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Product Summary

Format: DVD
Buy.com Sku: 40121279
UPC: 717951001658
UPC 14: 00717951001658
Category Keywords: Documentary  IMAX  Theatrical Release
Rating: NR
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Filmed during the infamous 1996 climbing disaster documented in Into Thin Air!
Members of a 1996 expedition cross paths with an ill-fated group as they plant scientific equipment and ascend the summit. Liam neeson and mountaineers narrate.

"...Takes moviegoers to new heights!  New York Post
"...dramatically-scored, beautifully-filmed...  Pat Kramer, Boxoffice Magazine
"...Everest is a trip well worth taking.  Dan Jardine, Apollo Leisure Guide

Editor's Note
Originally produced for IMAX theaters, this documentary (with some re-creations), focuses on an expedition which set out to climb the famed mountain in the spring of 1996. Narrated by Liam Neeson and featuring the standard beautiful photography characteristic of IMAX productions.
Features
Video Features DVD, Collector's Edition, Aspect Ratio 1.33:1, Dolby Digital (5.1)
Technical Info

Release Information
Video Mfg Name Studio: Buena Vista Home Entertainment
Video Release Date Release Date: 1/10/2006
Video Play Time Running Time: 40 minutes
Video Release Year Original Release Date: 1996
Video CategoryId Catalog ID: 16539
Video UPC UPC: 00717951001658
Video Number of Discs Number of Discs: 1

Audio & Video
Video Original Language Original Language: English
Video Audio Spec Available Audio Tracks: English [CC], English
Video Color Spec Video: Color
Cast & Crew
Video Cast Info Araceli Segarra
Video Cast Info Ed Viesturs
Video Cast Info Jamling Tenzing Norgay
Video Cast Info Liam Neeson
Video Cast Info David Breashears - Director
Video Cast Info David Breashears - Director of Photography
Video Cast Info Stephen Judson - Editor
Video Cast Info George Harrison, et al. - Musical Score
Video Cast Info Stephen Judson, et al. - Producer
Video Cast Info Tim Cahill - Screenplay
Video Cast Info Stephen Judson - Screenplay

Awards


Motion Picture Sound Editors (1999)
   Video Award Name , Nominee, Best Sound Editing - Special Venues

Columbus International Film & Video Guide (1998)
Video Award Name , Winner, Chris Award

Professional Reviews

Los Angeles Times
"...EVEREST not only shows us the beauty of the mountain, it also details how painfully arduous getting up and down on it is..." 10/16/1998 p.C8

Chicago Sun-Times
"...What makes Everest such a stunning picture is that it transports the audience to another world where the athletes don't just want to reach the top of the mountain. They are compelled to..." 05/08/1998 p.35

Apollo Leisure Guide 8 of 10
There is something essentially anti-social about mountain climbing. It shares this quality with other individual pastimes, but very few of them include as many risks. Interestingly, many serious mountain climbers dismiss Everest, the world's tallest peak, not only because it is less challenging than other smaller mountains, but also because it has become the playground of some rich and not-so-capable climbers trying to impress their socialite friends in London, New York or Tokyo. Regardless, Everest's mystique remains. In 1996, IMAX sent a film crew, along with a team of three climbers led by Everest veteran Ed Viesturs, to capture the magnificence of Chomo Lunga (goddess-mother). It seems fitting that the greatest mountain is captured on 70-millimetre film and displayed on a five story-high screen. The IMAX experience was made for Everest, as the cinematography and sound are sensational... [There] are two cogently engaging aspects in this story of Everest. One is the journey of Jamling Tenzing Norgay. Jamling wants to follow in the footsteps of his famous father, who accompanied Hillary to the top in 1953. His story is told elegantly with a few well-chosen words and some beauteous imagery. The second is the story of the single worst disaster in Everest history. On May 10,1996 five climbers died during a freak storm at the top of the mountain. The filmmakers made a tasteful decision not to film any of the victims, alluding quietly to their grief at this great loss. For those who want your IMAX Everest experience to be an emotionally profound experience, Jon Krakauer's Into Thin Air, which provides a first hand account of this climb, is compulsory reading or viewing. However, even without this guide, IMAX's Everest is a trip well worth taking. - Dan Jardine

Boxoffice Magazine 9 of 10
Intrigued by the challenge of filming in large-scale IMAX format a team of climbers' ascent up the tallest peak in the world, Emmy award-winning filmmaker David Breashears (Red Flag Over Tibet) got more than he bargained for. In the process of filming this historic event in May 1996, his crew unexpectedly witnessed the worst tragedy ever to take place on Mt. Everest: On May 10, 1996, while the climbers and crew patiently waited at Camp II for storm conditions to clear, 23 other climbers were caught in a terrifying white-out that took eight lives, including those of two experienced leaders, Scott Fischer and Rob Hall. In its exclusive footage, Everest depicts the events that followed, including their own dramatic rescue of survivor Beck Weathers, who stumbled into their camp suffering from severe frostbite on his hands and face. Everest shows in its dramatically-scored, beautifully-filmed footage the extreme conditions that prevail on the peak known as the highest point in the world. Likewise, it shows just how strong the human spirit can be in the face of adversity. Its stars are expedition members Ed and Paula Viesturs, Jamling Tenzing Norgay, Sumiyo Tsuzuki, and Araceli Segarra, who wagered their lives to make this film. Shown struggling up icy precipices and above yawning chasms hundreds of feet deep, they reveal their thoughts and feelings about life, death and the task they have before them. In the end, three of the climbers made it to the 29,028' summit (as well as director Breashears, who previously set a world record as the first American to scale the peak twice). As each climber is shown standing on the very top of the mountain, gazing out over the horizon above the clouds, we, the spectators, are also privileged to share the victory and exhilaration of their climb. - Pat Kramer

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