ^'Rescuers call off efforts to save Polish climber missing on 'killer mountain' Nanga Parbat'. Dawn.com. 29 January 2018.
Nanga Parbat Film Trailer Ita
External links[edit]
Nanga Parbat Messner Film Italiano
- Elisabeth Revol, sauvetage au sommet 8 February 2018 (TV France 2) 28 min, interview with and broadcast about Revol´s rescue.