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Matt Hunter in Black Rock, Oregon.
Matt Hunter in Black Rock, Oregon. (Photo: Sterling Lorence)

Nightriders: Mountain Biking Like You鈥檝e Never Seen It Before

The new film from Sweetgrass Productions shows you what it's like to pedal through a rattlesnake-infested desert鈥攊n the middle of the night

Published: 
Matt Hunter in Black Rock, Oregon.
(Photo: Sterling Lorence)

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The guys at 聽may be the world鈥檚 foremost authorities on filming extreme sports in the dark.

Last year, they released Afterglow鈥11 psychedelic minutes of neon-streaked skiers shredding Alaskan wilderness after nightfall. The film the made waves for its beauty (we called it 鈥arguably the most cinematically profound ski movie ever made鈥) and for its technical achievement. Before that, the crew made 聽in the Maldives look easy. The team embarked to dryer climes for its latest release, a mountain bike movie shot in the Utah desert and filmed, in Sweetgrass鈥檚 signature style, after dark.聽

The new movie, dubbed Darklight and slated for a mid-October release, is the second full-length film the team has done with support from Philips, which used footage from Afterglow in ads for its TVs. Although Sweetgrass has focused primarily on ski movies in the past, the film鈥檚 director and producer, Mike Brown and Zac Ramras, respectively, grew up biking together and figured it was time for a change of scenery. In terms of visuals, think LED-covered mountain bikers nailing flips in the foreground and Utah鈥檚 iconic desert plateaus illuminated in the distance.

Watch the full film.

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So how did they do it?

It鈥檚 pretty damn hard to bike through rugged terrain at night, let alone film it. For starters, lighting vast expanses of desert is tricky. When shooting their nighttime ski flick, the team had a couple of advantages: snow is reflective; and for most ski shots, the background is typically limited to the immediate mountain-scape. That meant the filmmakers didn鈥檛 have to light up entire panoramic landscapes to get great shots. 鈥淔or this piece we really wanted to try to push the depth in our images, 鈥 Brown says.聽

鈥淲e鈥檇 be setting up our lights for six hours, then put them on the spot and say its time for you to hit this 40-foot jump at night,鈥 Mike Brown says.

That meant generating four times more light than we saw in Afterglow鈥攕ome 1,500 pounds of lighting equipment had to be hauled into the desert near Lake Powell. Every day, a few hours before sunset, a crew of 15 people loaded 200 different fixtures onto trucks and strategically arranged them in the background of that night鈥檚 planned shoot. They used every conceivable kind of light source available, from 鈥渢hose lights that look like the sun at 8,000 or 9,000 [watts], down to little handheld ones you can place as accent lights to light up rocks,鈥 Ramras says. For every riding shot in the film聽the crew spent an average of about six hours setting up lights and rigs. In total, the shoot took 14 nights.

For pro mountain bikers Graham Agassiz, Matty Miles, and Matt Hunter鈥攖he talent in this one鈥攖he work was no easier. 鈥淚 think skiing is a lot more forgiving, at least if you鈥檙e on soft snow,鈥 Ramras said. 鈥淲ith the bikes, it鈥檚 a lot more critical to really see everything.鈥 The riders had limited time to practice routes, since set-up was so time consuming. They spent most of their days just waiting around. 鈥淚t was almost as much as mental challenge as it was physical,鈥 Brown says. 鈥淲e鈥檇 be setting up our lights for six hours, then put them on the spot and say its time for you to hit this 40-foot jump at night.鈥

After the Utah shoot wrapped, Ramras and Brown took the whole team a thousand miles west for some contrasting shots in the lush forests of Oregon. The crew set up cables through foliage鈥攐cto-copter drones don鈥檛 fly well in dense rainforests鈥攁nd sent high-end RED cameras down them at 40 mph to capture riders tearing through purple and neon-colored shrubbery. The resulting footage is mesmerizing.聽

Despite all the logistical horrors, the biggest problem the team faced had nothing to do with navigating mountain bikes at high speeds through wilderness at night or filming it, Ramras said. One evening, as dozens of workers installed lights across the desert, a rattlesnake bit mountain biker Matt Hunter. 鈥淓veryone stops and freaks out,鈥 Ramras said, 鈥渢hen we had to get him on an ATV to the road, then drive him to the hospital. And then he got life-flighted to a bigger hospital because they didn鈥檛 have enough anti-venom at the local hospital.鈥

鈥淭hat was a hiccup!鈥 Ramras laughed. (Hunter is fine.)聽

Lead Photo: Sterling Lorence

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