NZ Mountain Film and Book Festival - Adventure for a Cause
The NZ Mountain Film and Book Festival will continue to deliver world-class speakers and adventurers to the stage in
2017. Often the motivation behind undertaking dangerous or challenging expeditions is not immediately apparent. This
year two festival speakers will reveal the impetus behind their journeys and what drives them to capture and express
indescribable moments on film for audiences worldwide.
After 15 years of screening adventure films and hosting world-renowned adventurers, the festival audiences continue to
connect most strongly with content that bears a cause beyond adventure for adventure’s sake. Talented Kiwi storytellers
Mal Law and Simon Lucas represent this contingent of thoughtful, creative and courageous filmmakers able to balance
adventure and art on the big screen.
In February 2017 New Zealander Simon Lucas and three other Kiwi explorers were selected by the Antarctic Heritage Trust
as members of the Inspiring Explorers' 2017 team to travel to the Antarctic Peninsula to attempt a guided ascent of
Mount Scott. Their mission was to honour the legacy of the early polar explorers and celebrate the spirit of
exploration. Mount Scott is named after Captain Robert Falcon Scott and is an 880m high peak. Simon comments, “The aim
is to inspire exploration and interest for Antarctica in the next generation, because what’s the point in preserving the
legacy of the heroic explorers, if the next generation loses its connection to the continent.”
Simon’s talk will offer an insight into the mission and why the four members on the expedition seek exploration and lead
adventurous lives. He will talk about the challenges faced and how they overcame them and how the attained skills and
mind-set transfer into everyday life. Simon will delve into the filmmaking process and the challenges and benefits of
being a one-man operation as cameraman, director and editor.
Simon won the NZ Mountain Film Festival Best NZ Film Hiddleston/MacQueen Award in 2016 for his debut film ‘Paddle for
the North’. Simon continues to brilliantly blend his passion for adventure, conservation and filmmaking with his latest
project. Simon’s film ‘Mt Scott’ will be played as a world premier at the festival. His talk will show some additional
footage not seen in the film and his presentation will conclude with a Q and A session.
From early childhood Mal Law (NZ) devoured stories of great adventurers and explorers. He fulfilled a dream of his own
when he ran New Zealand’s seven mainland Great Walks back to back in just seven days raising a serious amount of money
for a charity close to his heart, Leukemia & Blood Cancer NZ, because as a nine-year-old he had lost his older brother to this cruel disease.
Next mission on the list was to run 50 mountain marathons and climb 50 peaks in just 50 days – The High Five O
Challenge. Mal completed the mission on behalf of the Mental Health Foundation of NZ, with more than 300 support runners
signed up to join him for a day or so each. The challenge raised a staggering $510,000 for the charity and was
instrumental in helping reduce the stigma around the topic of mental health.
Hear from this exceptional Wanaka local about his experience preparing for and running the High Five-0 Challenge, as
well as stories behind the making of his award-winning film ‘FIFTY’. Physically, not everything went to plan, with
injury, illness and weather forcing the shortening of some days. But 50 peaks were climbed on 50 consecutive days and
the equivalent of 40 rough, tough off-road marathons were achieved.
Laurence Fearnley is an award-winning novelist and non-fiction writer; she will be delivering a writing workshop at the
festival this year. Her storylines weave together insight into the human condition with our spiritual connection to the
land. A Kiwi voice is prominent, as the tales of New Zealand history and spirit unfold. Laurence’s love of adventure
shines through her stunning literary back catalogue. Her novels have been staged from Central Otago, Fairlie, Mount
Cook, Southland and in generic rural small town New Zealand.
Laurence has been awarded the NZ Post Fiction Award for her novel ‘The Hut Builder’. The novel was also shortlisted for
the international 2010 Boardman Tasker Prize for mountain writing. ‘Edwin and Matilda’ (2007) was runner-up in the
fiction category of the 2008 Montana New Zealand Book Awards. Her novel, ‘Room’, was shortlisted for the Montana Book
Awards in 2001. Laurence has also completed a Robert Burns Fellowship at the University of Otago. In 2003 she became an
Antarctic Arts Fellow in the Artists to Antarctica programme.
Her half-day writing workshop invites aspiring writers, of all genres, to discover how to craft a storyline, develop
structure and sharpen overall writing skills for fun or to publish.
The NZ Mountain Film and Book Festival received 182 film submissions this year, this constitutes more than 20% increase
in entries. The volume of films has not diluted the quality. Mark Sedon, the Festival Director, reasons the growing
international reputation of the festival is responsible for the surge in growth. He says, “It seems the reasons for the
exponential growth are twofold: the global profile of our event is increasing, as well as the rise in the number of
films being made due to accessibility and affordability of quality equipment. At the heart of it this means we will
continue to have high calibre content for the festival with access to world-class speakers looking to promote their
films.”
The festival programme will be announced when tickets go on sale on 1 June. The 2017 festival begins in Wanaka on Friday
30 June and in Queenstown on Thursday 6 July.
• Film Festival Wanaka 30 June to 4 July
• Film Festival Cromwell 5 July
• Film & Book Festival Queenstown 6 to 8 July
• Book Festival Wanaka 7 to 9 July
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About the New Zealand Mountain Film and Book Festival
The 15th NZ Mountain Film and Book Festival will run from 30 June to 9 July in Wanaka, Cromwell and Queenstown. The
event will host international and NZ speakers, a world-class line up of films, and a broad range of literary events all
honouring adventurous sports and lifestyles. From off-the-cuff storytelling to highly crafted filmmaking and written
works, all events champion the love of adventure and the outdoors, the environment and foreign cultures.
The festival holds an international adventure filmmaking competition that receives submissions from filmmakers from all
corners of the globe. The finalists make up the festival programme screened in Lake Wanaka Centre and Queenstown Events
Centre. The standard is exceptionally high and the event sits on the world stage alongside the well known Banff and
Kendal Mountain Film Festivals.
The addition of the Mountain Book competition has broadened the scope to illuminate the theme of ‘adventure sports and
lifestyles’. Written work can be submitted under a range of categories to win prize money and go in contention for the
Grand Prize. The Mountain Book event also features author readings, old fashion storytelling, writing workshops and
children’s events.
The festival line-up includes world famous speakers, a packed programme of adventure, cultural and environmental films,
informal storytelling, workshops, author readings, an adventure trade show and a free youth programme.
The festival programme will be announced when tickets go on sale on 1 June. The 2017 festival begins in Wanaka on Friday
30 June and in Queenstown on Thursday 6 July.
More details can be found online at mountainfilm.nz