The 1996 Disaster · STORM OVER EVEREST · PBS Documentary

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  • Опубликовано: 1 апр 2021
  • May 11th 1996, a fast moving storm trapped three climbing teams high atop Mt Everest. The exhausted climbers were soon lost in a fierce blizzard and far from the safety of Camp 4 at 26,000 feeet. Renowned Climber/filmmaker David Breasheers, who was on the mountain that fateful day, returns to Everest to tell the complete story of what really happened on that legendary climb.
    -----1996 Mt Everest Disaster------
    The 1996 Mount Everest disaster occurred on 10-11 May 1996, when eight climbers caught in a blizzard died on Mount Everest while attempting to descend from the summit. Over the entire season, 12 people died trying to reach the summit, making it the deadliest season on Mount Everest at the time and the third deadliest after the 16 fatalities of the 2014 Mount Everest avalanche and the 22 resulting from avalanches caused by the April 2015 Nepal earthquake. The 1996 disaster received widespread publicity and raised questions about the commercialization of Everest.
    Numerous climbers were at a high altitude on Everest during the storm, including the Adventure Consultants team, led by Rob Hall, and the Mountain Madness team, led by Scott Fischer. While climbers died on both the North Face and South Col approaches, the events on the South Face were more widely reported. Four members of the Adventure Consultants expedition perished, including Hall, while Fischer was the sole casualty of the Mountain Madness expedition. Three officers of the Indo-Tibetan Border Police also died.
    🎥 Frontline
    cir: 2008
    Director: David Breashears
    #Everest #StormOverEverest

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @nilofarbawa2377
    @nilofarbawa2377 3 года назад +1883

    Absolutely amazing! David Breashears a great mountaineer, writer and filmmaker. Above all he’s a good human being. Thank you for posting this wonderful documentary. Inspiring and heartbreaking. RIP Rob, Scott, Andy, Doug and all those who perished in the storm on Everest.

    • @devkkev9066
      @devkkev9066 3 года назад +45

      amazing that u know about it.. so many so called (i think in austria, where iam from) alpinist dont know a thing about the (sometimes tragic) history of "alpinclimb" and all the great human beeings who did all the great work we are today looking at..
      wish u just the best.
      have a great day & keep up the good work.
      & may also your smile ;)

    • @buzasmihaly8763
      @buzasmihaly8763 3 года назад +92

      @Nilofar Bawa We will never forget Namba Yasuko ( 難波 康子 ) !

    • @zyaneric1
      @zyaneric1 3 года назад +77

      Read the book, “Into Thin Air”

    • @lisahatton5718
      @lisahatton5718 3 года назад +45

      @@buzasmihaly8763 I hated how she went.. All alone cold Frozen to the ice on the ground.. If they would have brought her inside a tent and nursed her she might have lived... Bless her ❤️

    • @Truth1561
      @Truth1561 3 года назад +35

      @Jesse Fromal oh yes- the weak woman who had conquered the highest peak in 7 continents 🙄

  • @ali6ism
    @ali6ism 3 года назад +3332

    I am endlessly fascinated by everest and k2 stories but at the same time I just can't grasp having the desire to climb it

    • @gamingforfun9000
      @gamingforfun9000 3 года назад +198

      even after watching this one day i want to tackle it, and if i die up there, at least id like to be frozen facing some nice view. Isnt that a better grave than being in box with piles of dirt on it

    • @mr.onethirtyeight5088
      @mr.onethirtyeight5088 3 года назад +29

      @@gamingforfun9000 - yes, yes it is

    • @gibbontakeit9098
      @gibbontakeit9098 3 года назад +69

      Nope... cus ur your dead. ACTUALLY dying up there also sounds horrible. If rather have a massive adrenaline dump, like an airplane crash or something.

    • @misterysmithers8566
      @misterysmithers8566 3 года назад +260

      @@gamingforfun9000 I live in the north.
      You clearly have no idea what it is like to work at -50 wearher.
      Freezing is the worst feeling in the world.

    • @gamingforfun9000
      @gamingforfun9000 3 года назад +19

      @@misterysmithers8566 well you don't know where I live or lived ;)

  • @halfbloodprincess989
    @halfbloodprincess989 3 года назад +1359

    The Sherpas that came back to rescue Gau and even tried to reach Rob really are the unsung heros of this stormy day on the top of the mount everest...

    • @13lochie
      @13lochie 3 года назад +36

      Absolutely right. Theres a great documentary called Sherpa thats now on Netflix which really drives that home.

    • @Bogsyism
      @Bogsyism 3 года назад +36

      Yes, and these rich selfish bastards treat them appallingly

    • @sheilaboston7051
      @sheilaboston7051 3 года назад +56

      @@addictlee2008 After climbing Everest nearly every year since 1994, Sherpa Kami Rita has just summitted Everest for the 25th time and at the age of 51! He was one of the first people to summit this season, as he was fixing the ropes for all the groups. He's also climbed other major mountains, including K2. I'm hoping that he will now retire ...

    • @KenJames9911
      @KenJames9911 3 года назад +40

      Yes. and don't forget about Anatoli...

    • @missewe
      @missewe 2 года назад +1

      @@2684dennis good eye

  • @jarediledundee
    @jarediledundee 2 месяца назад +132

    R.I.P David Breashears. This documentary evokes so much emotion. It is an awesome example of thoughtful storytelling.

    • @peach7210
      @peach7210 2 месяца назад +8

      Truly. 😭

    • @oc2538
      @oc2538 2 месяца назад +12

      This is such sad news, I cannot believe he passed. This is my favourite documentary. 🙏🏻 May he rest in peace. What a remarkable life he lived.

    • @wandaenman5630
      @wandaenman5630 Месяц назад +2

      Truth

    • @Tenebarum
      @Tenebarum 10 дней назад +2

      It's a tremendous work. He just lets the story unfold and allows the climbers to tell it.

  • @vincentkipkemei5401
    @vincentkipkemei5401 Год назад +154

    "Character is what someone does when no one is watching",....Felt that.

    • @wesgilmer5391
      @wesgilmer5391 3 месяца назад +4

      I wonder what Beck meant by that. He obviously felt slighted by someone.

    • @jody2873
      @jody2873 3 месяца назад

      ​@@wesgilmer5391ya, and unfortunately, as he stated that "slight" on a national scale, he'll have to eat those words

    • @kyledavis3440
      @kyledavis3440 2 месяца назад +1

      That would be integrity

    • @Tenebarum
      @Tenebarum 2 месяца назад

      ​@@wesgilmer5391Mike Groom.

    • @im-Sara-Jayne.
      @im-Sara-Jayne. 5 дней назад +1

      Yeah, that really got me too! Maybe he meant the way he felt whilst looking into another humans eyes, as they gave him up for lost cause, because nobody else would ever know what they saw or what he saw, they thought they could quietly walk away and pretend they never saw anything. I think that's what he meant, because they thought he was dead nobody would be watching them. 😢

  • @ThomasGabrielsen
    @ThomasGabrielsen Год назад +2389

    When I watch documentaries about Mount Everest I always feel that the Sherpas doesn't get the credit they deserve. Watching how they carry most of the supplies for the climbers, securing the ladders and ropes before every season. I remember a scene from a documentary about a Mount Everest expedition I watched many years ago. I can't recall which documentary it was, but the scene was from one of the base camps late in the evening. Two Sherpas came into a tent with where some of the paying climbers where resting, and they asked the Sherpas where they had been. They answered that they had been up and secured some ladders and ropes. I can't say where this ladders and ropes was, but the look on the face of the other climbers was just disbelief. They simply couldn't fathom that they had climbed so far up and went down again, and the Sherpas acted as this was nothing special. They did this after carrying their own supply in addition to the paying climbers supply. The Sherpas are the true superhumans to me.

    • @perseuslove1335
      @perseuslove1335 Год назад +62

      Sometimes people make them carry furniture. Like dining tables.

    • @janeworrall3694
      @janeworrall3694 Год назад +49

      @@perseuslove1335 …WHAAAAT? Is this true? So it’s just a picnic, a day out!!! Unbelievable.

    • @spiderknight9893
      @spiderknight9893 Год назад +43

      Except literally every video and comments section goes on and on about muh sherpas ! They didn’t even climb the mountains before westerners did …..

