Wednesday, 4 May 2011

How do you make a Black Swan by Michael Arribas-Ayllon

The following is a piece written by Michael Arribas-Ayllon and relates to our sciSCREENing of The Black Swan last Thursday.

The Black Swan is a classic narrative of self-destruction and part of a long historical tradition of exploring the boundary between transformation and annihilation. Freudians call this fundamental opposition of life forces Eros (the will to life) and Thanatos (the will to death). The Black Swan is a derivative of a much older story about the struggle of these forces. In fact, it is not the first time the ballet has been used as the setting to dramatise this struggle. The tension of life and death principles and the impossibility of perfection are embodied in the persona of Nina, played by Natalie Portman.

My task is not to diagnose Nina or to offer a moral commentary on the representation of mental illness in this film. Instead, I want to focus on the question I ask in the title of this essay: How do you make a Black Swan? For me, this is a more interesting question than asking: What’s wrong with Nina? We could debate whether Nina suffers from psychosis, we could speculate the causes of her pathology, but the film is not a genre of factual representation. If anything, it is an exaggerated simulation of madness at the ballet. Aronofsky’s Black Swan is essentially a horror movie that uses the setting of the ballet to portray the fragility of female autonomy and the tragedy of perfectionism. In this short essay, I use the film as a thought-device for exploring themes of pathologies of will and transformation of self.

To answer the question How do make a Black Swan? I need two concepts. The concept of ‘power’ maps the web of relations that produce the persona of Nina; the relations in which she is both an object of control and the subject of her own control. The concept of ‘desire’ is also essential to understanding the productivity of the persona who desires perfection, but destroys herself in order to transcend it.

Power and desire is linked to two prominent themes in the film. The first theme is the ‘obsessive’ model of desire, which describes the production of Nina as the eligible White Swan. Here, the film draws on the archetype of the child whose fragility and sexual innocence embodies the qualities of rigid perfection, but not the qualities of the Black Swan. The child cannot embody the permissive desire of the temptress. We have to turn to the figure of the mother, played by Barbara Hershey, to understand the making of this child. Hershey is compelling in bringing to life the controlling, obsessive mother who lives out her own unfulfilled desires through her daughter. She controls her daughter’s body, regularly monitoring for signs of self-destruction, and creates an environment in which Nina never grows up. Surrounded by her fluffy toys and a music box playing Swan Lake, Nina lives in a Peter Pan world of her mother’s fashioning. On occasion, the film gives us reason to think that Hershey’s character is unhinged – depressed, over-protective and fixated on the daughter.

Outside the psychodrama of the mother-daughter relation, the character of Beth, played by Winona Ryder, is also an important projection of Nina’s desires. She represents the brittle object of perfection that descends into annihilation. Beth is the ballerina who has reached the end of the cycle. Once, the princess of the stage, she is discarded by an industry in search of the next princess. For Nina, Beth is the ideal she covets so much that stealing her possessions is the means of embodying her perfection; coveting the image of perfection is the child’s technique of identification. In the obsessive model of desire, we understand the making of the White Swan as the product of an obsessive mother unable to fulfil her own desires on the stage and the productivity of the obsessive child who covets the same image of perfection.

The second theme is the ‘dissociative’ model of desire, which describes the mechanism for becoming the Black Swan, the possibility of which resides in the sexually mature and sophisticated double we see in the early sequences of the film. The figure of the double is what Jung calls the alter ego (the shadow), the autonomous phantasm of the spilt self, which Nina cannot consciously reconcile as part of herself. The double is part of a different map of relations that facilitate Nina’s transformation from White to Black Swan. The figure of Tomas, the Director, plays the dominant sexual male who sees only the White Swan in Nina, but gives her the lead role after she bites him (‘I can’t believe you bit me’). Like the figure of the mother, Tomas also controls Nina’s body, but does so to subvert the frigid autonomy created by the mother. The figure of Lilly is also central as the adversary, the persona who threatens to usurp her role. She is the perfect embodiment of the Black Swan – sexual freedom and maturity – but lacks the discipline of the White Swan. Both Lilly and Tomas are devices that actively seek to stimulate and augment Nina’s sexual desire.

