Susanne Janssen
From Living City
Is it worth it to live 17 days and nights in a tent in the Arctic’s
freezing climate in western Greenland, fighting bone-chilling wind gusts,
eating canned food and staring at a shiny white glacier, from dawn until dusk
just waiting for it to calve? For Jeff Orlowski, director of the documentary
Chasing Ice, the answer is a resounding yes. The vigil was worth it. Jeff and
his co-cameraman were ready with cameras poised when a huge piece of the
Ilulissat glacier, similar in size to the lower tip of Manhattan with ice
higher than its skyscrapers — broke off and floated into the ocean. The
photographers filmed the largest calving of a glacier so far. “It was an
amazing, miraculous, horrible event,” says Orlowski. For five years, he
accompanied photographer James Balog on the Extreme Ice Survey project. What
started as a student project for YouTube videos and promotional material, ended
up as a documentary that won an award at the Sundance Film Festival in 2012.
The final song “Before My Time,” sung by Scarlett Johansson, was an Academy
nominee for best original song at the Oscars this year.
Chasing Ice causes the same reaction in the audience: Amazing!
Miraculous! Horrible! It documents the melting of 18 glaciers in Greenland,
Iceland, Alaska, Canada and the Rocky Mountains over a five-year period, from
2007 to 2012. James Balog, a Colorado-based photographer and environmentalist,
had the ambitious idea of installing cameras that would shoot pictures every
half hour as long as it was daylight to document the changes over the years as
part of the Extreme Ice Survey sponsored by National Geographic and other
entities. He encountered a lot of difficulties — some cameras didn’t work in
the cold or were destroyed by storm gusts. New techniques had to be improvised,
not to mention struggling with a knee injury. In spite of the obstacles he held
on to his idea of giving visual proof of the change in the glacier system which
in turn would be an indicator of the change in the global climate, considered
no longer a normal fluctuation, but a man-made deviation that may be
irreversible.


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