    • @Fa5Squad
      @Fa5Squad Год назад +29

      They get paid very well lol

    • @mysteryminx2619
      @mysteryminx2619 Год назад +133

      The Sherpa people are extraordinary and living proof of human adaptation to their native environment. Sherpas DNA is sequenced in such an intricate way that they literally have a higher blood volume and the metabolism to accommodate it, completely in order to function at their best and healthiest at higher Earth altitudes, acclimated to process a lower atmosphere than non-Sherpa people, they thrive in thin air that would leave most of us breathless. Sherpa are BORN to live among the Himalaya, it is their gift. They live largely in villages throughout what is known as the Sagarmatha Zone (the Nepali name of Everest "Head of the Sky" In Tibet She is Chomolungma "The Mother of the World" and deeply revered by both cultures). They are wonderful people, and it is my joy to know a Sherpa gentleman (and yes, his name is Tenzing-- a common family name) He has a relative who has summited Sagarmatha eight times, each time he climbs to honor the five buddhas as well as to safely guide climbers who persist and pursue a personal conquest. Climbing fees are a boon to families of Sherpa guides. They are indispensable, gracious, and loving people.

  • @LatmaTVulpanstudent
    @LatmaTVulpanstudent 2 года назад +1261

    A mountaineer once said, "Summiting is optional. Coming down is mandatory." Climbers who lose sight of that are doomed.

    • @Paul1958R
      @Paul1958R 2 года назад +47

      Ed Viesturs

    • @pjo2386
      @pjo2386 2 года назад +45

      all these people are egotists, addicted to adrenaline ----- an addiction always wants more

    • @brandonbentley5453
      @brandonbentley5453 2 года назад +2

      @@pjo2386 I'm Gen-X.
      In the words of Steve McQueen
      Racing is life, everything in-between, is just waiting.
      If you're not fulfilling your dreams then you're just waiting to die...

    • @pjo2386
      @pjo2386 2 года назад +2

      @@brandonbentley5453 hedonism sums it up - steve was also a sex addict, womanizer

    • @cattycorner8
      @cattycorner8 2 года назад +13

      @@pjo2386 Good Heavens. Spare us. Don't believe everything you see on RUclips or in the funny papers. 🙄

  • @stevenkristoph6993
    @stevenkristoph6993 Год назад +250

    The late Anatoli Boukreev said it best “Mountains are not Stadiums where I satisfy my ambition to achieve, they are the cathedrals where I practice my religion.” ...

  • @jameskelly2559
    @jameskelly2559 9 месяцев назад +136

    Anatoli’s rescue is beyond belief what a great man he was, RIP stud

  • @Blaine10024
    @Blaine10024 3 года назад +2411

    Neil really said it best when he talks about Anatoly, "what he did was superhuman." Anatoly went out into the storm, alone, and at 1:00am and saved four people's lives. Extraordinary.

    • @PlateletRichGel
      @PlateletRichGel 3 года назад +91

      Anatoly killed in avalanch several years later.

    • @donniev8181
      @donniev8181 3 года назад +130

      Yes but he should of never went solo without oxygen. That's not something a guide does.

    • @rocketmom60
      @rocketmom60 3 года назад +167

      I don't understand that a guide left the climbers hours ahead of them reaching camp. Anatoly saved them, but he never should have left them to begin with.

    • @donniev8181
      @donniev8181 3 года назад +89

      @@rocketmom60 yes and because of him having no o2 it made him in a sense no longer a guide but just a climber that had to get back to camp to get o2

    • @PlateletRichGel
      @PlateletRichGel 3 года назад +43

      @@rocketmom60 I think he could only help two people at a time. But worse was leaving Beck Weathers in camp!

  • @Farmer-bh3cg
    @Farmer-bh3cg 3 года назад +1434

    In watching this and reading a bit about the 1996 climbing season, it seems one of the truest climbers is Lou Kasischke. Having saved for years, worked to get into shape and got within a couple hundred feet of the summit, he looked at the summit, his condition, his remaining capabilities --- --- and turned back. With the goal of years so close he could almost taste it, he made a classic example of wise decision-making under extremely stressful conditions.

    • @cremebrulee4759
      @cremebrulee4759 2 года назад +174

      He deserves high praise for doing the safe thing. Such a difficult and devastating decision.

    • @DanRustle
      @DanRustle 2 года назад +6

      sounds like a loser. losers quit. he is going to have to live with the question of "what if" i guarantee you it will haunt him on his deathbed.

    • @neuralmute
      @neuralmute 2 года назад +261

      @@DanRustle And you sound like an idiot who could easily end up as a meatsicle on the side of a mountain. At least he gets a life beyond Everest. That's worth more than any summit.

    • @fjdididiididid1238
      @fjdididiididid1238 2 года назад +24

      @@neuralmute hahhaha amazing

    • @joostdriesens3984
      @joostdriesens3984 2 года назад +82

      @@neuralmute Dan is already a kind of 'meatsicle' where one of his very few pleasures is trolling on the internet..

  • @jturtle5318
    @jturtle5318 Год назад +171

    They didn't mention the Nepali Army pilot who flew a helicopter to 6,500 m to get Beck above the Khombu ice fall.
    It had been thought impossible because of the thin air.
    Col Madan Khatri Chhetri "KC" hovered but didn't land while they put Beck in the copter, so they wouldn't have to ge him across the ladders spanning the gaps in the ice fall.

    • @AnkitBhatiaat
      @AnkitBhatiaat 3 месяца назад +11

      yeah there's a lot they left out and that's was such a major part

    • @JustinCase-lu6qp
      @JustinCase-lu6qp 3 месяца назад +2

      Yes. How could they leave that out?

    • @fishkapb
      @fishkapb 2 месяца назад +7

      They have already showed him in the Everest 1998 IMAX film. This film is the addition to that.

  • @shidehhafezi6826
    @shidehhafezi6826 7 месяцев назад +388

    In my opinion, climbing Everest, but not making it to the peak, still counts as climbing Everest. You climb 12 or 15 hours from Camp 4 to get to the peak but you are short an additional 500 or 1000 feet, or whatever distance , before you can safely come back is good enough. You have still climbed Everest. Your loved ones will be thrilled to see you back and you get to keep your fingers, toes, and nose- and your LIFE.

    • @FT4Freedom
      @FT4Freedom 6 месяцев назад +51

      Anywhere above camp 4 is considered done in my book.

    • @MoGumboFukUTubeForChngngMyName
      @MoGumboFukUTubeForChngngMyName 5 месяцев назад

      Nope… didn’t make it.

    • @martijndegroot9772
      @martijndegroot9772 5 месяцев назад +65

      Summiting is optional - getting down is mandatory.

    • @lynnpatenaude5548
      @lynnpatenaude5548 5 месяцев назад +13

      Totally agree!
      When you become a parent or married, you don’t have to stop everything but you do have to think about them as well

    • @Thornspyre81
      @Thornspyre81 5 месяцев назад +6

      Not to mention your there for weeks before doing other climbing and acclimatizing BEFORE you even get to Everest.

  • @matthewnguyen518
    @matthewnguyen518 2 года назад +651

    I attempted Mount Williamson a week back, but turned around because I wouldn't make the summit in time and I met experienced climbers who told me that you should summit no later than 1pm since afternoon thunderstorms are common. I think it was a big mistake that the climbers in this doc weren't keeping with their turn around time, and I think this doc teaches us climbers that we should always stick to our turn-around time. As an experienced climber once told me, "the mountain will always be here." I think it should be in our ethics that safety should always be our #1 priority.

    • @jackfanning7952
      @jackfanning7952 2 года назад +18

      Absolutely.

    • @cremebrulee4759
      @cremebrulee4759 2 года назад +37

      Sadly, summiting, is such a driving force that it motivates these people to take unacceptable risks. Then, when they reach the point where they are oxygen-deprived, they aren't thinking clearly.

    • @jackfanning7952
      @jackfanning7952 2 года назад +57

      @@cremebrulee4759 They weren't thinking clearly when they woke up one morning, hugged their wife and kids and thought to themselves, "I think I'll go climb Mt. Everest."

    • @jfrtbikgkdhjbeep9974
      @jfrtbikgkdhjbeep9974 2 года назад +2

      summited , sent in 1984 at age 13 😌

    • @NickShelson
      @NickShelson 2 года назад +4

      Williamson is quite the challenge for a California peak. Best luck next time.

  • @suejones5295
    @suejones5295 3 года назад +919

    My dad was a mountain climber. He climbed the Grand Teton and most of the mountains in Utah. I’m thankful we were poor so he couldn’t afford a trip to Mt. Everest.

    • @dammitmom
      @dammitmom 3 года назад +28

      Mountaineering is mostly for the rich. Which is why ridiculous things like this happen. It should be for everyone that's able to climb. Sorry your grandad didn't get to see my everest

    • @mitchconner2021
      @mitchconner2021 3 года назад +60

      You don't really climb Everest anymore. Sherpas carry everyone's shit to camp while the fucks just take pictures and brag about how cool they are lol

    • @seattlejayde
      @seattlejayde 3 года назад +23

      Your Dad sounds Awesome

    • @agrojester1156
      @agrojester1156 3 года назад +88

      Most of them are Dentist's and Lawyer's that want stories about conquering Everest to tell for the next 40 years at cocktail parties.

