Nims and the team trying their best on the Rescue! Even when they are on their 14/7 project possible! I am from Malaysia! Thank you (Wormkit) for the video and the selfish efforts making this video! Proud of the humanity and the spirit of mountaineering! It is hard to loose a friend.....
This is the best doc. on Annapurna I've seen... I was unable to trace the climbing route, but you made it sooo easy by wide angle shots and showing actual climbing route at every step. Thank u❤❤
Thank you for making this remarkable program. It gave us a unique perspective on this mountain and what it takes, physically and mentally, to climb it. Having it made by non English speakers was refreshing. I am sure that all the glitches with subtitles etc will be ironed out in the final version. Outstanding photography!
What happened to Mr Chen? Was he rescued or not? This film doesn't make any sense missing such crucial point. Truth is truth, no matter how bad or ugly it is. Very disappointed.
From what I take it is that a rescue pack was dropped to Mr. CHIN. What I’m having trouble understanding is why he was left behind after they all summited. It seems that the narrator has some sort of guilt about the death. I recall that he was almost dying when they were 2 hours from the summit and needed more oxygen. Maybe he used Mr. CHIN’s oxygen tank? There was also a Dr. something that was hit by the avalanche at C1 that I do not think ever surfaced from it.
I did not use The Oxygen because I was told the oxygen would be used to rescue someone behind me, Mr.Chin, that I didn't realize at that time. Dr.Dragon is ok, back to BC before the avalanche hit C1.
Fascinating to watch, with epic camera work. Thank you for indulging our obsession with this beautiful and treacherous mountain. The impressionistic narration with its sometimes awkward translation made the story line a bit hard to follow. Who got rescued and who perished on the mountain?
from google research: Mr. Chin stoped moving at 7,500 meters at descend from summit. Mr. chin got rescued after 40 hours on 7,500 meters but perished on hospital.
Stunning. Needs an editor. (I couldn’t even keep up with the subtitles.) I could relate to all of it, including having talent and a great work that just refuses to be born. I was especially amused by the drunken wisdom, too: “Fate is life!” Alcohol makes blithering fools of us all.
I still don't know what happened to Mr/ Chen. This film seemed overly dramatic and maudlin. I get that it's not all roses up there on Annapurna - but it would be nice to have a more straightforward telling of the expedition. I did like the wide shots with the lines demarcated for us to see the route - that was a brilliant way to show one's climbing route. But all the other drama for drama's sake - and then to not fully understand the true tragedy, if there was one - was so frustrating.
Amazing. I hope to be able to do 8000m mountains in the future, and this really gave me a huge push towards it. I’ve always felt at home in the mountains, and watching this video makes me feel at home as well
Really nice photography. I respect how hard it is to climb and photo-document. Great job on that front. The imagery is exquisite; however, the storyline seems a little haphazard. Its very difficult to follow. I’m sure the fast subtitles have something to do with it, but the storyline itself seems to bounce around a bit. I would have liked to have seen more character development of the other climbers in your team (including Mr.Chin). What happened at Camp 1 in the avalanche? Was anyone in Camp 1 at the time? If so, was anyone hurt (or worse). Did you pass by Camp 1 on the way down and photo-document that? When an avalanche wipes out a step camp, that is pretty significant but only got a partial mention in the story. How did seeing that affect you or your team's mental state on the push to the summit? These are examples of how the story could have gone from a photo-diary to a full-on documentary. I left a little confused at what was happening in the end. What exactly happened to Mr.Chin? He was alive (I think), but then you pan to people crying (maybe for joy?). You are left guessing what happened. Did anyone not make it home? In the beginning you are alluding that this was a very difficult experience for you to relive (at least that was my take-away). Obviously climbing an 8.000-meter peak is demanding and exhausting, but that would be something anyone who has taken that on would experience. You open with the impression that this was something more for you then just the physical demands. There was a troubling in your spirit. Why? That is the loop that is never closed. In the beginning you mentioned that you were on your (fourth?) edit. Maybe those answers were in your first edit. I was once told your first intuition is probably your best. In the end the photography was amazing. You are very talented. This has so much potential. I would love to see the photography re-worked into a digestible story line. A documentary on that level with this quality photography could win awards.
Thanks for your Professional suggestion. I totally got your idea, inspire me a lot. This is a rough-cut version, A part of my 14x8000 expedition documentary project, used only 1/4 of all the footage, I have to keep the best for the final cut. In Mr.Chin's storyline, I tried not to describe things I am not 'certain', so I told the story in 'question' but not in 'normal description'..Besides, Chin's death shock his family, and they could probably see the film on youtube, so I want to keep neutral and try not to touch their pain in both pictures and narration. Sorry for my poor English, see if you understand or not, I could explain further :)
Very good photography but the storyline, the nonsense philosophical drama and great swatches of what was actually going on were bafflingly omitted. Subtitling was impossible--too fast and white on white? Really!
One of the very best if not the best videos about Annapurna that really shows the difficulty of the climb and the size of that monster.
Wow... !!! My best friend, thanks to you, I enjoyed watching... I'm proud of you for developing day by day.
Nims and the team trying their best on the Rescue! Even when they are on their 14/7 project possible! I am from Malaysia! Thank you (Wormkit) for the video and the selfish efforts making this video! Proud of the humanity and the spirit of mountaineering! It is hard to loose a friend.....
Great documentary drama, thankyou. Very interesing perpectives 👍🙏
This is the best doc. on Annapurna I've seen... I was unable to trace the climbing route, but you made it sooo easy by wide angle shots and showing actual climbing route at every step. Thank u❤❤
Fantastic video. Really got a sense of climbing… subtitles were good enough. Thx!
Gnarly. great show.