The theme of dissociation becomes more prominent in the second half of the film as Nina struggles to embody the role of the Black Swan. What seems to drive this process of dissociation is the emerging sexuality of the alter ego, the violent struggle between the child and the temptress. The transformation from White to Black Swan is facilitated by a series of negations: the negation of the mother, Beth, Lilly, and finally, herself. In the ensuing struggle between mother and daughter, Nina resorts to various strategies to resist the mother’s control and to hide the signs of her impending transformation. As her delusions become more prominent, Nina is also confronted by the destruction of perfection, the horribly disfigured body of Beth that transforms into her monstrous double. The Black Swan destroys Nina’s image of perfection. In the final moments of the film, the negation of Lilly represents the final obstacle in her passage to becoming the Black Swan. The real tragedy of this film is the awful realisation that she has destroyed not Lilly, but herself.

Aside from all the clichés that deliberately intensify the horror and confusion between reality and delusion, the most compelling moment of the film is when Nina literally transforms into the Black Swan. Becoming the Black Swan is itself an archetype of transformation; the monstrosity of the child that becomes a swan, the performer that transcends perfection to achieve excellence, is both a tragedy and a triumph. It is here that we are confronted by a fundamental ambivalence about what value we should give this monstrous transformation of the self. It lends itself to two different orientations, one being moral and the other being amoral. The moral reading sees only a tragedy in which the pathologies of will, the sins of the mother and the pressures of the stage are lamentable factors in the production of Nina’s madness. The amoral reading attends to the productivity of this tension between life and death, between transformation and annihilation. The Black Swan, like the birth of tragedy in the Greek tradition, invites us to look into the abyss of human suffering in order to affirm our existence, and to explore the ecstasy and terrifying possibilities of what we can become.

Ballet Fiction by Amy Doughty

The following is a piece written by Amy Doughty and relates to our sciSCREENing of The Black Swan on April 14th.

I was a dancer with Ballet Cymru for 13 years. I am now assistant artistic director of the company and am responsible for the training and maintenance of all the professional dancers employed by the company. During my dancing career I danced many leading roles with the company, sustained and recovered from injuries, had an operation to remove a bone spur from my foot, forgot steps on stage, been dropped from lifts, tore and split costumes, put on weight, lost weight, worked with interesting and dynamic choreographers, and overall had a very full and exciting professional ballet dancing career.

As a film to watch for pleasure, I enjoyed Black Swan. As a film to watch for accuracy of the ballet world, it missed the mark. I will always be interested in films which highlight ballet and bring it into the focus of main stream society; however, Black Swan does not accurately depict the profession and, instead, encourages every cliché suspected of the ballet world. The premise of Black Swan could have been placed into any context, be it music, sport, academia etc., In this instance it was placed into the world of ballet but it is not really a film about ballet as such, more about Nina’s state-of-mind, obsession/commitment to her work and her subsequent loss of reality.

In my role as assistant artistic director with Ballet Cymru I endeavour to break down the myths and stereotypes which surround the ballet world and its dancers. In contrast to this, Darren Aronofsky pumps up themes of the ballet industry for dramatic effect and so consequently it becomes more a fantasy film involving an interpretation of ballet. For me, this is particularly highlighted in the casting of Natalie Portman in the role of Nina, a Hollywood actress, rather than casting an actual trained ballet dancer. I cannot help comparing Black Swan to The Red Shoes in which Moyra Sheera, a trained ballet dancer, plays the lead role. Though the plot line of The Red Shoes, as in most ballet films I have seen to date, is far reaching and bear little relation to the ballet profession, I do applaud a film which casts an actual dancer over a Hollywood starlet in a so-called ballet film. I consider Mao’s Last Dancer, an autobiographical novel and recently released film based on the life of dancer Li Cunxin, as an accurate dance film, not only because it is the story of Li’s life and his career in the world of ballet, but because it is cast using dancers of The Australian Ballet Company and Birmingham Royal Ballet Company. For this reason Mao’s Last Dancer has authenticity.