    • @ANGELSURS
      @ANGELSURS 3 года назад +24

      Grand Teton = Big tit 😍

  • @rickwrites2612
    @rickwrites2612 7 месяцев назад +138

    I love how Beck describes climbing at night, the blackness punctuated by a string of headlamps representing everyone completely silent each alone with themself in the darkness. Makes it seem more like a pilgrimage.

    • @Tenebarum
      @Tenebarum 2 месяца назад +2

      He's very poetic.

    • @im-Sara-Jayne.
      @im-Sara-Jayne. 5 дней назад +1

      Yes he certainly has a way with words and can imagine what's going on in each person's head while in a world of their own ❤

  • @manzarelahi1812
    @manzarelahi1812 Год назад +143

    The one thing that continues to amaze me every time is the music in this documentary. When I watch the documentary and listen to the music in the background, it makes me feel like I am with them climbing up Everest. Bravo to the composer of the scores!

    • @tmoe6674
      @tmoe6674 Год назад +8

      Agreed. Superb score.

    • @miri745
      @miri745 Год назад +3

      I'm having difficulty finding the composers name. Anyone? Is the score on Spotify?

    • @dana102083
      @dana102083 Год назад +2

      Ive watched this so many times.. Tonight there is a wind warning that piped up on the hillary step 😆

    • @Thepourdeuxchanson
      @Thepourdeuxchanson 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@miri745 It seems, especially in the first half hour, to have been very heavily influenced by Ralph Vaughan William's "Lark Ascending" which you are going to love if you liked this!

    • @miri745
      @miri745 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@Thepourdeuxchanson it's beautiful!

  • @nordvegfigg7746
    @nordvegfigg7746 2 года назад +439

    The real footage, the re-creations, the music, the tone of the survivors, the cinematography... everything about this documentary is just superbly done. Absolutely top notch stuff. 10/10. Everything done with respect for all involved. Those who survived, and those who didn't.

    • @annakeye
      @annakeye 2 года назад +22

      For me, there are a few stand out moments but the moment where Rob Hall's friend and team member, Helen Wilton, explaining facilitating the last phone call between
      Rob and his wife, Jan, was hammered home in that final look at 1:26:15 after explaining what she was doing was a terrible thing but also a good thing. A range of emotions that
      she's still feeling as she retells the story.

    • @CoIoneIPanic
      @CoIoneIPanic Год назад +12

      The music is too overbearing and sounds like a funeral.

    • @dana102083
      @dana102083 Год назад +15

      @@CoIoneIPanic it was a funeral.

    • @jsbach9848
      @jsbach9848 Год назад +5

      @@CoIoneIPanic it was hardly a New Year's party.

    • @CoIoneIPanic
      @CoIoneIPanic Год назад +3

      @@jsbach9848 but this is a video and it has distracting music .

  • @edwigcarol4888
    @edwigcarol4888 7 месяцев назад +219

    Makalu Gau is so sympathetic... the way his whole body is involved in telling the story... His survival story..
    His language sounds beautiful

    • @str8cndian
      @str8cndian 6 месяцев назад +1

      Bruh! did you see his hands?

    • @Galaxie08
      @Galaxie08 5 месяцев назад +41

      @@str8cndian Yes, and, ‘Bruh’? 🙄 That’s the result of frostbite. He still told his story with his whole body.

    • @roinafernandes3693
      @roinafernandes3693 5 месяцев назад +9

      Very expressive indeed!

    • @pavanman6632
      @pavanman6632 4 месяца назад +11

      he survived like a champ

    • @MichaelTarailo-st1nv
      @MichaelTarailo-st1nv 3 месяца назад +11

      He made the documentary a 10 when it would've been a 7

  • @stuckinthepattayabubble9319
    @stuckinthepattayabubble9319 2 месяца назад +43

    God speed David, you were an inspiration to so many. Thank you for leaving us this documentary about life, death, and Mount Everest.
    Rip David 🙏

    • @nancifyme
      @nancifyme 25 дней назад +1

      I didn’t realize he died just a couple months ago. RIP David.

  • @peach7210
    @peach7210 2 месяца назад +47

    Goodnight, David Breashears. Thank you for the gift of telling your story. 😭

  • @miroslavcervenka3283
    @miroslavcervenka3283 2 года назад +209

    Mount Everest has become a high end tourism destination. It is no longer a magical quest for the select few, but a lineup at a mall. Majestic and deadly as the mall is, the disrespect for it is obvious.

    • @NOBODYASKEDFORAFILM
      @NOBODYASKEDFORAFILM Год назад +3

      Are you high bro?

    • @stj971
      @stj971 Год назад +19

      It's foolishness at its worst. That being said, I would love to see the Himalayas. I am deeply saddened by the destruction of Tibet and its people. FREE TIBET!

    • @michelleduplooymalherbe2837
      @michelleduplooymalherbe2837 Год назад +10

      @@stj971 agree with you it is so sad to see how they have commercialised everything just for the sake of t he mighty dollar

    • @newnum2
      @newnum2 Год назад +5

      I blame late stage Sherpa capitalism.

    • @gloriawelch3603
      @gloriawelch3603 Год назад +3

      It should be available to anyone that can finance and make the trip.

  • @horrortackleharry
    @horrortackleharry 2 года назад +679

    To me, this documentary shows exactly why the commercialisation of dangerous high peaks like Everest is fundamentally wrong. Up there in the Death Zone, you can't be thinking about paying clients to whom you feel an obligation to provide a full 'summit experience'.

    • @nikkicas260
      @nikkicas260 2 года назад +25

      Thank you! Well said

    • @chocosmoke0208
      @chocosmoke0208 2 года назад +12

      This is so true :( God Bless you all.

    • @RuminatingWizard
      @RuminatingWizard 2 года назад +11

      Adults are adults.

    • @garymitchell5899
      @garymitchell5899 Год назад +6

      There are many dangerous activities. Adults make their own decisions based on risk. Silly comment.

    • @_Daio_
      @_Daio_ Год назад +55

      @@garymitchell5899 I think you're just too thick to understand it, and his comment was basically saying when you've been paid to get people to the summit, then you're more likely to take risks.

  • @highdesertsunset3011
    @highdesertsunset3011 23 дня назад +10

    can anyone please agree the musical score behind this is absolutely mesmerizing

  • @Moishe555
    @Moishe555 11 месяцев назад +99

    the music in this documentary is fantastic. just. perfect.

    • @christopherknowles
      @christopherknowles 3 месяца назад +1

      Imagine dying and then a bunch of dorks tell a boring story about it to jaunty woodwinds.

    • @dr.barrycohn5461
      @dr.barrycohn5461 3 месяца назад +4

      I thought the music echoed violins.

    • @piquedametarot
      @piquedametarot 3 месяца назад

      Jocelyn Pook is also the composer of "Masked Ball" from "Eyes wide shut" Kubrick.

    • @rjmoney9
      @rjmoney9 3 месяца назад +2

      @@christopherknowlessounds like an ok deal to me

    • @christopherknowles
      @christopherknowles 3 месяца назад

      @@rjmoney9 as long as I get to die

  • @williamwalker5326
    @williamwalker5326 2 года назад +542

    Having watched and read almost everything about the 96 expedition and tragedy, I can only say that those in charge of the various teams did not follow the most important of all rules..."wherever you are on the mountain above camp 4, you MUST turn back within the "return window" no matter how close you are to the summit." Minutes are one thing but, many of those who tragically perished in 96 were HOURS beyond the return window of 1:00pm!!! It's a matter of obeying absolute leadership absolutely.

    • @lindahoffman2692
      @lindahoffman2692 2 года назад +37

      William, While there is undeniably truth in some of what you say about scrupulously following the “window” rule, there were also many unavoidable devastating mishaps such as the log jam of climbers, lack of available supplemental oxygen and of course the severity of the STORM that contributed to this CATASTROPHIC loss of so many priceless lives.

    • @moshunit96
      @moshunit96 2 года назад +45

      Everyone having a radio would have also helped. Two different climbers were just waiting for people who would not return to them. They are pretty much standard now.

    • @riaenkarhystnk6318
      @riaenkarhystnk6318 2 года назад +4

      Ur wrong... All I can see is the great leadership from Scott and Rob...
      That's all....

    • @jiogcyihsugyiocjfdoivhphvw6821
      @jiogcyihsugyiocjfdoivhphvw6821 2 года назад +13

      return window is a misnomer
      also it was 2 not 1

    • @nikkicas260
      @nikkicas260 2 года назад +3

      Agreed

  • @nordvegfigg7746
    @nordvegfigg7746 2 года назад +155

    It really hits home when you start seeing that some of the survivors have no fingers.

    • @saund102
      @saund102 2 года назад +7

      David Brashears declined to film their injuries (for their privacy) even though he could have recorded a once in a lifetime event.

