Q&A with Kyle Portbury – the director of The Mountain Within

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Photo courtesy of Kate Coggins

Welcome to a new feature we will be running on the site.  It took a huge amount of hard work and determination to make The Mountain Within (TMW for short) so we decided to interview some of the crew members to give you an insight into the different types of obstacles that the crew on the mountain and the post production team had to overcome.

To kick off we’re starting with our Director – Kyle Portbury.

First of all, could you tell us a bit about yourself – where are you from and what was your role in TMW?

My name is Kyle Portbury, and I am the director of The Mountain Within.  I am from a little town in Victoria, Australia called Warburton where I grew up with my parents and older sister.  I was fortunate to have a British mother who wanted to visit her family often so Dad and Mum would regularly expose us to life in a bigger world.

When and how did you get involved in TMW?

In about February 2008 I premiered a short film at the Curzon cinema in Soho.  The Enham Kilimanjaro Challenge climb initiators happened to be in attendance, liked what they saw and approached me to discuss filming the climb.  I pitched them the idea of filming it as a feature documentary where we could really do some things that haven’t been done in the genre in a long time.  They liked the direction and we set off on the adventure of making a climb into a dramatic story.

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Photo courtesy of Kate Coggins

Had you worked with any of the crew before?

Yes I have worked with a number of the crew before.  The composer, Michael Price, and I had worked on a couple of projects before and were keen to push our director/composer creativity to another level.  My longtime producer Greg Rinaldi has basically produced everything I have done and Kate Coggins had edited one of my short films.  Having a core of people you know and understand was a real blessing because when you get out into extreme locations everthing that can go wrong does and you need to know that essentially your key people get you and can work together to problem solve out of any situation.

What did your role involve?

I am only a young director who is still working out how to tell stories.  I guess having said that directing for me involves finding the story to tell in the first place and then working out how to best tell that story.  How do you do that… get the best people you can in each of the key roles and listen to them.

For this project, some crew members took on different and/or extra roles to those they would normally take on – what were some of the strangest things you had to do on TMW?

I am a pretty hands on director but even for me, scrabbling along with our cinematographer, Gordon, on the side of a cliff with the wireless shotgun mic while he ran with a steadicam rig was pretty crazy, especially when you looked sideways and saw the drop off. I also ended up shooting the entire summit sequence as our main unit camera went down due to the cold on the summit.  Filming at 20,000ft was definitely a new one for me.

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Kyle and Gordon following the action

What were your thoughts about Kilimanjaro and the climb before you arrived in Tanzania?

I was really excited to get to climb it.  It is such an inspiring mountain, you see photos of this thing poking out of the clouds with giraffes and elephants in the foreground, who wouldn’t want to climb it.

How did you feel when you arrived at the base of the mountain?

What have I got myself into… ahahaha.

Had you been on Kilimanjaro or to altitude before?

This was my first time in Africa and I think the highest I had been was about 12,000ft.

Had you met any of the climbers before the climb?

Yes we spent about 6 months getting to know them and getting them used to us and the cameras.  They are such an amazing group of people and to get to the point where we got to see that meant a lot of time with them, so by the time we got to the mountain, cameras around was just a normal part of life.

How did you find working at altitude?

Both exhilarating and exhausting.  Making a film anywhere requires a certain level of physical and mental agility, when you throw altitude into that mix you have to work twice as hard to get the same result.

How do you feel that the crew as a group handled the extremes of Kilimanjaro?

Whatever the mountain threw at them, they handled it as a team and brought back a story, you can’t ask for much more.  Everyone had a day where they were not running at their peak but everyone stepped up to cover this, it was an incredible team effort and sheer determination that got this film in the can.

Did you reach the summit?

Yes.

Tell us about reaching the summit?

I was filming when we reached the top, it was a funny feeling you know, you expect that it will be this big moment but actually you just hurt, you can’t breathe and you look around and everyone else is thinking the same thing you are.  You sit and reflect for a few moments, you think about the ones who didn’t make it and then you muster the strength to get back down… awesome.

Was there a particular event on the mountain that sticks out in your memory?

There were so many but the one that sticks out would have been the final climb to the summit.  It was pitch black and I can still remember looking up and seeing an endless trail of lights that seemed to ascend forever.  When you can’t breathe and your legs feel like they weigh a tonne that sight is terrifying…

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Photo courtesy of Kate Coggins

If you had to summarize the summit attempt in one word, which word would you use?

Surreal.

Do you feel more of a connection to the film (because you took part in the climb), compared to other films you have worked on?

Every film is a unique and special experience, what I think is different with this one is you have the added bonus of having not only succeeded in shooting a film which is a huge undertaking in and of itself but you have also climbed one of the world’s highest mountains.  You get the personal sense of achievement in getting to the summit and the collaborative achievement of making a film so it is a pretty special film.

What is the most important lesson you have learned from making TMW?

Patience.

If you have any questions for Kyle please post them in the comment window below.

2 Responses to “Q&A with Kyle Portbury – the director of The Mountain Within”

  1. tommy simpson says:

    Well done on the film, remarkable. How did you manage to fund it?

  2. Kyle says:

    Hi Tommy,

    We had several sponsors for the film and also cash donations that covered most of the costs but for the most part the film was made due to the generosity of the film crew and post production team. Just about everyone on this project gave up their time and energy to see it through.

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