At 8,200 meters on the north face of Kangchenjunga, a six-person expedition finds itself trapped between a collapsing ice serac and a storm system that forecasters never saw coming — and the only way down is through each other.
The Story
The team is led by Anika Berge, a Norwegian alpinist with eleven 8,000-meter summits behind her and one failed attempt at Kangchenjunga that cost her climbing partner’s life. This time she has assembled a carefully balanced team: a Sherpa sirdar who knows the mountain better than anyone alive, a military trauma surgeon doubling as expedition medic, and three clients who have each paid six figures for a shot at the top.
When the storm pins them in a high camp designed for a single night, oxygen runs low, radio contact drops out, and the carefully maintained hierarchy of guide and client dissolves. Director Samuel Okoro shoots the confined tent scenes in claustrophobic close-up, cutting to vast aerial plates of the mountain that reduce the characters to specks — a visual argument about how small human ambition looks from the sky.
Above eight thousand meters, your body is dying. Every minute you stay is a negotiation with your own cells.
Dr. Yael Stern, expedition medic
Cast & Crew
- Director: Samuel Okoro
- Starring: Ingrid Halvorsen, Pemba Tshering, Katarina Novak, David Ashworth
- Cinematography: Renan Ozturk
- Sound Design: Ren Klyce
Principal photography spanned fourteen weeks across Nepal, the Swiss Alps, and a refrigerated soundstage in Oslo. The production employed three high-altitude camera operators and custom-built wind machines capable of generating 120 km/h gusts inside the studio tent set. Halvorsen trained for four months with professional mountaineers and performed her own exposed-ridge sequences without a stunt double.

The Summit is not a film about conquering nature. It is a film about what happens when nature makes it clear that conquest was never on the table.