    • @mon6745
      @mon6745 2 года назад +1

      Bro

    • @theaxe6198
      @theaxe6198 2 года назад +11

      @@saund102 you can see their missing fingers on several. It’s heart wrenching

    • @Lopyswine
      @Lopyswine Год назад +13

      @@theaxe6198 he means that he didn't film the injuries ON Everest. The black skin, the blood coming out of their mouths and noses.

    • @stanzanossi
      @stanzanossi 11 месяцев назад +1

      I wonder how many climbers of Mount Everest have also lost their penises to frostbite🥶😱

  • @VioletWongtheVioletRabbit
    @VioletWongtheVioletRabbit Год назад +44

    This is the best documentary about the 1996 tragedy. RIP to all those who lost their lives.

    • @rhubarbara2877
      @rhubarbara2877 5 дней назад

      The channel Adventures gone wrong recently published a fantastic 3 parter series on the 1996 tragedy, it is well worth watching!

  • @jonloftness5210
    @jonloftness5210 5 месяцев назад +50

    I have watched this documentary now 2-3 times. I feel so many emotions with the incredible beauty of Everest; the anxiety of trying to survive in those conditions; the awe of physical and mental toughness of climbers; and also the sorrow of losing a friend to the mountain. Thank you David Snow.

    • @luciad5988
      @luciad5988 5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank David Breashears.

    • @AchtonsVideos
      @AchtonsVideos 4 месяца назад +2

      Read Jon Krakauer's book, Into Thin Air. This film supplements his writing beautifully.

    • @MsRexsmurphy
      @MsRexsmurphy 3 месяца назад

      ❤ lovely comment 🙏🏼🫶🏼

  • @williamstdog9
    @williamstdog9 3 года назад +252

    That Anotoly dude sticks out of this story like a Greek god or something - Wow what a legend of a dude. This story keeps going from bad to worse to WORSE, then this guy pops out of NOWHERE, who summited alone, and WITHOUT OXYGEN, and flies by everyone helping them etc .. I was like where did that character pop up in this story? And How the heck was he so seemingly unaffected by the storm, conditions, lack of oxygen etc?! Dude was a pure LEGEND. Wow

    • @djy4322
      @djy4322 3 года назад +42

      He was a very famous climber from Kazakhstan (USSR at the point of his birth) raised in 5000m .he died the next year on another pick

    • @djy4322
      @djy4322 3 года назад +7

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anatoli_Boukreev

    • @nightmoves12
      @nightmoves12 3 года назад +38

      Thanks for posting his Wiki link. He had a prophetic dream where he died in an avalanche, but refused to stop climbing. I gained some respect for him after reading his quotes and thoughts about climbing. He was a hero, and that's how he should be remembered. :)

    • @andreabrava6899
      @andreabrava6899 3 года назад +17

      He is russian😂

    • @louiseanderson1505
      @louiseanderson1505 2 года назад +5

      Earth Angel ❤

  • @williamstdog9
    @williamstdog9 3 года назад +361

    As BRILLIANT as this doc was in almost every aspect of film making, the ONE thing I kept wishing was to see a Damn MAP of the routes, camps, distances between camps and altitude breakdowns. Maybe some viewers are experts on this already but it would have helped me so much to have a better overall view of the magnitude of what makes Everest near impossible to summit, and why walking 200 yards is a virtually impossible task (for the most accomplished climbers in the world..) in certain parts.

    • @priyanshusahoo2339
      @priyanshusahoo2339 3 года назад +19

      Yeah Same. Also Everest is easier to climb compared to some other 8000m plus peaks in this region like K2, Annapurna and Kanchenjunga. 40% of the ppl who climb annapurna (10th highest mountain) die. Also one reason why one can't walk continuosly is coz at high altitude u get tired very easily to u need to make sure that u can't overwork yourself.

    • @Erin-rg3dw
      @Erin-rg3dw 3 года назад +33

      That's one of those things that many people miss about climbing Everest and other major mountains - just how HARD it is: it's super high elevation, it's steep, you're climbing in crampons (not fun) many of of the climbers were sick prior to the climb, you're not able to digest food properly (and had been going through that for weeks prior to the ascent), many things. Jon Krakauer goes into more detail about the physical demands and problems that he and many others went through.

    • @rabola55
      @rabola55 3 года назад +27

      Google "everest south col route" you will find plenty of maps.

    • @maverik15j
      @maverik15j 2 года назад +5

      There are good RUclips videos with 3Droutes to accompany this doc.

    • @nora_nayeli
      @nora_nayeli 2 года назад +11

      When you are In high altitudes you feel heavier than what you are. It takes more effort to climb just like it would if you had weights on you. You also are carrying layers and things to help you. The weather also makes things painful and the higher you go the harder it gets to breath.

  • @aspromonte5179
    @aspromonte5179 4 месяца назад +25

    I only just learned of this tragedy from watching the movie Everest on Max, I went into it completely blind. I thought it was going to be one of those "tragedy strikes and maybe one side character dies but they all pull through in the end" kind of films. I'm a full grown man and by the time I realized Robb really wasn't making it I started tearing up. The only positive I can think about is that these men died doing what they love.

  • @benoitbergeron8858
    @benoitbergeron8858 10 месяцев назад +31

    I can't even being to imagine what that night in the tent felt like for Beck Weathers. It was as if he had become a ghost before his life has ended. He must have felt utterly desperate and isolated... It's heartbreaking. I'm glad that he made it back to his wife and children in the end.

    • @luckyspurs
      @luckyspurs 4 месяца назад +5

      Yeah, him becoming aware that they were leaving him alone to die, because no-one thought he'd last to the morning, was heartbreaking.

  • @DEATH-THE-GOAT
    @DEATH-THE-GOAT 2 года назад +212

    The sherpas Norbu, Ang Dorjee, Ngawang Sya Kya, Tashi Tseri and all the others are heros in the words true meaning.
    May they live long and happy lifes and have good fortune.

    • @ballaservices9275
      @ballaservices9275 2 года назад +12

      Not to mention Anatoly Andreev - the Russian who went out at 1AM into the nightmare storm to try and rescue people. That was courage.

    • @DEATH-THE-GOAT
      @DEATH-THE-GOAT 2 года назад +5

      @@ballaservices9275 -Apparently you missed my other post. Where I wrote-
      🇷🇺 Anatoli Bukrejev 🇰🇿
      _"deus ex camp IV"_
      Rest in Peace
      _Now you can look down on Mount Everest_
      _from the heaven you were reaching for_
      januari 16 1958
      december 25 1997

    • @ballaservices9275
      @ballaservices9275 2 года назад +4

      @@DEATH-THE-GOAT Yes I did! But we're travelling on the same bus here- they're all heroes as you say.

    • @DEATH-THE-GOAT
      @DEATH-THE-GOAT 2 года назад +5

      @@ballaservices9275 I'm sorry how my answer came out. I now see it sounds awful and nasty.
      I'm sorry

    • @ballaservices9275
      @ballaservices9275 2 года назад +3

      @@DEATH-THE-GOAT No, no, nothing to apologise for at all. I agree entirely with your main post on the Sherpas!!

  • @933pilgrim
    @933pilgrim 3 года назад +476

    The real hero was Anatoly Bukreev - he saved lifes... This story teach - not everything possible to buy!

    • @AudreyMealiff
      @AudreyMealiff 3 года назад +37

      He really was heroic in rescuing those in the huddle. Neal Beidleman was also amazing.

    • @dianelapp
      @dianelapp 3 года назад +44

      Boukreev is absolutely the hero of this story.

    • @gabrielfestini
      @gabrielfestini 3 года назад +24

      From the little bit that I read he seem to have missed a few of his guiding duties and went to enjoy the summit alone. He then went straight to camp 4 instead of helping the group under his responsibility going down. He ultimately saved everyone under his supervision but it could have been worse. He was also "lucky" that they managed to get that close from camp 4 by themselves.
      He is however indeed a true selfless hero! No one can take that away ~
      (I am absolutely not an expert on this event 😊 these are bits that I have collected from his book and Krakaeurs' and I thought it gave an interesting alternative angle^^)

    • @jeffbrunton3291
      @jeffbrunton3291 3 года назад +79

      @@gabrielfestini - no, Anatoly was given an award for exceptional bravery by the mountaineering soc. No one on his group died. He saved many people, because, having rested he was the only one strong enough to do. Don’t listen to those who bad mouthed him for their own agenda / writing sensationalist stories. Also, Krakeur was asked to help, but remained in his tent.

    • @gabrielfestini
      @gabrielfestini 3 года назад +2

      @@jeffbrunton3291 oh i don't make an opinion based on that yeap 😉 i just thought it was an interesting angle since no one will ever know exactly what happened!

