For over after hour, they dangled on the edge, their lives in grave jeopardy: six school kids and two adults stranded in a cable car suspended 900 feet above the ground. The unfolding drama in a remote section of Northern Pakistan in August 2023 seized the world’s attention as rescuers tried to save the trapped passengers from impending doom.
The tension and emotion of that day and night are captured in the documentary Hanging By a Wire, which premieres Thursday, the opening day of the Sundance Film Festival. Emmy-nominated filmmaker Mohammed Ali Naqvi directs, writes, and produces the film, screening in World Cinema Documentary competition.
We have your first look at the film in the clip above.
“With the clock ticking and pressure mounting, regional authorities, army commandos, and courageous local community members undertake dramatic risks to save the cable car passengers,” notes the Sundance program. “Fault lines around class emerge in the process, begging the question of whose knowledge and expertise is valued and whose is instead dismissed, as well as why proper transportation infrastructure is lacking in these remote areas. Drawing from up-close drone footage, on-the-ground recordings from the assembled community of onlookers, and skillful reenactments featuring actual participants from the incident, director Mohammed Ali Naqvi constructs a riveting, unforgettable documentary thriller.”
There are “no proper roads” in the area where the incident took place, Naqvi explains in a Meet the Filmmaker video from Sundance. “The way people get around in the mountains is by using makeshift cable cars. And it is so dangerous.” Naqvi adds he got a taste of the perils of the transport system. “During location scouting, I did this stupid thing of taking one.” His Filmmaker video shows him on board one of the cable cars, only a crisscross metal gate separating him from a steep plunge.
The morning of August 22, 2023, six teenagers were taking a cable car to school (a typical mode of travel) with their two fellow passengers when a high-tension coil suddenly snapped. It tipped the car sideways, which easily could have dumped them all out the side. Then began a race against time, as authorities, the military, and locals tried to devise a way to safely offload the passengers before the only remaining cable broke.
“The story is told through the rescuers who only have a few hours” to pull off a miracle, Naqvi comments. “They risk it all to save these kids.”
The filmmaker describes the ad hoc first responders as “a wild, mismatched bunch.” One of them, Sahib Khan, was a local cable car repairman known in his community as a “sky pirate” for his aerial exploits. Another of the rescuers, dashing Ali Swati, combined good looks, big muscles and bravery, plus helpful access to high-quality zipline equipment. Overseeing the operation – and the likely fall person if the mission went awry — was the forceful Sonia Shamroz, “the district’s no-nonsense head of police.”
Naqvi could draw from ample footage – the whole community came out to witness the attempted rescue, many recording the action with cell phones. Someone had a drone which they used to get images from inside the cable car, where the kids were crying, fearing they would not survive.
“The entire rescue played out on live television, online, on the ground, and even from inside the cable car,” Naqvi recounts. “With such rich archive, we knew we had to tell this story with the scale and tension of a Hollywood action thriller, one that just happened to be a documentary.”
EverWonder Studio and Mindhouse co-produced with Universal Pictures Content Group. Mohammed Ali Naqvi directed, producer, and co-wrote the film. Bilal Sami served as produced and co-writer. Cinematography is by Brendan McGinty; Will Grayburn edited the film. Sven Faulconer composed the score. Executive producers include Ian Orefice, Amanda Spain, Jon Adler, Bonnie McGrath, Helen Parker, Nancy Strang, Aloke Devichand, and Arron Fellows.
In addition to Thursday’s world premiere, Hanging By a Wire will screen in Park City on Friday (Jan. 23), as well as Jan. 29 and 30. It screens in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Jan. 24.
Watch a clip from Hanging By a Wire above.
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