Manitoba ice climber's debut film ascends to Vancouver film fest lineup
Manitoba ice climber Ray Hope has reached new heights.
“Prairie Ice Farmers,” a short film Hope directed, has been selected for the 2024 Vancouver International Mountain Film Festival.
The film follows a group of ice climbers who have created a vibrant community in the heart of the Canadian Prairies as they live and breathe the thrill of the climb.
Ray was inspired to direct the film based on his own passion for climbing.
“I started 10 years ago. I was on a trip in Japan and did some climbing there, and it just changed my life,” he said in an interview on CTV Morning Live Winnipeg.
Ever since, he and his wife Jackie have taken yearly trips to the Canadian Rockies to mountaineer.
During the COVID pandemic, the Hopes were grounded in Manitoba, unable to travel to the mountains to do what they loved.
To pass the time, they got into filmmaking, turning to their gravity-defying passion for inspiration.
“We thought the story about the ice climbing in Manitoba was very unique, and we thought that story should be told, and we wanted to tell it,” he said.
The film charts the rise of passionate climbers who created St. Boniface’s 60-foot ice tower, and the community that rose up around it. It also travels to the Kenora area, where that region’s unique topography has been engineered to create a frozen playground for climbers.
The film took three years to complete.
Hope submitted it to the Vancouver International Mountain Film Festival, and was tapped for its lineup.
“To be selected is quite an honour.”
It is set to premiere at the event on Nov. 12.
The film is also part of an online program, allowing folks to watch it from home for a fee. Details can be found on the festival’s website.
- With files from CTV’s Rachel Lagacé
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Canada expands list of banned firearms to include hundreds of new models and variants
The Canadian government is expanding its list of banned firearms, adding hundreds of additional makes, models and their variants, effective immediately.
Could the discovery of an injured, emaciated dog help solve the mystery of a missing B.C. man?
When paramedic Jim Barnes left his home in Fort St. John to go hunting on Oct. 18, he asked his partner Micaela Sawyer — who’s also a paramedic — if she wanted to join him. She declined, so Barnes took the couple’s dog Murphy, an 18-month-old red golden retriever with him.
The world has been warming faster than expected. Scientists now think they know why
Last year was the hottest on record, oceans boiled, glaciers melted at alarming rates, and it left scientists scrambling to understand exactly why.
The latest: Water bottle, protein bar wrapper may help identify shooter in UnitedHealthcare CEO's killing
The masked gunman who stalked and killed UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson used ammunition emblazoned with the words 'deny,' 'defend' and 'depose,' a law enforcement official said Thursday. Here's the latest.
7.0 earthquake off Northern California prompts brief tsunami warning
A 7.0 magnitude earthquake shook a large area of Northern California on Thursday, knocking items off grocery store shelves, sending children scrambling under desks and prompting a brief tsunami warning for 5.3 million people along the U.S. West Coast.
Saskatoon based dog rescue operator ordered to pay $27K for defamatory Facebook posts
A Saskatoon based dog rescue operator has been ordered to pay over $27,000 in damages to five women after a judge ruled she defamed them in several Facebook posts.
Pete Davidson, Jason Sudeikis and other former 'SNL' cast members reveal how little they got paid
Live from New York, it's revelations about paydays on 'Saturday Night Live.'
Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim admits to being 'orange pilled' in Bitcoin interview
Bitcoin is soaring to all-time highs, and Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim wants the city to get in on the action.
Man wanted for military desertion turns himself in at Canada-U.S. border
A man wanted for deserting the U.S. military 16 years ago was arrested at the border in Buffalo, N.Y. earlier this week.