  • @p7377
    @p7377 9 месяцев назад +38

    Makalu is my favourite. The way he describes things...a phenomenal story teller ❤

  • @DAVELAD101
    @DAVELAD101 2 года назад +246

    Rob literally gave his life to try and save Doug over and over again he tried but in the end it cost him his life. Very sad that yumiko perished because she finally completed all seven peaks sad for all those who perished.
    Beck’s survival is out of this world, seeing his family again gave him the drive to walk on
    But the true heroes are the Sherpas who go up there every single day and aren’t given the proper recognition
    RIP TO ALL

    • @erbol700
      @erbol700 2 года назад +32

      True hero in that night was Anatoly Bukreev. Only person who went back to save lives on storm. He might dead in that night.

    • @melissaowens1559
      @melissaowens1559 2 года назад +9

      Doug ass woulda been left I'm fr he knew the consequences

    • @GoCoyote
      @GoCoyote 2 года назад

      Would have been nice if they gave a drink to a suffering man even if he would have died.

    • @clarecollins3726
      @clarecollins3726 Год назад +20

      @@FalkorA333 That’s inaccurate. They risk the lives of the Sherpas. One third of people who have died on Everest have been Sherpas.

    • @JamesXiaolu
      @JamesXiaolu Год назад +4

      Who is yumiko ?

  • @paulkramer4176
    @paulkramer4176 2 года назад +223

    I was involved with a few teams climbing Everest at that time. My team and I designed the suits and gear for the climbers, (including Ed Viesturs) that David was filming for the IMAX movie planned. Fortunately none of them were injured, but we also supplied tents for Scott Fisher and I think for Rob Hall too, both of whom were killed. Pretty heartbreaking. Scott and Rob were very experienced, but they were guiding folks that really wanted to summit and just made some decisions that weren't correct in hindsight.

    • @kcsnow9447
      @kcsnow9447 2 года назад +10

      Don't suppose your design team was Marmot (or affiliated with Marmot)? The reason I ask is that I'm reasonably sure Marmot got its start as a company/corporation designing suits and gear for Clint Eastwood's filming team on his movie "The Eiger Sanction." They won the bid. I recall that being some twenty-six suits or a jacket/pants combo then and they leveraged that small start into the firm they are today. IIRC, Ed Viesturs was so strong (huge lungs) that he summited seven times WITHOUT oxygen. BIG chest on his suit. 44 shoulders, 60 chest....

    • @kcsnow9447
      @kcsnow9447 2 года назад +6

      I'm not related to David Snow, who's presentation this is, BTW. The shared last name is just a coincidence.

    • @kayk2956
      @kayk2956 2 года назад +4

      My husband constantly says that it is possible to wear battery operated suit warmers on Everest. Is that a possibility? I would worry about sweating then freezing and it would be crazy hard to carry a bunch of extra batteries.

    • @gatekeeper84
      @gatekeeper84 2 года назад +3

      @@kayk2956 old motorcycle rider's trick is to short out 9v batteries and throw them in their boots.

    • @thecommonsenseconservative5576
      @thecommonsenseconservative5576 Год назад +3

      Prove it

  • @Scurry9
    @Scurry9 3 месяца назад +103

    Knowing that Sandy Pittman was short-roped to a Sherpa and essentially dragged up the mountain (the only reason she summited AND the only reason there were no ropes equipped for climbers ahead of her) and was the most vocal about her suffering, makes me value her contribution a lot less than anyone else's on this documentary.

    • @honeybunch5765
      @honeybunch5765 2 месяца назад +14

      I am dead against climbing these mountains. It is getting out of hand.

    • @gtaylor6937
      @gtaylor6937 2 месяца назад +31

      I wonder if people like Sandy Pittman, whose wellbeing requires so much of other peoples' resources, ever come away from an experience like this changed. I wonder if she had any kind of epiphany that maybe she could become the one who is the contribution to others. Somehow I doubt it.

    • @imagiraffe2848
      @imagiraffe2848 2 месяца назад +23

      ​@@gtaylor6937i could never find a video or article from Sandy where she thanks the sherpas publicly. I don't even know if she thanked the other climber for giving her medicine and her own oxygen tube. She always talked as if them dragging her up&down Everest was just them doing their job.

    • @MCrvngraddip2013
      @MCrvngraddip2013 2 месяца назад +20

      That's what I thought through the whole thing! Not mentioning being short roped and a contributing factor of why they were an extra 2 hrs late on fixed ropes. She shouldn't of been on there.

    • @andy31793
      @andy31793 2 месяца назад

      ​@gtaylor6937 She looks like Kaitlyn Jenner, right? I was thinking, "I wonder which Sherpa's nose that used to be."

  • @alinapopescu872
    @alinapopescu872 Год назад +35

    I've seen this documentary several times and each time it strikes me as a very compassionate piece of film.

    • @theresachung703
      @theresachung703 3 месяца назад

      Yes! That’s it! Compassionate to everyone

  • @lauriesmith4575
    @lauriesmith4575 2 года назад +59

    When Lou said, "I thought, why isn't anybody here? Why am I alone?... I felt lonely. I wanted to say goodbye. I didn't want to die alone." that about broke my heart. I didn't think I would cry watching this old documentary, and I was sorely mistaken. From that moment on, I was in tears.

  • @shadysif6220
    @shadysif6220 3 года назад +136

    The musical score was absolute perfection. It captured the majestic yet ominous nature of Everest. As well as the initial tempered optimism of the climbers, that slowly segued into full blown dread.

    • @shadysif6220
      @shadysif6220 3 года назад +2

      @Logan Hughes
      Nice, thanks.

    • @bebe6181
      @bebe6181 2 года назад +1

      Do you know name of music?

    • @cattycorner8
      @cattycorner8 2 года назад +1

      @Shadysif The score blew my socks off. I had never heard of Jocelyn Pook. She is up there with Howardf Shore as far as I'm concerned.

    • @savantbouffant2603
      @savantbouffant2603 Год назад +1

      Yes - it was by Jocelyn Pook who did the entire score which is on soundcloud

    • @georgittesingbiel219
      @georgittesingbiel219 Год назад

      Pictures from an Exibition? Musical score?

  • @Peppermint1
    @Peppermint1 7 месяцев назад +57

    Incredibly, Lopsang sherpa carrying the fixed ropes leaves camp 4 behind everyone else and instead of going past everyone to arrive ahead and fix the ropes, Scott is assigning him to drag exhausted Sandy way behind the other climbers. So right off the camp 4 Lopsang had no chance whatsoever to arrive ahead and fix the ropes with Ang Dorje. it caused 2.5 hours of delay for all climbers waiting at the rIdge near the Hillary Step in bitter cold and winds, without moving, exhausting energy and oxygen

    • @timdd9880
      @timdd9880 5 месяцев назад +8

      I was searching everywhere for this comment. That was for me the main reason.

    • @Itried20takennames
      @Itried20takennames 2 месяца назад +1

      That is a bit too simplistic,though often repeated. Sandy Pitman seems pretty awful, but to say this was her fault is juvenile. There were so many delays that day (see below) plus the storm itself, which had nothing to due with tone deaf and weak Sandy Pitman.

  • @Lando-ie9tx
    @Lando-ie9tx 4 месяца назад +11

    Probably my favorite documentary about the 1996 Everest tragedy. I’ve seen it at least t a dozen times. RIP to all who lost there lives that day

  • @carriekeith2266
    @carriekeith2266 2 года назад +106

    It is astonishing to me how people can prepare for years to climb Everest, knowing the hardships, suffering, both mental and physical, the potential loss of life, all the risks, to reach the summit, and only be able to stand there for a few minutes. If you reach it at all...
    Unbelievable. Soul-wrenching. It must be a holy moment. 🤯❤😇

    • @jonathanbuss7538
      @jonathanbuss7538 Год назад +18

      it is reckless and not worth losing your life for

    • @JimAllen-Persona
      @JimAllen-Persona Год назад +7

      @@jonathanbuss7538 Reckless to you is a challenge to them. Why train for and run a 26 mile marathon? Myself, I’m of the opinion I couldn’t (and wouldn’t) put someone else’s life at risk for mine.

    • @pokenurse1
      @pokenurse1 Год назад +3

      @@jonathanbuss7538 agree. Chasing a high that isn't different than that of a drug addict imo

    • @myentertainment55
      @myentertainment55 Год назад

      Aren't they stayed there for several hours? Did I heard it correctly in documentary. They were waiting others to climb.

    • @ellenkufa3653
      @ellenkufa3653 Год назад

      @@myentertainment55 yup for 1 hour because there was no rope guide..somebody has to put it and secure😢

  • @howardc7820
    @howardc7820 Год назад +75

    Glad to hear Beck made it. He kept his word to his mate to wait for him. We can only hope to get a climbing partner/friend with that much integrity.

