Far Beyond the Pasturelands

Far Beyond the Pasturelands (French: Au-delà des hautes vallées) is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Maude Plante-Husaruk and Maxime Lacoste-Lebuis and released in 2021.[1] The film centres on a small rural village in Nepal, whose residents support themselves by foraging for yarsagumba, a rare but highly valuable fungus that grows out of the decomposing bodies of dead caterpillars in Nepal and Tibet.[2] The film highlights both the economic exploitation of the villagers, who are paid just a few dollars for their harvest even though the dealer can sell it for over $18,000 per kilogram at market, and the unsustainable overharvesting that threatens to destroy the entire supply chain.[3] The film premiered at the 2021 Montreal International Documentary Festival,[4] before going into wider commercial release in 2022.This article related to a Canadian documentary film of the 2020s is a stub.
FrenchMaude Plante-HusarukMaxime Lacoste-LebuisyarsagumbaMontreal International Documentary FestivalPrix IrisDecember 10, 2023Best Cinematography in a DocumentaryBest Original Music in a DocumentaryBest Sound in a DocumentaryPoint of ViewPlaybackLe DevoirQuebec