Himalaya (French: Himalaya: L'Enfance d'un chef) is a 1999 film directed by Eric Valli and was funded through France-based corporations. It was the first Nepalese film to be nominated in the Best Foreign Film category at the 72nd Academy Awards.
Himalaya is a story set against the backdrop of the Nepalese Himalayas. At an altitude of five thousand metres in the remote mountain region of Dolpa, Himalaya is the story of villagers who take a caravan of yaks across the mountains, carrying rock salt from the high plateau down to the lowlands to trade for grain. An annual event, the caravan provides the grain that the villagers depend on to survive the winter. The film unfolds as a story of rivalry based on misunderstanding and distrust, between the aging chief and the young daring herdsman, who is both a friend and a rival to the chief's family, as they struggle for leadership of the caravan.
Characters:
Tinle as elderly village leader
Lhakpa as Tinle's son and present heir
Tserin / Passang asTinle's grandson and future heir
Pema as Lhakpa's wife
Norbou as Tinle's monastic son
Karma as rival leader to the Tinle clan
Himalaya is a story set against the backdrop of the Nepalese Himalayas. At an altitude of five thousand metres in the remote mountain region of Dolpa, Himalaya is the story of villagers who take a caravan of yaks across the mountains, carrying rock salt from the high plateau down to the lowlands to trade for grain. An annual event, the caravan provides the grain that the villagers depend on to survive the winter. The film unfolds as a story of rivalry based on misunderstanding and distrust, between the aging chief and the young daring herdsman, who is both a friend and a rival to the chief's family, as they struggle for leadership of the caravan.
Characters:
Tinle as elderly village leader
Lhakpa as Tinle's son and present heir
Tserin / Passang asTinle's grandson and future heir
Pema as Lhakpa's wife
Norbou as Tinle's monastic son
Karma as rival leader to the Tinle clan