THE EIGER
Kleine Scheidegg Switzerland - 2025
Anthony Bourdain once said “It’s an irritating reality that many places and
events defy description. For a while after, you fumble for words, trying vainly to assemble a private narrative, an explanation, a comfortable way to frame wher...
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THE EIGER
Kleine Scheidegg Switzerland - 2025
Anthony Bourdain once said “It’s an irritating reality that many places and
events defy description. For a while after, you fumble for words, trying vainly to assemble a private narrative, an explanation, a comfortable way to frame where you’ve been and what’s happened. In the end, you’re just happy you were there - with your eyes open - and lived to see it.”
In 1840, the Hotel Bellevue des Alpes opened its doors for business in the fabled
Kleine Scheidegg pass in Switzerland. Sitting proudly at nearly 7,000 feet, with
the notorious Eiger mountain towering above it, this grand old hotel has, for 185
years, offered unparalleled bedroom visuals. Its decor and design have an Agatha
Christie vibe and its location a James Bond one. Anyone with a visual sensibility
recognises immediately that there is nothing remotely normal about this place.
Its existence is testimony to Swiss ambition and engineering prowess eight or nine
generations ago.
I had pondered and iterated for some months as to how to do justice to the location. There were a few easy decisions such as filming in the winter and to position my camera far enough back from the righthand wing of the hotel to give the structure room to breathe and, in so doing, convey a necessary sense of isolation and scale. I knew that the end frame demanded perfect compositional balance.
But delivering a legitimate foreground narrative was more challenging. The north
face of the Eiger has claimed 64 lives since 1937 and is something of a “Holy Grail”
for mountaineers who get a rush from the implicit risk and danger. The setting draws
in risk takers and thrill seekers and that was ultimately the angle I focused on.
I sensed that an old European roulette table would not only play on risk taking
well, but it would also double down on the James Bond vibe that the setting evokes. I
wanted to reinforce the message that is not only a hotel where guests have literally and
metaphorically lived on the edge, but also a destination that attracts those who live fast
paced and glamorous lives.
The missing link in this layered story were
the protagonists and I knew that they would be critical to the whole piece. If they fell
short, the picture would fail. It was that simple. David Gandy is a bankable asset
in any picture, that is why he has been the face of Dolce and Gabbana for so many
years and, for a still camera, there is a very creditable 007 look. Meanwhile, our old
Austrian friend Nadine Leopold - with her femininity, grace and intelligence - adds to
any story.
My sense was always that this vignette needed to be taken as close to twilight as possible; the sense of impending darkness would add drama and certainly complement the styling
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