It was directed well, but it was a little too long for me at almost 2 hours, and the pacing wasn't that great. Some scenes felt rushed, others incomplete. This should've been shorter, or more content added with faster pacing.
It had great cinematography, both in and out of the water. Could be the best documentary ever made. Because of the proliferation of cameras and social media, everything seems to happen in real time. Forces of Nature. Even not kidding a love story. Supernatural intervention. A happy ending. Bring Kleenex. Lots of Kleenex.
But even if you're scuttling along alone, half-submerged in an underground ditch toward the outer edge of Fiborn Quarry, and the back of your sweatshirt gets snagged on a jagged rock underwater when you have just a few inches of breathing room above, you might quickly realize that you're on your own getting out of your predicament because hunting season is five months away and nobody will happen along to stumble across your remains AT LEAST until then.
Conversely, you might be high and dry on Horseshoe Mesa on the abandoned Grandview Trail within the Grand Canyon when cave scat spooks your little sister, forcing you to chunk rocks at her legs to motivate her to climb back up to the East Rim. Perhaps it's the ounces sweat away there that allow a safe escape from another tight spot hidden deep within a semi-wild King's Canyon cavern a few days later.
Most enter from neighboring Turkey, either crossing the northeastern land border or being ferried by smuggling boats to the eastern Aegean Sea islands near the Turkish coast. Recently, smuggling gangs have even been piling migrants into yachts heading from Turkey to Italy. Dozens of migrants died in a series of accidents in the central Aegean last month. We'll notify you here with news about. Turn on desktop notifications for breaking stories about interest? Jimmy co-produces and co-directs with his wife Chai Vasarhelyi.
John Battsek is one of the most successful producers in feature documentary filmmaking. Starting with Academy Award winning One Day In September which Battsek conceived and produced, he has since been responsible for some of the most acclaimed documentaries in recent years. In , Battsek launched his new production company Ventureland with long-time collaborators Kerstin Emhoff and Ali Brown. Battsek is currently in production on a range of titles including a film about the iconic Abbey Road Studios, directed by Mary McCartney and a biopic on the former world number 1 tennis player Boris Becker, directed by Alex Gibney.
The company originates and focuses on a diverse range of premium film and television projects with global appeal. The latter two films both premiered at the Venice Film Festival and were nominated for several major awards. Siriporn Bangngoen Amp set off to explore the world after completing her education, living in Thailand, Bahrain, New Zealand and Australia.
While on holiday in the United Kingdom, she met cave diver Rick Stanton. Upon returning to her home in Chiang Rai, Amp was horrified to hear that a group of boys were trapped in a cave close to her village.
Amp volunteered to assist with the rescue and worked alongside Rick Stanton as a translator. Thanet has been highly involved in charitable acts of service regarding water management and environmental care globally for several years. Beginning in and continuing presently, Thanet and his team kickstarted the National Groundwater Bank Project in Thailand, which has helped to lift thousands of people from poverty.
Thanet has also aided in the ongoing effort to solve the issue of PM 2. When COVID complications began in , Thanet designed and built mobile negative pressure units for patients in Thailand, he also worked with the Thai Ministry of Education developing water management courses for community colleges.
He has quietly spent forty years exploring caves around the world, steadily building his unique skill set as he defied limits, pushed boundaries, and discovered parts of the earth that had never been seen before. Along the way, he and his dive partners became the ones to call for the most challenging cave rescue and recovery missions.
John Volanthen is a world record-holding British caver and cave diver who has been involved in cave exploration over the last two decades. John began caving with the scouts at the age of 14 and has been at the forefront of cave exploration since combining disciplines of both caving and diving. Where suitable equipment was not available, John has innovated, designed and built breathing and mapping systems to safely explore new ground.
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