Heather “Anish” Anderson stands out as the biggest hiker to ever stroll the earth. She has persistently damaged the female and male thru-hiking data on a number of the world’s longest and most difficult trails. And but, she has remained a mysterious determine to most.
The current launch of a brief documentary from filmmakers Carlo Nasisse and Maria Luisa Santos goals to shed some gentle on this journey. In “The Ghost,” viewers not solely learn the way that title got here to be, but additionally obtain an intimate exploration of Heather’s private journey from unknown hiker to the holder of a number of the most coveted data within the mountaineering world.
We caught up with Carlo Nasisse, Maria Luisa Santos, and Heather “Anish” Anderson herself to be taught extra about how the movie got here to be and what they hope viewers take away from it.
Gossamer Gear: Carlo, we’ll begin with you. What was your purpose with this movie if you first began? Did it end up as you anticipated? If not, how did it change over time?
Carlo: I first met Heather on the Outdoor Retailer Show. I used to be taking footage for the OR Daily ({a magazine} printed each day in the course of the present that options retailers, athletes, and different folks from the trade) and we had her scheduled to return in for a portrait. Making a picture of another person is an intimate course of. You attempt to briefly discover some a part of that individual’s essence and seize it on digicam. I actually felt Heather’s energy at that second, and noticed the drive that allowed her to finish wonderful feats of bodily and psychological endurance. She felt distinctive and I knew that her story was value sharing. I feel my main purpose was to inform a narrative about mountaineering that, after all, paid homage to the spectacular bodily feats that Heather had achieved, however that additionally explored the emotional and religious ingredient of lengthy distance mountaineering. Gossamer Gear was extremely supportive and excited in regards to the concept.
The greatest change for the movie was the pandemic. We had envisioned filming on the Pacific Crest Trail, presumably having a crew of 4 or 5 folks. There was a second after we felt the movie may not occur, that there was no secure approach to do it. My associate, Maria Luisa Santos, who’s a gifted director and movie editor, and I made a decision to take my Subaru and switch it right into a manufacturing automobile. We shot all the movie ourselves and camped out close to Heather’s residence. I’ll have imagined extra dramatic pictures for the movie—the mountain vistas of the West, thunderstorms, deserts, and so on.—however the movie grew to become one thing extra intimate and internally targeted. The Appalachian Trail is a seemingly infinite expanse of inexperienced that enshrouds you for hours and hours, with none vistas. This ended up feeling like a becoming setting for the movie as we delve into Heather’s previous and her evolution that led her to lengthy distance mountaineering.
Gossamer Gear: What was the method like accumulating the footage and narrative for this story?
Carlo: It was a really natural course of. As I discussed earlier than, the pandemic nixed any risk of a bigger crew so it was typically simply Luisa, Heather, her husband Adam, and I. It was truthfully very enjoyable and by the tip I feel all of us felt that we had gained new pals. An attention-grabbing problem was maintaining with Heather whereas mountaineering. I assumed that I used to be in comparatively good mountaineering form earlier than filming, however rapidly realized how improper I used to be.
In post-production, we had the chance to work with the gifted music composer, Eric Phillips, and our buddy, Alex Belser, who’s an animation and movement graphics wizard. They helped additional breathe life into the movie.
Gossamer Gear: How did you choose the voices aside from Heather’s to incorporate?
Carlo: This was an enormous problem due to the pandemic. I all the time knew that I needed to speak to Doug Schnitzspahn who’s an outdated buddy and had written an article on Heather for National Geographic’s Adventurer of the Year. We selected our different voices based mostly on their experience within the discipline and ideas from Gossamer Gear and Heather.
Gossamer Gear: What do you hope folks take away from the movie?
Maria Luisa: I grew up surrounded by boy cousins, which was enjoyable, however it additionally rapidly taught me that “there are some things that are just for boys.” This is how I used to be excluded from enjoying soccer and as a substitute was given the “honor” of being the crew’s nurse. Whenever I see girls reaching wonderful feats in sports activities, I’m reminded of my seven-year-old self hauling a primary help equipment round, secretly eager to be on the sector.
Heather is a type of girls that I want I’d seen as a toddler in order that I may clarify to my grandmother that soccer is certainly for ladies. At the identical time, this movie is just not solely inspiring as a lady, however it additionally illuminates one thing very lovely in regards to the human expertise: the capability for change. Heather resides proof that we will all the time re-evaluate who we’re, what we’re doing, and the place we’re going. Life turns into way more attention-grabbing after we permit ourselves the pliability to think about totally different realities.
Gossamer Gear: Anish, you’ve written your mountaineering tales in a few books now. What appealed to you about sharing them by movie?
Anish: Film was by no means one thing I thought-about for sharing my story. I’m a wordsmith. I like writing and portray footage with language. I’d had a number of folks attain out to me about creating a movie and I all the time turned them down. However, once I met Carlo I immediately felt like I’d met somebody who understood me and when he reached out about crafting a movie, I knew I may belief him to inform my story effectively on display screen.
Gossamer Gear: You speak about dealing with a whole lot of self-doubt throughout your FKTs. Do you continue to hike with that generally or has your path time modified that?
Anish: Through my a few years of pushing limits and asking inside questions, I now have a rock stable understanding of who I’m and what I’m able to that doesn’t waver.
Gossamer Gear: What was it like sharing not simply your path tales but additionally a few of your house life with viewers?
Anish: I truthfully didn’t like sharing the house life, particularly because it’s not likely mine. It’s simply one other non permanent location the place I spend day off path. However, with the pandemic limiting journey, it made sense to incorporate it since we couldn’t present the place we reside more often than not, which is out of our automobile within the West.
Gossamer Gear: What do you hope folks take away from the movie?
Anish: That your story doesn’t outline you.
Connect With Heather “Anish” Anderson’s Story Through “The Ghost”
You can now watch “The Ghost” on-line right here. The brief movie received the 2021 Maine Outdoor Film Festival’s Best Film From Away, was an official choice on the 2021 Kendal Mountain Festival, and an official choice on the 2021 Wild & Scenic Film Festival.