Documentary maker Craig Leeson is defying a visceral fear of heights in making a film about an environmental crisis facing the world. He gives Oliver Giles a preview of the project.
Craig Leeson is so scared of heights that he struggles to stand on the balconies of Hong Kong apartment buildings—yet he’s currently planning a trip to Peru during which he is hoping to paraglide off a 6,000-metre mountain. Is he out of his mind?
“I’m not doing it because I enjoy it,” laughs Craig, the director of the award-winning 2016 documentary A Plastic Ocean, which shone a light on the plastic pollution crisis facing our planet. “But I had to get into the mountains so that I could see this for myself and we could film it.”
“It” is the melting of the world’s glaciers, and Craig, who remains a “global evangelist” for the Plastic Oceans Foundation, has swapped his wetsuit for mountaineering gear and has been scaling peaks around the world to film The Last Glaciers, a documentary partly inspired by the adventures of a fellow Hongkonger.
This story is from the August 2018 edition of Hong Kong Tatler.
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This story is from the August 2018 edition of Hong Kong Tatler.
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