Brave New Wild
Synopsis: BRAVE NEW WILD is an offbeat chronicle of America’s Golden Age of rock climbing before and after the controversial ascent of the Dawn Wall in 1970. Some forty years later, Oakley Anderson-Moore, the daughter of a pioneering climber, stumbles upon her father’s old hi8 tapes, and sets out to answer the question: why climb when there’s nothing to gain — and everything to lose? Wry humor and an eclectic original soundtrack punctuate the delinquent antics of the Vulgarians in the ‘Gunks, the larger-than-life rivalry of Yosemite’s rock gods, and the fruit tramping, freight train hopping hobodom of her dad’s climbing life. This film is quintessential viewing for those who long for adventure.
Genre
Rated
Language
Run Time
Available Territories
Starring
Warren Harding (himself)
Tom Frost (himself)
Mark Moore (himself)
John Gill (himself)
Don Lauria (himself)
Directed by
Written by
Produced by
Edited by
Cinematographer
Prod. Company
Director's Statement
In the early 1970s, when my father would have been about my age when I started this project, he abandoned what appeared to be a promising future to become a penniless rock climber. I grew up getting glimpses of that life; some might say I grew up in the shadow of the mountains of my father’s past, although I only interpreted that my father had a peculiar obsession with rocks. Growing up a climber’s daughter, I was always struck by the dedication to what outsiders often see as such a dangerous — and pointless — activity. But I understood that to my father, climbing was far more than a ‘sport’ — it was a way of life, an ethos, an alternative universe that ultimately made much more sense than the one we lived in. My father had once lived there, helped create that place, and seeing his name in the back of climbing guidebooks along so many first ascents, at the age of 23, I wondered if I could somehow get there, too.
I read every book anyone had ever written on climbing, searched through old newspapers and magazines, memorized by heart the collection of Sheridan Anderson’s climbing cartoons. I traveled across the country with my small and good-natured crew in a ’76 VW van to interview some thirty or forty strangers under the intense glow of camp fire light. I interviewed scholars and relearnt American history from 1933 to 1978.
Like most people that go down the rabbit hole of history, I came out with more answers than I had bargained for. But had I found an answer to the central question, why do people climb? Climbers, my father included, were unusual and unique, motivated by different reasons; the answer was the intersection of a thousand different people, places, and events. I wanted the film to be a reflection of that, to be made up of intersections of stories that accumulate into a world of your own interpretation. I wanted the style to be true to the eclectic nature of the people in the story, to be often tongue-in-cheek and slightly subversive. The climber’s philosophy was not about conquering stuff, making your country proud, or following the American dream. Climbing was a fierce expression of existence. I had embarked on a journey to understand my father, and therefore, the Golden Age and the world of climbing. Now I invite you to look at this world through the kaleidoscope and see if you don’t find some meaning in that distant rock formation on the horizon.
Director's Bio
Oakley Anderson-Moore is from the small town of Ellensburg, Washington but spent half her childhood living in foreign countries from Brazil to the Philippines, and that mixed looking glass guides her style of storytelling. After graduating with highest distinction in Media:Film/Video and Theatre Arts at UC San Diego, Anderson-Moore worked as the L.A. street blogger for Nike’s/LinkTV’s Play City campaign, using multimedia to profile inspirational youth in Los Angeles from activists to skateboarders. She is a feature writer at Nofilmschool.com, where she has interviewed directors from Joel Potrykus to Kat Candler. Director Sally Potter (The Man Who Cried) called a work-in-progress scene from Brave New Wild “a fascinating glimpse into the obsessive culture of rock climbing…” The film was one of ten accepted into the 2012 IFP Independent Documentary Lab, and marks Oakley’s feature documentary debut.
Awards
Woods Hole Film Festival - United States - 2014
Emerging Filmmaker Award (Oakley Anderson-Moore)
Official selection
Big Sky International Film Festival - United States - 2015
Tallgrass Film Festival - USA - 2015
Big Sky Film Festival - USA - 2015
Tacoma Film Festival - USA - 2015
Kendall Mountain Film Festival - UK - 2015
Mountainfilm Graz Film Festival - Austria - 2015
Quotes
The first time’s a charm for director Oakley Anderson-Moore…Brave New Wild deftly weaves together interviews, animated bursts of exposition and family footage to craft a taut narrative about the thrills and limitations of the climbing life. - Brad Weismann, Denver Westward
This is one of the best films I've ever seen -- climbing or otherwise... - Cameron Burns, Author, Postcards from the Trailer Park
Speaks to a lot of us who yearn for vertical adventure & the song of the open road. - Stewart Green, About.com
An outdoor classic is born. - De Escalada
This movie goes places other climbing filmmakers have yet to even dream about. - Ajax Greene
A playful, unique tone that is rare in documentaries. - Robert Hardy, Filmmaker's Process
Press
Entropy - WHY DO PEOPLE CLIMB?: ON BRAVE NEW WILD. AN INTERVIEW W/ OAKLEY ANDERSON-MOORE - Janice Lee, April 12, 2016
KPBS - ‘Brave New Wild’ Explores Lifestyle Choices Of Rock Climbers - Beth Accomando, April 15, 2016
UCSD The Guardian - A Chat with “Brave New Wild’s” Oakley Anderson-Moore on the New World Boulder and More - Dieter Joubert, May 11, 2016
UCSD Newswise - ‘Brave New Wild’ Asks Legendary Adventurers What Lures them to Climb Rocks - April 25, 2016
Adventure Sports Journal - Brave New Wild - Doug Robinson -