Clint on the cover of mountaineering magazine Alpinist |
21-Jul-2017 By Chic Scott, photos and captions by John
Cleare
The following article about the
making of one of Hollywood's first climbing films originally appeared in the
1975/1976 edition of Ascent. It is republished here as part of our celebration
of Ascent’s 50th anniversary. Founded in 1967 by the Yosemite pioneers Allen
Steck and Steve Roper and now published by Rock and Ice, Ascent is the
compendium of climbing’s timeless stories.
What’s it all about? Where do you
lose that youthful dream, that idealism?
Maybe on this page ... Or maybe
not. Perhaps I’ll know by the time I reach the end. Rébuffat has written,
“Youth, to live, must have some great aspiration. When I was 15 ... I longed so
much to become a mountaineer one day, perhaps, a guide!” How long it seems
since I read that.
In this era of climbing
commercialism, it is a little difficult to retain any integrity. The lure of
glistening, distant peaks has been replaced by the lure of gold and silver, and
it seems as if no climber can resist. Now Hollywood is in the arena, with the
resources to make a Judas of any of us.
For seven weeks during the summer
of 1974 I worked on the filming of “The Eiger Sanction.” It was a miserable
time. It is over now and I am glad. But the summer lives on in more than
memories, and that is what this ... (confession?) is all about.
For most of us mountaineers
working on the film, it was our “Fistful of Dollars.” To one who lived on pea
soup and porridge in a shepherd’s hut, it was a home for his wife and child. To
another it was a log cabin in Wyoming, and to another it was the break into a
new life as a professional mountaineer.
For me it was my temptation, my
30 days in the wilderness.
London,
spring 1974. Phone rang. "Mr. Eastwood would like you to join him for
lunch at Claridge’s." While not a movie buff, I was familiar with
Eastwood’s name, and, intrigued, I accepted the invitation.
Clint Eastwood
seemed like a nice guy. He outlined his plans for the summer—shoot a Hollywood
film, "The Eiger Sanction."
But unlike other climbing films that had
been shot on sets of fake mountains, Eastwood’s production would be shot on the
real Eiger. Eastwood, I thought, was crazy. But when he told me that he’d
already signed up Dougal Haston and Norman Dyhrenfurth, two friends I
respected, as safety officer and second-unit director, I thought, "Why
not?"
In this photo, Eastwood, playing the art collector/ assassin Dr.
Jonathan Hemlock, dangles from a portable tripod about 2,000 feet up the Eiger
North Face —John Cleare, 2017
I had qualms about accepting the
job. The smiling face of Toni Kurz, and the struggles of Heckmair and the rest
were my boyhood treasures; “The White Spider” was my Homerian epic. But who
among us can resist the lure of Hollywood, the silver screen, the starlets and
the wine—and the money? I justified it by convincing myself that I might be
able to get the whole script rewritten ... (In the face of the storm the team
pulls together, and espionage and murder are forgotten. Through the Eiger’s
most bitter mood, an international team winds through to the top. Friends and
heroes, the team descends, and the culprit is found elsewhere—as does happen in
the book.) Fat chance.
Juggling greed and idealism, and
scared silly of what I might have to do, I made my annual flight east. Two
pleasant days were spent scouting the face and rigging. “That scene on the
Shattered Pillar would be terrific, and the cameraman could film from the 3.8
km window. The Rote Fluh is steep, too steep for actors, but it’s safe.” I
learned a lot and made a fine acquaintance with the mountain. On the third day
we started shooting. My first task was a 25-foot leap into space and I balked.
A somewhat dramatic scene in the brass-and-leather Scheidegg Hotel bar the
night before, and my cover was blown. I spoke my piece. No falls! But, of
course, there were others more anxious than I that the show go on, and the gap
was filled. Another point was raised that night—how many people would be killed
by showing the wrong techniques and attitudes? I won few friends but made my
point. That was the last official meeting, and our after-dinners were
undisturbed in the future.
Swept
by stone fall, the ice fields on the Eigerwand are not places to hang around,
and the second-unit director, Norman Dyhrenfurth, from previous experience,
pointed us at the perfectly safe north face of the Mathildaspitz, a small
peaklet adjacent to the easily accessible Jungfraujoch just west of the Eiger,
to which we could ride the train.
