Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Photography
  3. Outdoors
  4. News

Red Bull brought Hollywood to the jungle in ‘Blood Road’ making-of series

Add as a preferred source on Google

Red Bull has released episode three of its making-of series about Blood Road, a film that documents the story of professional mountain bike rider Rebecca Rusch riding across Vietnam in search of the crash site of her father’s plane, who was shot down in the Vietnam War. It is the first feature-length documentary produced entirely in-house by Red Bull Media House. Digital Trends previously spoke with director Nicholas Schrunk about his experience working on the project, and now viewers have the chance to see what it was like working in the jungles, mountains, and caves of Vietnam and Laos along the Ho Chi Minh Trail.

BLOOD ROAD: Behind The Scenes - Hollywood Meets The Jungle

Blood Road was a very unique production for multiple reasons, beyond being the first in-house documentary for Red Bull. “Nobody had done this before,” Schrunk says in the making-of video. “Nobody had taken this type of equipment to the middle of the jungle to document something as ambitious as what Rebecca wanted to do.” That equipment included Red digital cinema cameras, Cooke anamorphic lenses, and tons of support gear, including both small and large drones. Carrying all of it along a 1,200 mile bike ride presented numerous challenges.

BLOOD ROAD: Behind The Scenes – The Cave

Episode one deals primarily with how the crew managed that gear, packing what they needed for the day with them on dirt bikes so they could follow in Rusch’s path. The less critical pieces would be transported by truck to the next meet-up location. Episode two looks at one particularly challenging point in the journey: an 11-kilometer cave in Laos. Some of the local guides wouldn’t even venture into the cave with the crew, for fear that it was haunted by spirits.

Recommended Videos

But the cave also presented complications of a more physical nature. “The problem with shooting in a cave is, of course, there’s no light in it,” Schrunk says. So the crew attached lights to DJI Phantom drones and carefully flew them into the dark, aware of the danger that if a drone crashed, it would likely be lost to the river below.

BLOOD ROAD: Behind The Scenes – Drone Down

In the third episode, while filming aerial shots of a field of bomb craters left over from the war, the crew watches in horror as $75,000 worth of camera equipment spirals toward the ground on a malfunctioning drone. Those shots would be critical to the final production, so naturally tensions ran high as the crew desperately worked to locate the drone’s crash site, adding an interesting parallel to the story they were trying to tell in Blood Road. 

If you haven’t yet seen the film, Blood Road is available now from iTunes, Amazon, Google Play, and Vimeo. It is also screening around the country.

Updated July 25 to include episode three.

Daven Mathies
Daven is a contributing writer to the photography section. He has been with Digital Trends since 2016 and has been writing…
Google releases big v4.0 update for its popular Snapseed editing app on Android
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

After years of sitting on its hands, Google appears to have remembered it owns one of the best photo editing apps on mobile. Snapseed 4.0 is now rolling out to Android, bringing the platform up to speed after a stretch of iOS exclusivity that left Android users watching from the sidelines.

The story starts last June, when Google quietly broke Snapseed out of its long dormancy with a significant 3.0 update for iPhone. It was a surprise move that suggested the company was serious about the app again. Google then confirmed at the start of this year that Android wouldn't be left behind for long, and true to that word, the Play Store listing has now been updated to reflect version 4.0 — skipping straight past 3.0 for Android users and landing both platforms on the same version simultaneously.

Read more
Google Photos gets new editing tools that are all about subtle touch-ups
Google Photos just made your camera roll feel like it came with a makeup artist included, and the results are refreshingly understated.
Google Photos Touch Up feature in action.

Whether it is dark circles from a late night of work, a blemish that showed up uninvited, or something similar that could use additional brightness, Google Photos now has you covered.

Google has officially rolled out a new Touch Up suite inside its Photos app editor, integrating face retouching tools directly into the app for the first time. Previously, such adjustments were only available inside Google’s Camera app at the time of capture. 

Read more
Adobe Firefly AI will let you edit in creative software by just talking your way through it
Adobe's new AI Assistant can now run your entire creative workflow. Yes, all of it.
Adobe Firefly logo on dark background

Adobe has quietly been building something big inside Firefly, its all-in-one creative AI studio. And today, the company is ready to show it off.

Meet Firefly AI Assistant, a conversational tool that lets you describe what you want to create and then handles the execution across Adobe's entire app ecosystem, including Photoshop, Premiere, Lightroom, Express, and Illustrator. 

Read more