Sundance documentary explores tragic K2 winter ascent

Amir Bar-Lev's 'The Last First: Winter K2' premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, chronicling the perilous first winter climb of the world's second-highest peak. The film highlights the 2020-2021 expeditions marked by competition, innovation, and devastating losses. While capturing human ambition against nature's fury, it reveals more tragedy than triumph.

The documentary 'The Last First: Winter K2,' directed by Amir Bar-Lev, opened the 2026 Sundance Film Festival on January 22. It focuses on the groundbreaking yet deadly attempts to summit K2—the Savage Mountain—at 8,611 meters in the Karakoram range, spanning Pakistan and China. Known for its treachery, K2 has claimed nearly 100 lives, far more than any other peak, with winter conditions amplifying the dangers through icy facades, snowstorms, and extreme cold reaching 50 degrees below zero at base camp.

The film centers on Icelandic climber John Snorri Sigurjónsson, a family man with six children, joined by Pakistani mountaineers Ali Sadpara and his son Sajid. It also features Nepalese superstar Nirmal “Nims” Purja, who in 2019 set a record by scaling all 14 of the world's 8,000-meter peaks in six months. Purja's team, including Sherpas, achieved the historic first winter summit of K2, framed as a national triumph for Nepal. Bar-Lev interviews Purja, portraying him as an obsessive force in mountaineering.

However, the narrative shifts from glory to peril. Competition among teams, fueled by commercialization and social media, leads to chaos: overcrowded camps, insufficient tents, and fatigue. Rumors of Purja's team cutting ropes proved false, yet the climb results in five deaths, including experienced Spaniard Sergi Mingote's fatal fall. John's wife, Lina Móey Bjarnadóttir, discusses his addiction to the sport.

Unlike vertigo-inducing docs like 'Free Solo' or 'The Dawn Wall,' Bar-Lev's 98-minute film emphasizes human folly over exhilaration, using stunning footage of avalanches and crags without immersive climbing thrills. It probes the democratization of mountaineering and the dark side of pursuing extremes.

Articoli correlati

Alex Honnold at the base of stormy Taipei 101, illustrating Netflix's weather-postponed Skyscraper Live free solo climb.
Immagine generata dall'IA

Netflix postpones Alex Honnold's Skyscraper Live climb due to weather

Riportato dall'IA Immagine generata dall'IA

Netflix has delayed its live event 'Skyscraper Live,' featuring free solo climber Alex Honnold's ascent of Taipei 101, from Friday to Saturday because of inclement weather. The streamer emphasized safety as the top priority in rescheduling the high-stakes climb. The event will now stream at 5 p.m. PT on January 24.

Explorer Matthieu Tordeur and glaciologist Heïdi Sevestre are undertaking a pioneering 4000-kilometre kite-ski expedition across Antarctica to collect vital data on the continent's ice sheet. Using ground-penetrating radar, they aim to assess whether increased interior snowfall offsets coastal melting amid climate change. The journey, which began on 3 November, marks the first such trip dedicated to polar science.

Riportato dall'IA

Four British veterans, including Jason 'Foxy' Fox and Aldo Kane, have completed a grueling 514km ultra-marathon in Swedish Lapland to raise funds for SSAFA while addressing toxic masculinity and mental health issues. Their experiences are featured in the new Channel 4 documentary 'Arctic Adventure: Ultimate Survival,' which airs tonight. The series highlights their personal struggles with trauma and the importance of seeking help.

Seventeen-year-old South Korean snowboarder Choi Gaon claimed her first World Cup title of the season in the women's halfpipe at the FIS Snowboard World Cup in Zhangjiakou, China, on Friday, staging a dramatic comeback in her second run. She scored 92.75 points to finish 2.50 points ahead of Japan's Rise Kudo, with China's Cai Xuetong taking third at 80.50. The victory, her first since December 2023, bodes well for her medal hopes at the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics in February.

Riportato dall'IA

La località svizzera di Crans-Montana ospita questa settimana le gare di Coppa del mondo di sci alpino, quattro settimane dopo un tragico incendio di Capodanno in un bar che ha ucciso 40 persone, per lo più adolescenti, e ferito 116. Gli eventi, che fungono da ultima prova generale prima delle Olimpiadi di Milano-Cortina, procedono in un'atmosfera rispettosa e sobria con omaggi alle vittime. Le migliori sciatrici come Lindsey Vonn e Sofia Goggia hanno iniziato gli allenamenti tra striscioni di lutto e commemorazioni delle squadre.

La norvegese Eirin Maria Kvandal ha conquistato la seconda vittoria consecutiva nella Coppa del mondo di salto con gli sci a Willingen sul grande trampolino in Germania, ultima gara prima delle Olimpiadi 2026. Lo sloveno Domen Prevc ha dominato anche la competizione maschile con un'altra vittoria. I saltatori francesi hanno mostrato risultati misti, con Joséphine Pagnier nel top 20 e Valentin Foubert 16°.

Riportato dall'IA

Malorie Blanc della Svizzera ha conquistato la sua prima vittoria in Coppa del Mondo nella gara femminile di super-G a Crans-Montana sabato, deliziando i tifosi locali poco prima delle Olimpiadi invernali. La 22enne ha fermato il crono a 1:17.34, precedendo l'italiana Sofia Goggia di 0,18 secondi, mentre Breezy Johnson degli Stati Uniti ha chiuso terza. L'evento è seguito all'annullamento drammatico della discesa del giorno prima a causa dell'infortunio di Lindsey Vonn.

 

 

 

Questo sito web utilizza i cookie

Utilizziamo i cookie per l'analisi per migliorare il nostro sito. Leggi la nostra politica sulla privacy per ulteriori informazioni.
Rifiuta