Thank you for making this remarkable program. It gave us a unique perspective on this mountain and what it takes, physically and mentally, to climb it. Having it made by non English speakers was refreshing. I am sure that all the glitches with subtitles etc will be ironed out in the final version. Outstanding photography!
Thank you for sharing. This was amazing.
Amazing. This was re-published on David Snow channel. Sometimes the English translation doesn't accurately convey the true feeling or meaning.
Very good filming! Loved it!
Slow the speed down to .75x and it will be easier to follow the subtitles.
beautifully filmed.
What happened to Mr Chen? Was he rescued or not? This film doesn't make any sense missing such crucial point. Truth is truth, no matter how bad or ugly it is. Very disappointed.
From what I take it is that a rescue pack was dropped to Mr. CHIN. What I’m having trouble understanding is why he was left behind after they all summited. It seems that the narrator has some sort of guilt about the death. I recall that he was almost dying when they were 2 hours from the summit and needed more oxygen. Maybe he used Mr. CHIN’s oxygen tank?
There was also a Dr. something that was hit by the avalanche at C1 that I do not think ever surfaced from it.
I did not use The Oxygen because I was told the oxygen would be used to rescue someone behind me, Mr.Chin, that I didn't realize at that time.
Dr.Dragon is ok, back to BC before the avalanche hit C1.
Fascinating to watch, with epic camera work. Thank you for indulging our obsession with this beautiful and treacherous mountain. The impressionistic narration with its sometimes awkward translation made the story line a bit hard to follow. Who got rescued and who perished on the mountain?
from google research: Mr. Chin stoped moving at 7,500 meters at descend from summit. Mr. chin got rescued after 40 hours on 7,500 meters but perished on hospital.
Hello. I hope for full version...it is amazing video but I´m a little confused...
5d IV? I soo miss mine. Great footage!
Stunning. Needs an editor. (I couldn’t even keep up with the subtitles.) I could relate to all of it, including having talent and a great work that just refuses to be born. I was especially amused by the drunken wisdom, too: “Fate is life!” Alcohol makes blithering fools of us all.
Thank you, Lisa. It's a rough-cut version, part of my 14x8000 peak expedition documentary project.
I still don't know what happened to Mr/ Chen. This film seemed overly dramatic and maudlin. I get that it's not all roses up there on Annapurna - but it would be nice to have a more straightforward telling of the expedition. I did like the wide shots with the lines demarcated for us to see the route - that was a brilliant way to show one's climbing route. But all the other drama for drama's sake - and then to not fully understand the true tragedy, if there was one - was so frustrating.
LES FR ONT EST LA
Oe oe oe
Poisson fécond mdr
Deadliest to summit hands down
Amazing 💯
Amazing. I hope to be able to do 8000m mountains in the future, and this really gave me a huge push towards it. I’ve always felt at home in the mountains, and watching this video makes me feel at home as well
拍的实在是太好了,感动
赞啊,拍的跟制作的真棒
Really nice photography. I respect how hard it is to climb and photo-document. Great job on that front. The imagery is exquisite; however, the storyline seems a little haphazard. Its very difficult to follow. I’m sure the fast subtitles have something to do with it, but the storyline itself seems to bounce around a bit. I would have liked to have seen more character development of the other climbers in your team (including Mr.Chin). What happened at Camp 1 in the avalanche? Was anyone in Camp 1 at the time? If so, was anyone hurt (or worse). Did you pass by Camp 1 on the way down and photo-document that? When an avalanche wipes out a step camp, that is pretty significant but only got a partial mention in the story. How did seeing that affect you or your team's mental state on the push to the summit? These are examples of how the story could have gone from a photo-diary to a full-on documentary. I left a little confused at what was happening in the end. What exactly happened to Mr.Chin? He was alive (I think), but then you pan to people crying (maybe for joy?). You are left guessing what happened. Did anyone not make it home?
In the beginning you are alluding that this was a very difficult experience for you to relive (at least that was my take-away). Obviously climbing an 8.000-meter peak is demanding and exhausting, but that would be something anyone who has taken that on would experience. You open with the impression that this was something more for you then just the physical demands. There was a troubling in your spirit. Why? That is the loop that is never closed. In the beginning you mentioned that you were on your (fourth?) edit. Maybe those answers were in your first edit. I was once told your first intuition is probably your best.
In the end the photography was amazing. You are very talented. This has so much potential. I would love to see the photography re-worked into a digestible story line. A documentary on that level with this quality photography could win awards.
Thanks for your Professional suggestion. I totally got your idea, inspire me a lot. This is a rough-cut version, A part of my 14x8000 expedition documentary project, used only 1/4 of all the footage, I have to keep the best for the final cut. In Mr.Chin's storyline, I tried not to describe things I am not 'certain', so I told the story in 'question' but not in 'normal description'..Besides, Chin's death shock his family, and they could probably see the film on youtube, so I want to keep neutral and try not to touch their pain in both pictures and narration.
Sorry for my poor English, see if you understand or not, I could explain further :)
This documentary left more questions than answers. I had a hard time following what was going on. 😕
So beautiful and sad...
(Sorry for asking, which music did you use in the video? I like it a lot.)
Glad you know you like it. I use licensed music from soundstripe.com, Album and Cody martin, Caleb Etheridge, etc.
@@ArJet Thank you very much!
The summit scene is so little, hope to see more stunnnin footage from the infamous anapurna, btw great work, hope all the best for your future project
👍💪
Annapurna is a piece of cake to climb. no english?
farina = Brit. starch = L far
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Very good photography but the storyline, the nonsense philosophical drama and great swatches of what was actually going on were bafflingly omitted. Subtitling was impossible--too fast and white on white? Really!
Just add an English narrator.