On July 17 or 18, 2006,Jos Antonio DelgadofromVenezueladied a few days after reaching the summit, where he was caught by bad weather for six days and was unable to make his way down. He is the only Venezuelan climber, and one of few Latin Americans, to have reached the summit of fiveeight-thousanders.[35]Part of the expedition and the rescue efforts at base camp were captured on video, as Delgado was the subject of a pilot for a mountaineering television series.[35]Explorart Films, the production company, later developed the project into a feature documentary film calledBeyond the Summit, which was scheduled to be released in South America in January 2008.[36]On July 15, 2008, Italian alpinistKarl Unterkircherfell into a crevasse during an attempt to open a new route to the top with Walter Nones and Simon Kehrer. Unterkircher died, but Kehrer and Nones were rescued by the Pakistani Army.[37]On July 12, 2009, after reaching the summit,South KoreanclimberGo Mi-Youngfell off a cliff on the descent in bad weather in her race to be the first woman to climb all 14 eight-thousanders.[38]On July 15, 2012, Scottish mountaineers Sandy Allan and Rick Allen made the first ascent of Nanga Parbat via the 10-kilometre-long (6mi)