  • @eileennardi
    @eileennardi 6 месяцев назад +18

    Rob had his duty to himself, his family and team. It’s unfortunate he allowed Doug Hansen’s desire to summit overrule his better judgement.

    • @EmiliaJay
      @EmiliaJay 28 дней назад +6

      In Krakauer’s book it’s written that Mr. Hansen stepped out of the summit line and wanted to turn around but Rob Hall spoke with him - then he suddenly changed his mind. We’ll never know for sure, but it’s possible Rob talked him into continuing up.

  • @speterlewis
    @speterlewis 2 года назад +67

    Scott Fischer was on my board of directors in 1996. He was so big and so strong, a man to be reckoned with and a man to be trusted.

    • @kylemma33
      @kylemma33 Год назад +6

      Without a doubt he was one of the strongest climbers in the world.

  • @Sam-hf8nq
    @Sam-hf8nq 2 года назад +323

    If you read Into Thin Air you get a lot more context about why there was such a bottleneck at the top on that fateful day. Climbing groups that had agreed to summit on different days all broke their verbal contracts and greedily joined the queue which slowed everyone down, causing missed turnaround times. Throw in the dynamics of Rob and Doug trying to get their respective clients to the top and breaking their own rules, throw in a storm, etc., you've got a monumental shit show at the top of the world that largely could have been prevented.

    • @dana102083
      @dana102083 Год назад +26

      Doug was Rob's client. You mean Rob and Scott's dynamics. So many steps could have been prevented, indeed..

    • @rickp3753
      @rickp3753 Год назад +13

      The Sherpa didn't fix ropes like they should have. The guides had to do it and it took a lot of time.

    • @mathildewesendonck7225
      @mathildewesendonck7225 Год назад +58

      @@rickp3753 Because the Sherpas were exhausted from carrying Sandy Hills stuff to the high camps, like her 40 pound satellite phone

    • @mottopanukeiku7406
      @mottopanukeiku7406 11 месяцев назад +12

      Well said, thank you. Combination of bad complications and low leadership. All the odds stacked up and you had this. Rare, but this is a worst case.

    • @jesusisking8502
      @jesusisking8502 11 месяцев назад +38

      @@rickp3753 Sandy arrived with 200 pounds of carry on luggage. They are brilliant, but they are not pack mules or wild beasts.

  • @melodymacken9788
    @melodymacken9788 2 месяца назад +11

    RIP. David Breashears.
    Unforgettable.

  • @Pensfan-xw2zi
    @Pensfan-xw2zi Год назад +18

    This was so well done. I've seen many documentaries on the 96 Everest disaster but this is one of the best. Footage here I'd never seen before.

  • @MC-vh7go
    @MC-vh7go 2 года назад +121

    This is one of the best documentaries I have ever seen. I’ve watched Everest, the movie many times and like it very much but this documentary is at another level. The way in which they capture the effects of the wind is incredible and done much more effectively than the 2015 movie. I’m stunned that this is so much better at putting you in those moments and in that place than the movie was able to do. I didn’t know this even existed. It’s brilliant.

    • @UAPReportingCenter
      @UAPReportingCenter 2 года назад +2

      The wind on a summit above treeline is just incredible... There's nothing like it. Temp drops over 30 degrees instantly and winds picks up to 100mph. It's intense

    • @skirmishofwit
      @skirmishofwit 2 года назад +5

      If you want to find out more there are a number of excellent books told from the perspectives of those who lived it. Into Thin Air, After the Climb, Left for Dead, Climbing High, After the Wind, A Day to Die for, and more. It's a long list but I recommend the first two at the very least. I was very disappointed in the 2015 movie. It didnt do the story justice at all and got a LOT of things wrong.

    • @bellz9113
      @bellz9113 2 года назад +4

      David breashers who directed this film was also a producer on the theatrical movie Everest. I don't think you can fully replicate every thing from the mountain on a movie. Given with the movie they would have to edit out the wind to hear the dialogue and re-add it with sound design in post production. Which would have been very tricky as well. Although I agree what we are presented with here is phenomenal for sure.

  • @1makalu
    @1makalu 3 года назад +47

    I was at base camp in 1998 - watching climbers through a telescope way up.............................the emotions and energy from 1996 was palpable. Walking past Rob Hall's stone cairn got me.💔

    • @Jayade04
      @Jayade04 2 месяца назад +1

      Why would you just go to the basecamp instead of climbing mount everest? Doesn't make sense

  • @sueferris3685
    @sueferris3685 10 месяцев назад +150

    This is an amazing documentary, but I also read "Into Thin Air" by Jon Krakhouer, and that really filled in some of the finer points of this climb. So many mistakes were made, and so many people should NOT have been on that mountain. Several people who said they reached the summit were actually carried there by sherpas. What a tragedy!

    • @amandamosteller1371
      @amandamosteller1371 10 месяцев назад +33

      I believe this is the only show I've seen where Sandy is involved. She was the one being carried up by Scott Fishers "Mountain Madness" Sherpa.

    • @rosaharris4750
      @rosaharris4750 5 месяцев назад +34

      In my opinion it does NOT count if someone carries you up the mountain.

    • @J24J
      @J24J 5 месяцев назад +15

      If you’re really interested in certain truths, read The Climb by Anatoli Boukreev.

    • @lisahertel2415
      @lisahertel2415 5 месяцев назад +5

      @@amandamosteller1371no, she wasn’t. Not true.

    • @amandamosteller1371
      @amandamosteller1371 5 месяцев назад +8

      @lisahertel2415 I'm just repeating what's been told from several accounts of people who were there first hand. Idk what's true or not because I wasn't there. However I do know that several people saw her being carried up and she has ran out or refused any interview where she is asked about it.

  • @CourtsThoughts
    @CourtsThoughts 3 месяца назад +14

    Anyone else on their annual YT Everest expedition, or just me?

  • @mariacangi5586
    @mariacangi5586 3 года назад +192

    This is so much better than any other film made on these events. It's priceless to have the story told polyphonically by the survivors.

  • @_TG
    @_TG 3 года назад +287

    The survival of Beck Weathers is a feat of inhuman grit and determination. When he spoke about his wife and children spurring him on I totally lost it.

    • @aaronandannelogan
      @aaronandannelogan 3 года назад +15

      Check out his talk, "Left for Dead", also on RUclips. Totally gripping retelling of his personal experience of this tragedy.

    • @jackfanning7952
      @jackfanning7952 2 года назад +53

      What in the hell is a person doing on top of the highest mountain in the world if they have a wife and a kid? Show some responsibility! Get over yourself and be a man.

    • @keepitabuck2313
      @keepitabuck2313 2 года назад +17

      @@jackfanning7952 agreed.

    • @muttley8818
      @muttley8818 2 года назад +15

      @@jackfanning7952 Are you suggesting that all climbers with partners and kids shouldn’t be allowed to climb Everest?
      I’m sure he discussed it with his wife before he left. What they decided between them isn’t really anyone else’s business.

    • @marajaded2051
      @marajaded2051 2 года назад +11

      True story, they were on the brink of divorce before the trip.

  • @larrycipriani351
    @larrycipriani351 Год назад +22

    I have watched this several times, and have been memorized by the music, background etc. The loss of life was truly heart breaking. They were doing what they loved.

    • @dana102083
      @dana102083 Год назад +1

      This is my go to video for the music and narration. Neal Biedleman (sp) also has a great narration voice. It doesn't keep me up as I know what happens and distracts me from my pain. This is still my favourite Everest video.

  • @robertross8565
    @robertross8565 Год назад +16

    So glad I am terrified of heights. I can watch documentaries on Everest from the comfort of my home near sea level.

    • @uglytuco3829
      @uglytuco3829 3 месяца назад +1

      Me too. I'd be into hiking too base camp, though. It sounds like a really challenging trek of about 15-20 days and you get to see Everest in the flesh...or rock. 😅

  • @charliekezza
    @charliekezza 3 года назад +249

    Omg i love watching Gau talk he is so animated we almost didnt need the subtitles lol

    • @abcd-xr1fh
      @abcd-xr1fh 3 года назад +10

      yeh and a heartless piece of shit

    • @LesSharp
      @LesSharp 3 года назад +17

      I can tell you, as a Mandarin speaker, that the subtitles don't do his story justice. He gets a pretty bad rap in Krakauer's book, and after watching this, I don't think he deserved it.

    • @F.G.30.4.91
      @F.G.30.4.91 3 года назад +7

      @@LesSharp they were at fault.. they were inexperienced and thus got all of the other groups in danger. They also didn’t hold true to their word not to ascend on the 10th but later.

    • @gunnervin
      @gunnervin 3 года назад +2

      @@LesSharp What's the bad rap he got?