Here we shot the ice-field sequences. As is
obvious, Eastwood was no ice climber and is merely changing position—he was
filmed only in static close-up while all movement takes were doubled by the
elegantly moving Martin Boysen or myself.
Luckily throughout the shooting here,
the incongruous distance of green hills was obscured by constant poor weather.
I was relegated to other duties
off camera. And so the film rolled. Two days later, at nightfall, we flew to a
cliff high on the Eiger’s west ridge. The body of one of the team hung
jackknifed in space, suspended from the anchor rope. My mind could barely
register, for it was all too real. There was nothing we could do. His dreams of
a Scottish Highland cottage were forever gone. In climbing there are too many
scenes that you can’t retake. We had spent two days rigging and shooting the
most difficult part of the film: “Stonefall hits climber who is held on rope
and then pulled onto ledge. Climber ultimately dies.” All had gone well and the
final scene (plastic rocks being dropped from above) had been shot when a real
rock did its job. Result: one dead real climber and one bruised cameraman.
We all know one thing—climbing is
very real and Hollywood is fantasy. You can’t forget that and stay alive. I had
been standing beside my now-dead friend 20 minutes before it happened and, as I
was no longer needed, excused myself and jumared to the waiting helicopter. It
was the second-spookiest place I have ever been. They say that the show must go
on and it did. After a few days grace and the miraculous appearance of a
special $100,000 insurance policy, we were back at it—bivouac scenes, ice
climbing, rock climbing, and day-for-night shots with knives flickering in the
moonlight as they silently slit ropes (oh, sacred ropes). But the heights of
absurdity and black humor had yet to be plumbed, and several days were spent
doing the “body-hauling scene.” Bidet, the body, was not real and became a
silent companion. The humour was that a rope continually oozed real blood on
wet snow. No one ever considered replacing it.
The
crux of filming was the Big Fall where everyone dies but Eastwood, and his
subsequent rescue a la Toni Kurz. Masterminded by Hamish MacInnes, the famed
Scottish mountaineer and "Fox of Glencoe," the scene was shot on the
Eiger North Face itself. Winched by chopper into a tiny eyrie overlooking the
Rote Fluh on the Eiger’s North Face, we rigged an alloy ladder out into space.
We then dropped three kapock-stuffed climbers from the ladder, to freefall some
1,000 feet, hoping first unit’s camera was running in the meadows below the
wall. Then it was Eastwood’s turn. No wonder he looks gripped. Haston
re-checked the ropes and knots and Eastwood tightened his Whillans harness
around his crotch before swinging out to the ladder’s end and lowering some 20
feet into space.
Finally we reached the
“body-discovered scene.” The makeup man outdid himself and created a frozen,
putrid, and mutilated corpse. We all remember Longhi, Sedlmayer and Mehringer
and so, it seems, did the scriptwriter.
Ironically, someone commented
that the movie had lost all contact with reality. Finally, there was the
dramatic leap, the three-thousander down the face—the ultimate peel. Even my
California cousins balked at this, and so three dummies were enlisted. Footage
from cameras thrown over the edge and from several dozen other falls should
make a heart- stopping climax. There was some climbing for fillers. The
Shattered Pillar was never touched, although it offered, to me, the finest
camera angles for climbing. The actors did most of their paces themselves on an
assortment of cliffs and boulders. Several more serious moves were recorded with
stunt men in “doubling gear,” but they should not consume too much of the
public’s time.
So if that’s the film, then what
of the people? A mixture and, surprisingly, a pleasant one. The First Assistant
Director liked the mountains, hiked with his wife and took some pleasure in
learning a little technical climbing. He was always helpful and a joy to be
with.
So
Eastwood’s character Hemlock is dangling on his climbing rope, but through the
magic of Hollywood a rescue party has instantly gotten a line up to him. He
must now cut his own rope, plunge into space and (more magic) be swung into the
Gallery Window on the rescuers’ line. Hanging in space on his taut climbing
rope, Eastwood took in the rescue line with enough slack to plunge out of shot,
sagged back into fallen-climber mode, ordered, "Action!" and cut the
rope suspending him. A strangulated scream followed. The slack rope jerked
taut. The ladder shook violently. Eastwood bounced in space 30 feet below us.
