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Outside Magazine, July 2008
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Out There
A Long Way for a Short Film
Think adventure filmmaking sounds glamorous? Then watch THAYER WALKER get schooled on Kilimanjaro.

By Thayer Walker


Thayer Walker
The author on Africa's highest peak (Photograph by Michael Brown)

Watch a Video

IN THEORY, THE TIME-LAPSE is one of the simplest shots in filmmaking: Mount the camera onto a tripod, frame the shot, press record, and wait. All a filmmaker has to do is set a watch and make sure the camera doesn't fall over. Shooting a time-lapse is like a coffee break. You could even read the paper. But at 5:30 on my third morning on Tanzania's Kilimanjaro, my handle on the process felt thinner than the air at our camp at 13,000 feet.

The only thing I do less than make films is climb mountains. Conventional wisdom would dictate that I tackle one before the other, but as a student in Serac Adventure Films' inaugural Adventure Film School, it was my task to make a ten-minute short about climbing 19,340-foot Kilimanjaro. Before the climb, I told Serac founder and Boulder, Colorado–based filmmaker Michael Brown that I didn't want to make an earnest cry-at-the-summit kind of film but rather a parody of an adventure film, with myself as a comical Bear Grylls–meets–Inspector Clou­seau character always running into trouble. Brown, 42, has made more than 50 movies and won three Emmys, and he just received a lifetime-achievement award from the International Alliance for Mountain Film. His projects tackle topics like cataract surgery in the Himalayas and autistic kids learning to surf, so when I told him of my satirical intentions, he replied soberly, "We try to take this seriously."

Naturally, our first day on Kilimanjaro, I filmed a segment in which I asked Brown in jest about his plans to summit wearing nothing but a Speedo and wool socks while on a pogo stick. He was a good sport. "I've been spoofed before," he said. The mountain was less eager to cooperate.

Our biggest challenge on Kilimanjaro, I discovered, was not the receding glaciers but the mountainwide dearth of tape stock. Brown allows his students a limited supply so they'll learn to use it wisely After three days around the mountain's gateway town of Arusha shooting action-packed B-roll of sleeping Cape buffalo, I had already burned through a lot of tape. I couldn't waste more during my time-lapse attempt, so as I filmed the pitch-black sky, waiting for the sun, I spent 40 minutes recording and rewinding. Just before sunrise, a cloud bank stalled in front of the mountain, obliterating my shot. Which turned out to be a blessing, because under the now-illuminated sky I could see that I had chosen the worst angle of Kilimanjaro. "Coppola don't climb," I muttered. I wanted to smash my $2,200 Sony HDV camcorder into expensive little pieces. I took a coffee break instead.




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