
Survival
Michel Blomgren spends his time in the wilderness, practicing what he calls primitive but comfortable outdoor living. The film follows him as he sets up camp, gathers materials, and demonstrates the skills he has built a reputation sharing with others, from shelter construction to fire-making and food gathering using only what the land provides. Rather than a survival-competition format, the tone here is instructional and unhurried, showing the small decisions and techniques that make extended time outdoors sustainable rather than just possible. Blomgren narrates his own choices as he works, explaining why one method beats another in a given terrain or weather. The camera stays close on his hands and tools, letting the process itself carry the film. It plays as a continuation of earlier material he has released on the same subject, aimed at viewers who want practical outdoor knowledge rather than dramatized peril.