Unlike what people may think, Krakatoa was not the biggest volcanic eruption in history. More than two hundred years ago, on April 10th 1815, Mount Tambora in Eastern Indonesia became a merciless killer. It unleashed the most deadly volcanic eruption in human memory, wiping out at least 117,000 people. And an entire civilization and its language disappeared. But the killing didn’t stop there. It has now been proven that this eruption could have triggered an extraordinary and little known cataclysmic event: worldwide climate change.
Camera | Klaus Kurth | Camera Operator |
Crew | Feline Gerhardt | Production Office Assistant |
Production | Elmar Bartlmae | Producer |
Directing | Florian Breier | Director |
Sound | Jason Gillet | Sound |
Sound | Karol Obara | Music |
Sound | Marvin Baumgartner | Sound |
Production | Ute de Groot | Production Director |
Writing | Florian Breier | Scenario Writer |
Directing | Elmar Bartlmae | Director |
Crew | Corinna Barnstedt | Production Office Assistant |
Camera | Roland Meyer | Camera Operator |
Camera | Rajah Samaroo | Camera Operator |
Sound | André Stahl | Sound |