    • @gunnervin
      @gunnervin 3 года назад +1

      He was amazing to watch

  • @vjc2270
    @vjc2270 2 года назад +66

    Great documentary, but it does irk me when folk criticise Anatoly Boukreev for leaving the summit before the rest of the team. The man climbed without supplementary oxygen, fixing ropes for the paying climbers as he went. Was he supposed to sit there with them and risk his own life to hypoxia, just as some kind of grand gesture? To my mind he did the most sensible thing by descending, avoiding altitude sickness and making sure he was in a fit condition to go back and be of genuine assistance to his fellow climbers. Remarkable and courageous man!

    • @TS-rd7oy
      @TS-rd7oy 2 года назад +9

      He was one of the few with any sense and respect for the rules.

  • @theresa42213
    @theresa42213 10 месяцев назад +13

    Breasheers did the best job of anyone documenting this! Well done dude!

  • @bigwaidave4865
    @bigwaidave4865 4 месяца назад +13

    I read into Thin Air shortly after it came out maybe 1998. Now retired it inspired me to trek to Mount Everest base camp three times in my life. I’m not finished; I have taken 3 routes Gokyo, Chola, 3 passes and I’m not finished yet. I don’t think I ever will be.🙏

    • @KassieDavid
      @KassieDavid 4 месяца назад +1

      Good Luck on your Journey.

    • @strattus99
      @strattus99 3 месяца назад

      Base camp…slow down gramps

    • @Tenebarum
      @Tenebarum 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@strattus99He knows his limits. Could you get there?

    • @gwenjackson8583
      @gwenjackson8583 22 дня назад

      @@strattus99a trek to base camp is no easy feat.

  • @Xenonmorph__
    @Xenonmorph__ 3 года назад +180

    As a narcoleptic person with bad knees, I am amazed that people can have the physical abilities to climb a mountain over a mile tall. I struggle with stairs, but the fact people can climb for 12 hrs straight really is a testament to the human endurance and drive some people have.

    • @darrenlamb5640
      @darrenlamb5640 2 года назад +12

      If we are going by absolute height from sea level it is more like 5 or 6 miles high.

    • @darrenlamb5640
      @darrenlamb5640 2 года назад +12

      @@jeansullivan3869 and if Mallory and Irving did actually make it in tweed suits and hobnail boots that would be the most amazing of all.

    • @DIVISIONINCISION
      @DIVISIONINCISION 2 года назад +5

      Narcolepsy AND bad knees? Yeah, baby Xenon, you're not making that climb any time soon!

    • @vniDubs
      @vniDubs 2 года назад +5

      It is definitely an amazing achievement. There is also a lot of effort put in, such as months of physical training and once you are at base camp you will need to spend weeks up there for your body to acclimatize, which involves making higher attempts everyday and returning back to camp to sleep until the final summit push.

    • @anthonylong5941
      @anthonylong5941 2 года назад +1

      @@vniDubs A thought for the peoeple who don't make it past base camp due to altitude sickness. And have to return without trying for the summit.

  • @djembe555
    @djembe555 2 года назад +116

    Gau has an incredible spirit and very strong. Even in another language I could feel what he was expressing, a moment that changed his life forever.

    • @donniev8181
      @donniev8181 2 года назад +5

      And he got screwed over pretty badly.

    • @frankkolton1780
      @frankkolton1780 2 года назад +5

      The Taiwanese team, led by Gau, was one of the big problems that day. Instead of having a space between each team member on the rope while ascending, like normal, considerate climbing teams all do, they kept tightly grouped on the rope, making it near impossible for the better, faster climbers behind them to pass them. They were the talk of base camp that year, because they looked so ill prepared.

    • @donniev8181
      @donniev8181 2 года назад

      @@frankkolton1780 but wasnt the main problem that everyone ignored the turn around time except for Anatoli?

    • @surenraj6450
      @surenraj6450 2 года назад +3

      @@frankkolton1780 and to add, the Taiwanese were not supposed to summit on the same day as Rob and Scott’s team. That agreement was blatantly ignored

    • @jiogcyihsugyiocjfdoivhphvw6821
      @jiogcyihsugyiocjfdoivhphvw6821 2 года назад +2

      yet he and his team were too inexperienced and he shouldve never been there. hes had to be rescued from every mountain he climbs

  • @angelfrankenfine
    @angelfrankenfine 11 месяцев назад +29

    i just cant fathom anyone surviving that storm. i lived in the interior of Alaska where every winters cold season sees an average of -40F. Even with appropriately rated ECWCS gear, and a fuel stove, it's unbelievably freezing cold. going through nights like that was miserable. i cant imagine it being that cold with the additional wind from that storm. i truly am having a hard time imagining it. super human people.

    • @charlessanders4586
      @charlessanders4586 5 месяцев назад +3

      Yes, unless you have personally felt that temperature AND extremely high wind/storm you really can't truly fathom it.

    • @rosalinddances2890
      @rosalinddances2890 5 месяцев назад

      Without their oxygen tanks they would be nowhere

  • @bean4962
    @bean4962 3 месяца назад +7

    When Makalu was on the verge of death, that man thought… let’s disco. And it worked. Respect.

  • @tlis9495
    @tlis9495 2 года назад +101

    Very well done. I particularly liked hearing from the Sherpa's. So often they are just treated like pieces of furniture when they are the only reason these climbers can do what they do. I also like the fact that Anatole was not demonized like in Krauker's account. I have read several sides of what went on that night (including Anatole's own account) and there is no doubt that he went above and beyond to help pull people to the safety of the camp while others sat on their asses with their only contribution being criticism of the efforts made by others to save lives.

    • @KajunMs39
      @KajunMs39 6 месяцев назад +1

      Exactly 💯 💯

    • @BlueInOrangeAgain
      @BlueInOrangeAgain 5 месяцев назад +4

      you mean the same sherpas that left that Chinese guy out to die? They said they would find the ropes and come back for him, but they never went back.

  • @pokerdoll100
    @pokerdoll100 3 года назад +392

    The sherpas are amazing ! Their ability to put their own lives at risk to help rescue others is truly heartwarming. They are true hero’s

    • @darrenlamb5640
      @darrenlamb5640 2 года назад +11

      But if you think they agree to these rescues without negotiating a fee you're very naive

    • @darrenlamb5640
      @darrenlamb5640 2 года назад +8

      @@robyn-lee-INFJ and their word always charges a fee in the thousands to attempt these rescues. Funny how so few of these shows ever tell ppl that. For example they only agreed to bring back the dead bodies of two Indian climbers after the Indian govt paid them €90000. So heros... I guess. But heros for free? Not a chance

    • @banaabekwegirl5731
      @banaabekwegirl5731 2 года назад +53

      @@darrenlamb5640 why should they not be paid for their skills and expertise?

    • @darrenlamb5640
      @darrenlamb5640 2 года назад +6

      @@banaabekwegirl5731 did I say they shouldn't. You really haven't understood a single point I've made.

    • @darrenlamb5640
      @darrenlamb5640 2 года назад +7

      @@banaabekwegirl5731 that isnt the point I'm making at all. The point is I keep reading what heroes the sherpas are as if they do it solely out of the goodness of their hearts which is nonsense.

  • @bluegreenglue6565
    @bluegreenglue6565 Год назад +5

    Just this year began learning about mountaineering, and about the various triumphs and tragedies of those drawn to this kind of adventure. Thank you.

  • @lynngliottone2812
    @lynngliottone2812 5 месяцев назад +11

    This documentary was absolutely riveting. So well done!

  • @debrastarr8436
    @debrastarr8436 2 года назад +225

    I can’t imagine how emotional it was when Rob and his wife said goodbye after that last phone call. He is forever in a place he loved. RIP to all who are still on the mountain. And safe travels to those who have yet to climb.

    • @alanluscombe8a553
      @alanluscombe8a553 2 года назад +44

      Yeah I wonder what the emotions of that call would be like, unimaginably sad. And to top it off she was pregnant. Another thing I think about is her when the call is over and she hangs up the phone. Just quiet and in her home helpless. I don’t judge people for doing what they love and I don’t think badly of them but man that’s a big loss to put on someone that has to carry it forever.

    • @micaKTM1290
      @micaKTM1290 2 года назад +17

      Brashears IMAX film has part of that conversation in it ,since it was on the handheld radios. It was hard to listen to.

    • @grahamjarman
      @grahamjarman 2 года назад +2

      forever? i dont think so

    • @susannahhoffs860
      @susannahhoffs860 2 года назад +1

      His decision.

    • @grahamjarman
      @grahamjarman 2 года назад +1

      @@susannahhoffs860 yea, to try to help people

  • @sueware8377
    @sueware8377 2 года назад +37

    This was AMAZING, and not being a climber I thought it would not affect me the way it did...but I cried as I watched...the human experience versus the natural world and how people reacted to what happened. The courage and self-less-ness of some of these people was truly
    an inspiration to me and Breashears gave me a whole new perspective on the human condition under stress. Thank you, Mr. Breashears!!!