So, Black Swan is not a realistic take on the ballet world, however, there are elements of truth contained within it. The ballet world is a very hard industry. It relies heavily on image and the body, on physical prowess, technique, training and a very strong sense of will and determination. It is a short career with far too few jobs available and for this reason it is extremely competitive. Because of this, dancers tend to be very driven, focused and the outside world can, at times, become something a dancer does not always engage with (to a certain extent). In this respect the film does portray the anxieties and insecurities felt as a dancer is striving to earn her place in a company and be promoted to dance bigger roles. This is, however, exaggerated for dramatic effect by things such as the broken toe nails. In this instance we see the toe nail break and Nina gasp in pain; however, she continues to work en pointe with no further side affect or consequence. In reality this would affect her working en pointe for at least a week due to the injury needing to heal in order to bear the body’s entire weight. The teddy bears on her bed are another example, suggesting a Peter Pan type immaturity and sexual repression. To symbolise the developing fractures in her personality she stuffs her teddies in the rubbish and snaps the spinning ballerina in her jewellery box which had previously lulled her to sleep with tunes from Swan Lake, the ballet which ultimately destroys her. Her commitment with her training and the role of the Black Swan comes at the detriment of making friendships in the company and her idolisation of Beth, who unravels to the point of suicide, becomes another obsession Nina cannot control.

Indeed, Nina’s conflicts, reliance and unhealthy relationship with her pushy ballet mother is demonstrated in her mother’s obsession with Nina’s working and private life, her paintings of Nina, and Nina’s inability to sever herself from her controlling mother. Only through physical pain such as trapping her mother’s fingers in the door and Nina taking her own life can Nina finally sever ties with her mother. Nina’s eating is the one thing she can control and she does this through bulimia. This is done almost in defiance of her mother and Thomas who control every other aspect of her life.

There is some accuracy in the way Thomas pushes his dancers in different ways to produce different results from them but to show him as a sexual predator was highly dramatised. In reality, dancers are protected from this kind of treatment just as individuals are in any other type of work environment with policies, procedures, and good management. There are elements of truth in the way Nina attempts to find the resources to help in her interpretation and connection to the role of Black Swan. Her innocence and purity makes her a natural White Swan yet she knows to dance a convincing Black Swan she needs to find a way to access a darker, or more adventurous side to her personality - a side which has been suppressed. She does this through the exploration of her sexuality, of experimenting with drugs, and through defying her mother. In the end Nina discovers power, both in relation to her mother and with Thomas, and emerges as someone who is finally able to take control of her own life. Unfortunately this comes at the detriment of her existence - once this is realised it is too late to save her.

In truth, Black Swan is a Hollywood version based on observations of the ballet world from an outsider’s point-of-view and taken to the extreme. I doubt Aronofsky’s main concern was to produce a completely realistic film depicting the ballet world, or about psychosis for that matter. His intention was to create a film which would be entertaining and thrilling and perhaps give insight into these areas but ultimately with an Oscar in sight, not realism. While Black Swan did not dispel any myths about the ballet world I cannot deny there are fragments of truth displayed throughout the film. It was a convincing portrayal for the outside world but in reality it was all fantasy and cliché.

Monday, 18 April 2011

A Travel Beyond the Himalayas: Mustang # 3!

d':tf¨ efu —­#

A view of Himalayas as seen from the Pokhara Airport


I got to capture these stunning Himalayas from Plane

hf]d;f]d} ahf/df !@ ah] xfjf ;// .
P xh'/ 3/ xfd|f] kf]v/f, cEfm} ;Dd ef5}g 3/af/ ..
(Jomsome, air blows 12.00 noon;
Hey, we are from Pokhara and still unmarried!!) 

