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Movie review| Shades of Winter - Between

A movie about the little moments in between.

by Lisa Amenda 10/12/2016
Skiing is not just a sport. It's the little moments between the big runs that Sandra Lahnsteiner makes really big in her latest Shades of Winter film Between and that make skiing what it really is.

Let's be honest: for many of us, skiing is not just a sport. It's a passion, a form of expression, a pastime, sometimes an enjoyable waste of time and a great reason to be outside with friends. Skiing is not just about the next big run. It's about the moments when the deep snow swirls around your nose and takes your breath away for a short time. It's about the sparkle when lots of fine snow crystals swirl through the air. It's about the feeling of gliding almost weightlessly through the finest powder or pressing the edge into the snow and racing down the slope as if on rails. It's the nature, the mountains, the solitude, but also the togetherness that makes skiing so special. After all, it's usually more fun together.

Freerider and producer Sandra Lahnsteiner knows this too. For her new Shades of Winter film Between, she has dedicated herself to the little moments. She has created more of a documentary than an action-packed ski film about herself and her Shades of Winter crew, consisting of Julia Mancuso, Nadine Wallner, Evelina Nilsson, Janina Kuzma and Matilda Rapaport. Over 90 minutes, the film follows the six skiers and friends around the globe. But neither the pillow skiing in British Columbia, nor the descent from the 4000 m high Mauna Kea in Hawaii or the skiing at 10 o'clock in the evening in Abisko, Sweden, leave the impression of having landed in an ordinary ski film. The visually stunning 4K production in cooperation with Red Bull Media House offers the finest landscape shots in the most remote places in the world and right here in the Alps. But not only that.

You accompany the riders, travel with them, go ice fishing with them or ride the waves with surf pro Carissa Moore in Hawaii. What counts here are the emotions, the personalities, the winning and also the failures. When Nadine Wallner has to capitulate to the Matterhorn because the snow is too soft for an ascent or Evelina Nilsson has to take a break with an injury, you suffer with them. Because that's skiing too. Failing and then getting back up again. The laughter of Julia Mancuso after her first run after her hip injury or the cozy beer around the campfire in the midnight sun of Abisko.

Unfortunately, loss is also part of skiing. Matilda Rapaport's tragic avalanche accident last July always resonates. She is so vivid on screen, her words so clear and her skiing so unique.

Sandra Lahnsteiner has captured all of this in her latest film. It not only shows the sport, but also the athletes and people behind it. The friendships that develop as a result and the little moments that seem insignificant during the process, but in the end make up the journey. And once you've watched Between, you want to set off straight away. You want to glide through powder with friends or sit around the campfire, use the chairlift or go on a ski tour.

If you are ready for fine skiing action and great emotions, you can be inspired by Between with confidence and a clear conscience. On November 14 on Red Bull TV or at the other premiere stops, there are still plenty of opportunities to do so.

For more information on the film, visit: http://www.shades-of-winter.com

The trailer

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This article has been automatically translated by DeepL with subsequent editing. If you notice any spelling or grammatical errors or if the translation has lost its meaning, please write an e-mail to the editors.

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