Tag: base jumping

  • GoPro HD HERO: BASE Jumping Movie

    GoPro HD HERO: BASE Jumping Movie

    [youtube id=”mRzhBkZNQFI” width=”600″ height=”350″]

    Shot with the GoPro HD HERO camera in 960p (1280×960) resolution, this short BASE jumping movie highlights how beautiful the sport can be with the right equipment. In the last part of the clip, a face close-up, take note of the intense happiness.

  • Guerilla Elevator BASE Jumping in Spain

    Guerilla Elevator BASE Jumping in Spain

    Douggs, Carlos and Dario–who are you guys? The three of them perform a little guerilla BASE jumping exercise from the top of the Hotel Bali elevator in Spain. This clip is up close and personal; at one point you can see the camera man’s hands start fidgeting, and that’s when I got nervous. Wonder what they ate for breakfast that morning?

  • “The Descent” BASE Jumping Adventure Video

    “The Descent” BASE Jumping Adventure Video

    Shot in Lauterbrunnen and Kandersteg, Switzerland, “The Descent” is a beautiful movie that illustrates the delicate balance of man, nature and technology. Proximity flying at its finest, folks. This movie was sponsored by Casio G-Shock.

  • Oh, Beautiful. BASE Jumping in Norway.

    Oh, Beautiful. BASE Jumping in Norway.

    The Skywalkers and Soul Flyers, two BASE jumping and general thrill-seeking organizations, show us a different side of Norway. One of the best WiSBASE/proximity flying videos on the Interwebs these days. Enjoy!

  • Guillaume Néry’s Underwater Base Jump at Dean’s Blue Hole

    Guillaume Néry’s Underwater Base Jump at Dean’s Blue Hole

    A beautifully composed video of Guillaume Néry, a French free-diver that specializes in Constant Weight free-diving, exploring Dean’s Blue Hole, the deepest blue hole in the world. Dean’s Blue Hole is located in a bay just west of Clarence Town on Long Island, Bahamas and plunges 202 metres (663 ft) deep.

  • Reporting Live: 2011 Reel Rock Film Tour

    Reporting Live: 2011 Reel Rock Film Tour

    A few weeks ago, Nerve Rush HQ received an email:

    I bought two tickets to the Reel Rock Film Tour…The six movies being shown look incredible.

    I hopped on over to the website and found this trailer:

    Boom goes the dynamite–I was in. Waiting in line, I realized I should have gotten there earlier. The theater was packed.

    Reel Rock Film Tour 2011 line

    History of the Reel Rock Film Tour

    The first Reel Rock film tour premiered in 2006 in Boulder, Colorado, featuring two new climbing movies. Founded by Josh Lowell and Peter Mortimer, both who have been producing and directing adventure films for more than a decade, the Reel Rock film tour is organized annually and promotes films about rock and ice climbing, mountaineering, BASE jumping and other adventurous mountain sports. The tours often include gear raffles, athlete appearances and signings and fundraising for non-profit organizations. The tour is put on by Sender Films and Big Up Productions, who team up with North Face and Windstopper as primary sponsors.

    Reel Rock Film Tour 2011

    Reel Rock Film Tour 2011 screen

    This year, the 6th annual film tour kicked off with two winners from a filmmaking competition. The judges picked one winner, and online votes (or “the people”) chose the other winner.

    The judges choice, “Crash Pad Test Facility,” featured a comical sequence of tough situations, all of which were handled miraculously by the bouldering crash pad. The people’s choice, “The Climber Kid,” was a climbing parody of The Karate Kid.

    There were six other films:

    Ice Evolution
    A beautiful film shot at British Columbia’s Helmcken Falls, maniac ice climber Will Gadd, a 30+ year veteran to the sport, shows us his dream climb–a heinously difficult but perfectly aesthetic overhanging climb behind a waterfall. Gadd and Tim Emmett dodge 30 foot icicly bombs and climb undoubtedly the hardest pure ice climb in the world. My favorite part of the film? When Gadd and Emmett used a metal detector to hunt down ice-covered bolts from the previous season. It was hilarious.

    Cold
    “What the fuck am I doing here? We have to get down.” Over the past 26 years, 16 expeditions have tried and failed to climb Gasherbrum II, one of Pakistan’s highest peaks (over 8,000 meters), in the winter. In February 2011, Simone Moro, Denis Urubko, and Corey Richards became the first to achieve this goal, surviving -50 degree temperatures and a massive avalanche. In this first-person look at modern super-alpinism, Richards captured both the glory and pain of the trip.

    Project Dawn Wall
    Tommy Caldwell, one of the world’s best rock climbers, has devoted the last decade of his life to opening free climbing routes on Yosemite’s El Capitan. Three seasons into his ultimate project–the seemingly impossible Dawn Wall–Tommy documents his first big ground-up push, showing us pitch after pitch of 5.14 first ascents. Eventually, an epic storm shuts the team down for the season, but boy did they come back with some nutty footage–imagine what it looks like to sleep on a completely vertical face. Ever heard of a portaledge?

    Origins: Obe & Ashima
    One of the more inspiring adventure films I’ve seen, Obe & Ashima profiles nine-year old Ashima Shiraishi, a New York City bouldering prodigy under the tutelage of her passionate coach, Obe Carrion, a former professional. In part of the film, they head to Hueco Tanks, TX, seeking out the highest concentration of boulder problems in the U.S., where Ashima tears it apart. After climbing the notoriously difficult V12 Martini Right, Obe says to Ashima, “This is how psyched feels.”

    Race for the Nose
    It’s the wildest competition known to man, the speed record on the Nose route of Yosemite’s El Capitan. For 50+ years, the world’s best climbers have been one-upping each other, racing up 3,000 feet of vertical granite rock in under 3 hours, risking life and limb to shave mere seconds from the climb. In this film, we follow Dean Potter and Sean Leary, who duke it out with other teams for rock climbing’s ultimate prize.

    Sketchy Andy / Slacklife
    Andy Lewis is a nutty guy who, among other hobbies, enjoys BASE jumping, naked slacklining and aerial “trick-lining.” This film showcases someone who is pushing the limits–some might think too far–with some pretty gnarly feats. Below are some highlights, not from the film tour, of Andy’s best.

  • Adrenaline Rush (The Science of Risk)

    Adrenaline Rush (The Science of Risk)

    I actually caught this movie at the Boston IMAX about a year ago. My heart was pumping for hours. This unofficial recut features a Boards of Canada remix and highlights some of the best footage from the film. Film footage from Eikesdalen, Norway.