This is a rhyme of one famous Nepali song (by Nepathya) echoing on and striking me when I was about to step down from Sita Airlines’ Twin Otter (spell?) plane for the first time in Jomsome Bazzar. As in song, it was extremely windy. The wind blowing from south to north was such a strong that it was very difficult for everyone to handle their bags and move smoothlyL. But walking along the air current was super easy and effortless!
Landed Safely :)... Jomsome Airport and Mt. Nilgiri on the background
The journey was highly remarkable for me! I had to struggle to fly. Due to the fluctuating weather flights were cancelled for two days. Even in third day weather was not so good but the captain dared to fly, and thanks GOD for safe landingJ. That was the only flight taken that day. If I would not have gotten chance to fly on that plane I would have to wait for another day. So, I must thank a guy (I’m sorry, I forget his name) from SITA Air who was highly generous to provide me room on first flight even there was a long queue of foreign tourist who were paying way more in US$ for the ticket.

See the arid landscapes of Mustang and a suspension bridge above  Kaligandaki River
Although very dry and arid, landscapes were carved in such a way that everyone could easily lost within the beauty of Mustang. And, I was super excited to travel beyond the Himalayas. The only problem I had was being late by 2 days to conduct research. My research partner Mr. Gabe Stutman (from Washington DC, USA), who was already in Muktinath temple, was counting every minute for my arrival. And, It is totally understandable that how terrible time everyone finds to wait someone not even for a couple of hours but for three days! I am sorry my friend (d]/f] ;fyL u]j dnfO{ dfkm ug'{xf];\ .) ! 

Though it was super windy I decided to leave for Jharkot where everyone was waiting me. We had a team of 8 students (4 Nepali and 4 Americans) from CNSP (Cornell Nepal Study Program) looking at four different aspects in Mustang. As a part of regular courses of CNSP our American friends were there for their research and we (Nepali students) were assisting them.

The Jharkot Village
When I got into Hotel Plazza in Jharkot around 6:00 pm I was completely exhausted. I didn’t see anything on the store but just the Fanta! Wow J I didn’t have to wait for second round to finish half liter fanta. Now I could see who were there; almost all except Paul and Gabe! I came to know that Paul is staying with Amchi and Gabe is in Ranipauwa - Muktinath.
 
Winter season; Mustang region; evening time; very tired; how would you feel if you take shower using freezing water? Though shivering with almost frozen fingers, I was feeling refreshed! Cold but clean! Great time for coffee.

See few more snaps on the way to Jharkot:

Mustang valley: Kaligandaki River gorge

Plants coping with aridity
Salix were the only trees I saw with leaves

The Destruction of Divas by Paul Atkinson

The following is a piece written by Paul Atkinson and relates to our sciSCREENing of The Black Swan last Thursday.

I do not intend to talk a great deal about the film itself – we are not here to be amateur film critics, but to sketch a few points of cultural comparison, in order to put the film in a particular kind of context. My remarks are derived from opera and ballet, two performance genres that share many mythological characteristics. I do so because it seems to me that Black Swan works – insofar as it does work – by weaving together some well-worn narrative themes.

Opera and ballet share a common characteristic in that they are often portrayed as excessive. They transcend the bounds of normality, and can become not merely unusual forms of expression, but abnormal and unnatural as well. Their characters and their performers alike can be portrayed as monstrous – albeit as ‘sacred monsters’. So too can their presiding geniuses (such as Diaghilev).

The leading lady, the prima donna or the prima donna assoluta, is especially susceptible to monstrosity. One needs to think, for instance, only of the mythologised life of someone like Maria Callas. Exceeding the bounds of normal performance and normal behaviour, they are transformed into something ‘other’. At the same time, they are readily portrayed as victims, usually victims of a manipulative and potentially malevolent male figure. Think of Trilby and Svengali, or Christine and the Phantom of the Opera. These fictional narrative depend on the image of the (female) performer achieving perfection as a kind of hypnotically-induced hysteria.

