Meru film drops theatrical trailer, slated for theaters next month
Yesterday, the theatrical trailer for the film Meru was released and mountain film-fanatics like myself have since been abuzz with excitement. The film won the U.S. Documentary Audience Award at this past year’s Sundance Film Festival, and will start to his theaters next month.
Meru follows Conrad Anker, Jimmy Chin and Renan Ozturk in their quest to climb Mount Meru, a previously unclimbed peak in the Himalaya. The 21,000-foot peak shut them down on their first attempt in 2008, but the team returned in 2011 to try again. The film follows not only technical and physical demands of climbing Meru, but the ambition, risk taking and personal narrative of those who attempt it.
While I haven’t seen the film yet, my friends who got into the screenings said it was incredible. Of course, will the all-star cast and crew and a compelling story line, it would be hard to fall short of that superlative. Jimmy Chin and Renan Ozturk are both renowned adventurers, photographers and filmmakers. Conrad Anker is one of the most accomplished mountaineers of our time.
The crossover between cast and crew is a big part of what sets this mountaineering film apart from its peers. Very few production crews are able to keep up with the elite athletes they feature, so these films usually resort to GoPro footage once the climbing gets serious. Meru is a film shot and produced by the people actually doing the climb. From what I’ve seen in the trailer and other clips, the result is a far more visceral experience than most mountain flicks can deliver.
Meru will start screening in select theaters throughout the U.S. next month and will arrive at the Broadway Centre Theatre in Salt Lake City on August 28. Watch the trailer and read the synopsis here, and then head over to www.merufilm.com for more info.
In the high-stakes game of big-wall climbing, the Shark’s Fin on Mount Meru may be the ultimate prize. Sitting at the headwaters of the sacred Ganges River in Northern India, the Shark’s Fin has seen more failed attempts by elite climbing teams over the past 30 years than any other ascent in the Himalayas.
The layout of the 21,000-foot mountain’s perversely stacked obstacles makes it both a nightmare and an irresistible calling for some of the world’s toughest climbers. Hauling over 200 pounds of gear up 4,000-feet of technical, snowy, mixed ice and rock climbing is actually the simple part of this endeavor. After crossing that gauntlet you reach the Shark’s Fin itself: 1,500 feet of smooth, nearly featureless granite. There are few pre- existing fissures, cracks or footwalls. It is simply a straight sheet of overhanging rock.
To undertake Meru, says Jon Krakauer, the bestselling author of Into Thin Air, “You can’t just be a good ice climber. You can’t just be good at altitude. You can’t just be a good rock climber. It’s defeated so many good climbers and maybe will defeat everybody for all time. Meru isn’t Everest. On Everest you can hire Sherpas to take most of the risks. This is a whole different kind of climbing.”
In October 2008, Conrad Anker, Jimmy Chin and Renan Ozturk arrived in India to tackle Meru. What was meant to be a seven-day trip with the equivalent amount of food became a 20-day odyssey in sub-zero temperatures, thanks to the setback of a massive storm that showered the mountain with at least 10 feet of snow. Like everyone before them, their journey was not a successful one. But they had reached further than anyone else, beaten back just 100 meters below the elusive summit.
Heartbroken and defeated, Anker, Chin and Ozturk returned to their everyday lives, swearing never to attempt the journey again. But they faced sudden physical and emotional challenges back home, too, challenges only exacerbated by the siren song of Meru, one that Anker perhaps heard the loudest. By September 2011, Anker had convinced his two lifelong friends to undertake the Shark’s Fin once more, under even more extraordinary circumstances than the first time around.
MERU is the story of that journey–one of friendship, sacrifice, hope and obsession.