"Arr ye olright, Clint?" shouted MacInnes. A rather high-pitched
answer drifted up: "Say, guys, on which side does the Whillans
dress?" Thus, Clint Eastwood earned our great respect. He was a brave man
and a true professional, not just a Hollywood dilettante. He ordered a repeat
performance just to make sure, but this time with his Whillans harness adjusted
very, very carefully. Cut now to the Gallery Window, where Hemlock falls into
shot and hangs there awaiting rescue.
The Chief Cameraman made it 50
feet off the ground for the day- for-night shot and must have discovered more
than camera angles. Perhaps it was the sunny weather, the meadows, the cowbells
and the light on the Jungfrau, for that night he ecstatically thanked us for
the finest day of his life. George Kennedy could not leave Scheidegg soon
enough, although he was always most personable. He knew that mountains were for
mountaineers, and that he was an actor (a good one, the best in the group).
Jean-Pierre Bernard had the roles straight and did a fine job for the cameras.
He knew that climbing is for climbers, and every day on the mountain was a test
for him. Anyway, who wants to play a cuckolded, middle-aged has-been who gets
bonked on the head and then dragged all over the mountain?
Michael Grimm showed the most
climbing aptitude and has moved to Austria, where he hikes and skis with his
family. Perhaps he is a little too weak on his lines, but climbers never were
much for words. And Reiner, 6-foot-5 Reiner. Well, he lives every role he
plays, so who knows?
Finally, there’s Clint, .44
Magnum traded for an ice axe. Eastwood, like the character he played, was
willing to take his chances with the Eiger. They both lived through it, but not
because of their own doing. Perhaps the gods look out for those without
consciences, but who try. He’s got a lot more nerve and energy than I have, but
I would not trade places. Through it all, the parade of Eiger candidates passed
by. Messner and Habeler made their astounding 10-hour ascent. Roskelley and
Kopczynski came and went as most, unnoticed. I played on the fringes,
vacillating between guilt and despair. In late September the mountain was left
to itself, and the party went home.
Who knows what will end up on the
cutting-room floor and what will make the screen? It is unlikely, but there may
be some taste shown in the editing. One thing is certain—this summer Eastwood
will again be the North American idol, and the fellows who climbed the face for
real will go unheralded. But perhaps that is the way it should be. And for the
future, another film is being discussed. It will be on the life of Gary
Hemming. Perhaps if the folks from Hollywood look closely enough into that life
and themselves, they may realise why he blew his brains out.
"There comes a time in some
movies when sheer spectacle overwhelms any consideration of plot, and Clint
Eastwood's 'The Eiger Sanction' is a movie like that," wrote the movie
critic Roger Ebert in 1975.
Indeed, while the story was silly, the movie did
well at the box office thanks to the efforts of the real climbers who provided
the spectacular camera angles, took the risks and provided Eastwood with
advice, which was usually implemented. While we were busy filming, Messner and
Habeler zoomed up the 1938 Route in the then-record time of just 10 hours. They
could hardly avoid passing our hotel at Kleine Scheidegg on the way down, and
of course, they were well entertained. There was great camaraderie up there at
Kleine Scheidegg; we all mucked in. The Hollywood boys were delighted to escape
from the clutches of the film and actors' unions—all the bit parts were played
by technicians or climbers, even by me. The first casualty occurred before we
started filming, when the renowned first-unit cameraman, hardly an outdoor
type, was rushed down to the hospital with ... surely not altitude sickness?
And there he stayed for the duration, though the critics later applauded him
for our work.
There was a twist in my own tale
when, after the filming wrapped, I tripped on a curb outside our Zurich hotel
on the way to the airport and home, and tore a ligament in my knee. Ironically
I was insured up to the point of stepping out of the hotel. I had to be
wheelchaired to the airplane. —John Cleare, 2017
After “The Eiger Sanction,” Chic
Scott continued to climb and guide, notably in the Mount Logan region. In the
early 1990s he began writing ski guidebooks, climbing and ski histories, and
biographies. He has lectured extensively on mountain themes.
John Cleare continued in
photography, lectured around the world, edited a climbing magazine, published
40 books, and made dozens of expeditions on six continents.
Left
to right: Eastwood, Reinhold Messner, Heidi Brühl (Mrs. Montaigne), Peter
Habeler, Jean-Pierre Bernard (Montaigne), Reiner Schone (Freytag) and Michael
Grimm (Meyer).
The original feature can be found HERE
Watching the movie now and had to search the filming process. What a fantastic documentation of a once in a lifetime experience. Thanks for that!
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