These divas can, therefore, be consumed in the perfection of their art, and are destroyed in the very act of performing. Let us return to film. The film antecedent of Black Swan is Red Shoes (Powell and Pressburger). In many ways this was the better film. By casting Moira Shearer, a dancer, in the lead, the directors were able to make dance itself a more vivid part of the narrative. They had fragments of a ballet, based on the Andersen story of the Red Shows, created for the film. (By contrast Black Swan has some pretty jejune shots of what actually seems to be a very traditional version of Swan Lake). The ballet and the film’s characters’ lives are intertwined. The ballerina is driven (by the red shoes themselves, by the impasse of her emotional life) to throw herself to a death.

This is a sort of Liebestod – a consummation of oblivion. The self-immolation of the dancer or the singer thus parallels the mythical, sacrificial destruction of the heroine in opera and ballet’s tragedies. Interestingly, there is an interesting parallel her in another of the Powell and Pressburger films – their version of Offenbach’s opera The Tales of Hoffmann (which had performers in common with Red Shoes, including Moira Shearer and Robert Helpman). In a series of episodes, a series of failed loves are recounted. In the first, the hero encounters Olympia, who turns out to be a mechanical doll, created and then destroyed as she dances, by Dr Coppelius. In the second, he finds Antonina, who (the reasons need not detain us) must not sing, but under the influence of Dr Miracle, she sings herself to death.

To return to Black Swan, then, it draws on all of these, and other recurrent themes. It is thus part of a mythology of the performing arts, in which obsession, hysteria and excess drive the (female) performer, in which the (male) manipulator leads towards a destructive impulse, and in which there can be a sort of resolution in art-death.

Wednesday, 6 April 2011

Black Swan sciSCREEN - Thursday 14th April

The next Cardiff sciSCREEN is Black Swan on Thursday the 14th April at 6.15pm at Chapter.

Black Swan is a psychological thriller from Darren Aronofsky, director of Pi, Requiem for a Dream, and The Wrestler. The film was nominated for several Academy Awards, with Natalie Portman winning the Best Actress Oscar for her portrayal of Nina. The film takes viewers on a journey through Nina’s mental disintegration as she competes with a rival dancer during a production of Swan Lake. This screening will be followed by a sciSCREEN event, sponsored by the MRC Centre for Neuropsychiatric Genetics and Genomics. After the film there will be a wine reception and panel discussion in which academics and other experts - including a member of Ballet Cymru - will use this film to explore ideas such as the causes of psychosis and the nature of experience, the subjection of women’s bodies, the portrayal of the world of ballet, and the mythology of the 'diva'.


Apologies: as this is the official trailer, it is, in turn, preceeded by a mini-trailer.

As this film is being screened in the smaller of the Chapter cinemas, advance booking is advised. Tickets can be booked over the phone (029 2030 4400) or via the Chapter website. Entry to the post-film sciSCREEN event is free, though space is limited.

The speakers for the event are:

Tuesday, 5 April 2011

Recognising the relationships between donors and their recipients: The missing ‘others’ in Never Let Me Go.

The following is a personal piece written by BD, a member of Cesagen, which relates to our sciSCREENing of Never Let Me Go.


Never Let Me Go followed the lives of a group of ‘donors’ as they carried out their everyday, routine and mundane existence. Whether one thought the film dull or harrowing, it certainly prompted reflection of one’s own mortality and for me this meant thinking about my personal experience of being a recipient of a transplanted organ. From this position, my main criticism of the film was that it ignored any relationship between donor and recipient, and the value that this relationship might have for both parties.

One issue raised during the sciSCREEN discussion was why the children/young adults did not question their fate or attempt to run away (this is explored by Dr Mellor in his commentary on voluntary servitude). The discussion considered the possibilities of social conditioning, drugs that made the donors compliant, isolation and reduced possibilities for collective rebellion. Yet their lack of rebellion might also be explained by their implicit relationships, based on promise and expectation, with the potential recipients.

I was born with Cystic Fibrosis and during my teenage years my health had deteriorated to such an extent that I was on oxygen 24 hours a day and had to be fed through a tube in my stomach. My heart and lung transplant in 1996 (at the age of 23) brought with it a new life and I continued my studies, moved out of my family home and began living independently. Relationships between the recipient and the donor or donor family were not encouraged within my clinic but I was able to make contact, and therefore my experience might be very different to most. I have met and kept in touch with the family of the young boy who lost his life and from whom I received my new heart and lungs, as well as the man who received my own heart.

