In one recovered clip, a Sherpa screams "Joray! Joray!" (Look out!) before the camera flies into a crevasse. The recording continues for 45 seconds in total darkness, picking up the sounds of shifting ice and a man groaning. This is the most difficult genre of to watch—not because of the visual gore, but because of the auditory suggestion of dying alone in a frozen tomb.
For those who want to learn more beyond these core videos, several feature-length documentaries provide deeper context on the history of Everest and the events of 2015. The 2015 film "Everest," directed by Baltasar Kormákur, is a dramatic feature based on the 1996 disaster, which adds further perspective on the climbers' mindset. Documentaries like "Disaster on Everest" (2015) follow a British team's story of survival and rescue on the mountain, and "Nightmare on Everest" uses footage and narration from survivors to tell their story in their own words. These films, along with the raw footage, continue to shape the story of mountaineering's most tragic day. everest 2015 videos
[Video: Everest Avalanche 2015 (Warning: Distressing Footage)] In one recovered clip, a Sherpa screams "Joray