    • @kcsnow9447
      @kcsnow9447 2 года назад +2

      Also not a climber, but it has affected me the same way, and for many years now. You will probably know that the movie "Everest" is largely based on these events, and, though it speculates in parts, is still pretty good and, IMO, reflects the flavor* [* Embarrassing to even characterize it in such terms--it was any but] of the events.
      That said, this film is better.

  • @dressagerider31
    @dressagerider31 6 месяцев назад +1

    I watched this program first before I saw anything about the unknown causes for the catastrophe and this program is still my favorite. Even taking into account the 'tried and true mistakes ' that I learned about later, this was still a wonderful program to watch. The awe of the climbers, the incredible scenery which even diluted by only seeing the incredible scenery really jumps off the TV screen still translates well on my TV screen was still really remarkable. The first several times I watched this program I was in awe to see the incredible scenery . Though the year is known for those who died, part of me is jealous because they have seen some truly remarkable vistas. Watching on TV is fine for me , but OH!to see it in person must be Life changing

  • @MxPx77
    @MxPx77 2 месяца назад +7

    I’ve watched this documentary atleast 3 times already. It never gets old.

  • @graham8033
    @graham8033 3 года назад +57

    Thank you for posting this documentary and I’ve just watched it on the 25th anniversary of that fateful and tragic night. I have read just about every book written on this subject and am so glad that Anatoli Boukreev managed to tell his tale, before he too was tragically taken whilst climbing Annapurna. The dedication shown by Boukreev and Rob Hall to save lives that night was above and beyond and well deserving of an excellent documentary. I would also like to acknowledge the skill and bravery of the Nepalese helicopter pilot who flew Weathers and Gau of the mountain. RIP to those that didn’t come home.

  • @paulajohnson139
    @paulajohnson139 Год назад +34

    Fantastic retelling of this unbelievable story. The interviews, visuals, music.... absolutely everything, was very moving. Thank you David Breashears.

  • @comfortouch
    @comfortouch 11 месяцев назад +34

    Makalu Gau is an excellent storyteller. Even with the language barrier his words can be felt. Anatoly should be made saint of the mountain.

    • @Timmie999
      @Timmie999 10 месяцев назад +4

      Agreed he's very animated i love people like that

  • @METALMISFIT6
    @METALMISFIT6 Год назад +6

    My favorite EVEREST Doc..just absolutely perfect

  • @mrwdpkr5851
    @mrwdpkr5851 2 года назад +35

    I knew what kind of man Beck is when he said " I understand why they left me but they should have tried to save Yasuka " .
    WOW . Even near death he still thought of a person he barely knew .

    • @alkalinerainforestherbs
      @alkalinerainforestherbs 2 года назад +8

      They really should have done more for her.

    • @CharlesFreck
      @CharlesFreck 2 года назад +11

      @@alkalinerainforestherbs Like what? She was dead. If you're unresponsive and can't move at that altitude in that weather on a mountain, you're dead. Beck was in much better shape then her, if he understands why they left him, I can't imagine why he thought they could do anything to save Yasuko. She'd been in worse shape for far longer then Beck.

  • @jeremycubs8331
    @jeremycubs8331 2 года назад +23

    No matter how many times I've seen same stories about Everest it doesn't stop to amaze me, it's like watching it for the first time again and again.

  • @alexb6277
    @alexb6277 2 месяца назад +3

    This is the best documentary on Everest in my opinion.

  • @WienGolf
    @WienGolf Год назад +14

    This really was an overwhelming video, fantastic! I really admired the original footage, the play-scenes, all people who made personal comments, the cuts and the music, too.
    Of course you can discuss, who has made deadly mistakes on these two days, you can discuss if it makes sense to go to such a mountain as a tourist in general, you can analyze what had happened if…
    This video has not asked any of these questions. Of course it makes much sense to discuss them, but it is not always necessary. Here we heard about human fates on two furious days on a mountain. That’s enough.
    Thanks for uploading this treasure.

  • @keddy5627
    @keddy5627 3 года назад +21

    I have a love affair with stories about climbing Everest! I know I will never do it myself so I am amazed and grateful to have docs like this to give an idea of the incredible experiences of these courageous climbers!

  • @amandah2866
    @amandah2866 2 года назад +43

    Anatolie did an amazing job rescuing those people he did. I bet it was hard for him to leave Beck and Yasuko.
    Yes my spelling sucks, but no disrespect is meant if I've misspelled anyone's name.

  • @dararupert7199
    @dararupert7199 10 месяцев назад +15

    Such a tragic case of bad calls and uncontrollable circumstances leading to this incident. This documentary is so well done to shed light on what went through the climbers minds that night. ❤
    I can't imagine tne pressure the guides felt to have their clients reach the submit. I often hear Rob should have left Doug but I just don't think his heart would ever allow that.
    RIP to all those lives lost on both the south and north side of the mountains on that terrible day.

    • @str8cndian
      @str8cndian 6 месяцев назад +3

      I wouldn't a left him either! I would have a commanded a few sherpa's too stay with him while I head down the mountain too safety!

  • @georgittesingbiel219
    @georgittesingbiel219 Год назад +21

    It's hard to imagine climbing down the mountain, with only those headlamps, a few steps at a time. In a blinding snowstorm. It's beyond my realm of imagination. RIP 🙏 to those who perished.

  • @thedawgy1995
    @thedawgy1995 2 года назад +19

    Such an amazing story. David Breashears tells the story in such a touching way. Even without climbing the mountains, I want to see the Himalayan range in person.

  • @didimitten
    @didimitten 2 года назад +16

    Everest is one of my favorite films of all time and I have watched it more than once. Finding this documentary sheds so much more light on what actually happened up there. For me it is one of the most fascinating survival stories of all time.

  • @theresa42213
    @theresa42213 6 месяцев назад +3

    The score for this documentary is just STUNNING! Well done guys!

  • @amywood124
    @amywood124 Год назад +5

    This is so well done, as well as very sad. I love ths musical score. It's the best of all these types of documentaries and movies.

  • @wadesmith8307
    @wadesmith8307 Год назад +12

    Beck Weathers casually to Rob Hall: "oh, forgot to mention in the form, I had recent eye surgery and now have a dodgy eye and can't see" *near the summit of Everest*.
    Rob Hall: "OK, stay here until we come back".
    That conversation could've gone *very* differently. RIP Rob Hall.

  • @cherihill2003
    @cherihill2003 3 года назад +23

    Powerful documentary! I have been wanting to see this for years, and it did not disappoint. Thank you! RIP lost climbers.

  • @augnkn93043
    @augnkn93043 5 месяцев назад +10

    If I was climbing Mount Everest and I came across a fellow climber in trouble and needing help I’d definitely do the right thing. I’d look at them and say: “I’ll continue my climb to the summit because it’s what you really want. I’ll remember you forever. Bye.”

  • @vihockeyguy1
    @vihockeyguy1 Год назад +13

    The music in this doc is so powerful

  • @karenmonahan7253
    @karenmonahan7253 2 года назад +37

    Fascinating documentary that gives us a glimpse of how human beings treat themselves and one another. I love great story tellers, and this is a great story.

  • @bakerbaker1959
    @bakerbaker1959 3 года назад +94

    I remember watching this on PBS like 5 years ago. It is one of the best made documentaries ever made. Super intense.

    • @goldenniblings
      @goldenniblings 3 года назад +12

      It helped me through a rough time, and I have no climbing ambition at all. I don’t even know how I found it at the right time back in 2009/2010. Can’t tell you how many times I’ve watched it.

    • @cristibaluta
      @cristibaluta 3 года назад +2

      Let's not exagerate, it is not that good.

  • @zillurrahman2927
    @zillurrahman2927 12 дней назад +1

    One of the best Everest documentary. Reflects the danger, passion, feeling, life & death of Everest clearly.

  • @richwarren2475
    @richwarren2475 3 месяца назад +1

    My favorite documentary I have seen on the tragedy of Everest 1996. Thank you for this amazing story.

  • @davidhouchin4264
    @davidhouchin4264 2 года назад +25

    David Breashears thank you for the fine job you did on this film. It is too bad John Krakauer was not part of the interviews. I was on Island peak on May 10th, 1996. We had gone to basecamp a few days before to acclimatize and received the royal treatment for working to save the life of a sherpa from Fisher's team. We spent the night in a tent from Fisher's team and had breakfast with some of the climbers that were not on the mountain then. I was climbing with a doctor from Lake Tahoe. He had intubated the sherpa and we took turns bagging him all night until a helicopter came into Perache the next morning. I also carried loads to the lower saddle of the Grand Teton along with Joe Ryan when you were filming Fall line.
    Thanks again
    David Houchin