Although my heart was healthy, the heart and lungs were easier to transplant as a package rather than negotiate the complex web of nerves that links the two. I was therefore involved in a ‘domino transplant’ which meant that as I received my new heart and lungs, my own heart was given to someone else. While I was in theatre, my family began talking to another family in the waiting room whose relative was having a heart transplant. It soon became apparent that this was the wife and two sons of the recipient of my heart. During recuperation, my family brought me news of this stranger’s progress, and when I was well enough to leave my room I went to meet him and we stayed in touch until he passed away 10 years later.

In contrast to the opportunistic meeting with my ‘heart man’, it was my mother who had purposefully sought contact with my donor family in the desire to thank them and to provide them with news of my good health. She was told that she could write an anonymous letter that would be sent to the donor’s family if and when they requested contact. Despite these rules, my mother included her own address and within days had received a response. Through this letter I found out that my donor was a 15 year old boy who had been knocked down while crossing the road on his way to school. His mother sent me a photograph of a handsome and strong boy who was good at sport and had many friends. His mother and father visited some months later, and we even appeared on Richard and Judy together (Judy was ill on the day so Caron Keating took her place).

For a recipient, the relationship between donor or donor family can be extremely difficult. I have known people refuse to have a transplant because they cannot cope with the fact that they might benefit from another person’s death. In fact, very few people I know who have had a transplant have met their donor families or even know anything about their donor. Every milestone, such as surviving the first month and celebrating the first, fifth and tenth years, were a reminder of the different fortunes of our two families, yet the contact with my donor family has been really important in making sense of my new life. If a transplant is considered a ‘gift’ (Richard Titmus, 1970) then for my family and I it was important to say thank you.

Developments in medical technology might lead to an increasingly significant relationship between donor and recipient. Saviour siblings (where embryos are selected to be a genetically identical match for an ill child) and living donors (where relatives or even strangers might agree to donate an organ such as a kidney or part of their lung) have the potential to transform existing relationships. Yet the invisibility of the donor recipients in this film is not surprising. Never Let Me Go could be characterised by a distinct lack of ‘others’. Hospital wards were empty, the bleak countryside was unpopulated and even a normally bustling sea front appeared deserted. While this served to emphasise the isolation felt by this group, an opportunity to explore this unique relationship has, in my opinion, been missed.

Saturday, 2 April 2011

A Travel Beyond the Himalayas: Mustang # 2!

Major Routes:
Mustang is one of the major tourist destinations of Nepal. Many people visit the area not only to experience local culture and enjoy scenic beauty but also to understand the religious mutualism – which is being exemplified by the Holy Muktinath Temple. Thousands of National as well as foreign (mainly Indians) Hindu people visits this temple as a pilgrim. There are many things to talk about the Mythology, beliefs and other important aspects of Mustang and Muktinath Temple as well. Which I think is better if it is dealt details of each site separately. So, for now let’s starts with Major Route to Mustang in an order of shortest to Longest:-
Map showing the Route 1: the green line
 Route 1: Pokhara – Jomsome – Muktinath (the shortest one!)
Area: Mustang, Nepal
Type of tour: Eco-cultural/Pilgrimage
Difficulty: Easy
Hotel Facility: Available; Average - Standard
Trip Costs: US$50 - 150 per day per persons (foreign tourists) + Flight charge: US$ 160 - 200
NRs.1500 – NRs.3500 per day per persons (national tourists) + Flight Charge: NRs. 4000/7000
Maximum Elevation: 3850 meter average sea level
Season: Almost every season
Duration: 4 days
Day 1: Fly from Pokhara to Jomsom (15 minutes flight) and trek to Kegbeni (2 hrs.)
Day 2: Kagbeni to Muktinath (4 hrs.)
Day 3: Muktinath to Jomsom (5 hrs.)
Day 4: Fly from Jomsom to Pokhara (15 minutes flight)

