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Pascuales Double-Barrel: Beschen & Czermak in Ultra Slow-Mo

Pascuales Double-Barrel: Noah Beschen and Eimeo Czermak in Ultra Slow-Mo

Noah Beschen’s latest footage from Pascuales is the kind of surf clip that lives somewhere between pure spectacle and a careful exercise in trust. Beschen and Eimeo Czermak link up for a double-barrel run that looks—on first watch—dangerous, cinematic, and borderline impossible to time.

The session was captured on a high-speed Phantom-class camera capable of 4K at roughly 800 fps, the kind of kit that has become a specialty tool in surf cinematography. There’s a small price-note to flag: the camera is referenced at $18,000! Either way, we’re talking Phantom-level hardware, not a consumer rig.

Watch: Noah Beschen — DOUBLE BARREL with Eimeo Czermak (main clip)

Credit: Noah Beschen

Why Pascuales? The Mexican point has a long-reputation as a hollow, fast, right-hand wave that rewards precision. Compared to Pipeline, Pascuales gives photographers and filmmakers room to stage bigger pushes and repeated takes — which is exactly what a slow-motion experiment needs: repeatable sections and predictable peaks.

The footage reads like a study in timing: two surfers staggered inside the same tube, one slightly ahead to take the lip while the second threads the exit—an old-school double-barrel aesthetic updated with 800 fps detail. The slow-motion pullbacks show lip geometry and face compression in a way normal-speed footage simply can’t.

A quick note on safety and context: Eimeo Czermak is no stranger to heavy waves, he suffered a serious back injury at Pipeline earlier in the year… That history adds weight to watching him in a close-quarters scenario like this.

2024 Eimo Czermak injury at Pipeline during Pipe Masters Event

Historical frame of reference

Double-barrels have a lineage in surf lore. The most-cited early example is Mark Richards and Shaun Tomson’s Off The Wall pairing from 1976—textbook cinematic double-barrel territory. More recently, big-wave tow sessions like Nathan Florence and Kai Lenny’s Jaws double-barrel in 2019 show how the concept has migrated into tow-in and big-wave environments. On the performance- and editing-side, contemporary teams (Jack Robinson & John John Florence at The Box, among others) keep refining the visual vocabulary.

Watch: Mark Richards & Shaun Tomson — Off The Wall (1976)

Historical reference — classic double-barrel pairing. Credit: YouTube archival video

Watch: Nathan Florence & Kai Lenny — Jaws Double Barrel (2019)

Recent big-wave double-barrel example. Credit: Red Bull x Kai Lenny & Nathan Florence

Behind the camera

Beschen’s Instagram and Eimeo’s posts offer behind-the-scenes glimpses: rigs, framing rehearsals, and the slow-motion playback that helps the team pick the best timing. These posts don’t lay out every technical detail, but they show the practical side of mounting and testing a high-speed camera in the surf environment.

Noah Beschen — Instagram

Behind-the-scenes

Eimeo Czermak — Instagram

Filmer’s perspective and on-water shots

What this means for surf cinematography

Two things stand out. First, the accessibility of high-frame-rate storytelling is changing what surfers and filmmakers try to capture: micro-details (lip flex, face deformation, spray) become narrative elements. Second, pieces like this show the trade-off between expensive kit and creative payoff. A Phantom-class camera is a real investment, and slow-motion sequences like Beschen’s are the kind of content that can justify that price if they land with editors, brands, or a large YouTube audience.

Final frame

Beschen and Czermak’s Pascuales clip is more than a flex of tech; it’s a measured nod to a long surf tradition. The double-barrel is an old stunt that still looks fresh when delivered thoughtfully—especially when you can slow it down to study the moment where risk and beauty meet.

Steepline Editorial Team
Steepline Editorial Team
About Steepline Magazine: Steepline Magazine is an independent media born in Tahiti and dedicated to global surf and ocean culture. We share stories that connect riders, ocean lovers, and coastal communities — from reef breaks to cold-water lineups. Editorial Team The Steepline Editorial Team curates, translates, and fact-checks news from trusted international sources. Our mission is simple: deliver accurate, inspiring coverage of the surf world — from competitions and profiles to culture, environment, and board innovation. 📬 Contact us: editorial@steeplinemag.com

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