The world watched with bated breath in August 2023 as a makeshift cable car in Pakistan’s Battagram district snapped, leaving six schoolboys and two adults dangling 900 feet above a jagged mountain valley. Now, Emmy-nominated director Mohammed Ali Naqvi brings that harrowing 15-hour ordeal to the screen in the documentary “Hanging by a Wire.”
Premiering at the 2026 Sundance Film Festival, the film is a “white-knuckle” rescue thriller that explores the intersection of viral spectacle, local heroism, and a systemic infrastructure crisis.
The Anatomy of a Disaster
The documentary wastes no time setting the stakes. Through a mix of never-before-seen drone footage and first-hand accounts, Naqvi recreates the terrifying moment the cables gave way. What makes Hanging by a Wire stand out isn’t just the height—it’s the intimacy.
A local drone operator, whose footage serves as the film’s spine, captures the boys’ faces in jarring close-ups. We see the silent terror of children who have been told that even a single flinch could send the rusted sheet-metal carriage plummeting into the abyss.
Local Heroes vs. The System
One of the most compelling threads of the film is the tension between the official military rescue and the “Sky Pirates”—local villagers who refused to wait for government intervention.
- Sahib Khan: A local native who fearlessly attempted a DIY rescue with nothing but a pulley and raw courage.
- Ali Swati: An aspiring soldier who saw the crisis as a chance to prove his worth to a father who viewed him as a disappointment.
Their mid-air clashes provide the film’s emotional friction, highlighting a deeper subtext: in the remote mountains of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the people have learned that they can only truly rely on one another.
Spectacle and Substance
While the film excels as a thriller—utilizing studio-bound recreations for the pitch-black night sequences—it also poses a haunting question: Would the world have cared if a drone hadn’t been there to film it? Naqvi subtly critiques the “crisis-as-entertainment” cycle, showing how a proactive news anchor like Sumaira Khan (SAMAA TV) had to “kick the authorities into gear” by making the incident a global trending topic.
The Verdict
Hanging by a Wire is a taut, 77-minute experience that delivers the adrenaline of a '90s action movie with the heart of a social documentary. While some critics argue it leans into "spectacle," the film’s true power lies in its celebration of the human spirit under impossible pressure.