Route 2: Pokhara – Beni – Tatopani – Jomsome – Muktinath
Area: Mustang, Nepal
Type of tour: Eco-cultural/Geographical/Pilgrimage
Difficulty: Medium
Hotel Facility: Available; Average - Standard
Trip Costs: US$50 - 150 per day per persons (foreign tourists) + Flight charge: US$ 80 - 100
NRs.1500 – NRs.3500 per day per persons (national tourists) + Flight Charge: NRs. 2000/3500
Maximum Elevation: 3850 meter average sea level
Season: September – October
Duration: 8 days
Day 1: Drive from Pokhara to Beni
Day 2: Beni to Tatopani
Day 3: Tatopani to Kalopani
Day 4: Kalopani to Jomsom via. Marpha (the delightful apple kingdom of Nepal)
Day 5: Jomsom to Kagbeni
Day 6: Kagbeni to Muktinath
Day 7: Muktinath to Jomsom
Day 8: Fly from Jomsom to Pokhara
Map Showing Route 2 (the green line) and Route 3 (the red + green then after): I apologies for poor quality oblique map!
Route 3: Pokhara – Ghorepani – Tatopani – Jomsome – Muktinath
Area: Mustang, Nepal
Type of tour: Eco-cultural/Pilgrimage
Difficulty: Strenuous
Hotel Facility: Available; Average - Standard
Trip Costs: US$50 - 150 per day per persons (foreign tourists) + Flight charge: US$ 80 - 100
NRs.1500 – 3500 per day per persons (national tourists) + Flight Charge: NRs. 2000/3500
Maximum Elevation: 3850 meter average sea level
Season: March – April and September – October
Duration: 10 days
Day 1: Drive from Pokhara to Birethanti
Day 2: Birethanti to Ulleri
Day 3: Ulleri to Ghorapani (to Pun Hill as well)
Day 4: Ghorapani to Tatopani
Day 5: Tatopani to Kalopani
Day 6: Kalopani to Jomsom
Day 7: Jomsom to Kagbeni
Day 8: Kagbeni to Muktinath
Day 9: Muktinath to Jomsom
Day 10: Fly from Jomsom to Pokhara

Route 4: Pokhara – Dumre (Tanahu) – Besisahar (Lamjung) – Chame – Manang – Thorang Phedi – Thorang-La – Muktinath: The Annapurna Circuit trek - longest one! This takes 2 weeks to get back to Pokhara after a complete circle, but it is still worthy to enjoy the vastness of Himalayas.
Area: Manang and Mustang, Nepal
Type of tour: Ecological – Cultural – Geographical
Difficulty: Strenuous /Tough
Hotel Facility: Available; Average - Standard
Trip Costs: US$75 - 200 per day per persons (foreign tourists) + Flight charge: US$ 80 - 100
NRs.1500 – NRs.3500 per day per persons (national tourists) + Flight Charge: NRs. 2000/3500
Maximum Elevation: 5416 meter average sea level
Temperature: Goes below freezing during Thorang-La cross
Season: March – April and September – October
Duration: 10 days
Day 1: Drive from Pokhara to Beshisahar (5 hrs.)
Day 2: Beshisahar to Bahaundanda (5.75 hrs.)
Day 3: Bahaundanda to Jagat (4.5 hrs.)
Day 4: Jagat to Dharapani (5 hrs.)
Day 5: Dharapani to Chame (4.75 hrs.)
Day 6: Chame to Pisang (4. 5 hrs.)
Day 7: Pisang to Braga/Manang (3.5/4 hrs.)
Day 8: Manang Rest day (Hike to Icelake)
Day 9: Manang to Ledar (3.5 hrs.)
Day 10: Ledar to Thorangla Phedi/High Camp (3/4.5 hrs.)
Day 11: Thorangla Phedi/High Camp to Muktinath (8 to 10 hrs.)
Day 12: Muktinath to Kagbeni via Jhong (3 hrs.)
Day 13: Kagbeni to Jomsom (2 hrs.)
Day 14: Fly from Jomsom to Pokhara (15 minutes)