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| CATEGORY: | Video |
| DIRECTOR: | Charles Frend |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 20 April, 1949 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Republic Pictures |
| MPAA RATING: | PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| FEATURES: | Color, EP, NTSC |
| TYPE: | Drama, Feature Film-action/Adventure, Movie |
| MEDIA: | VHS Tape |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 017153357530 |
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Customer Reviews of Scott of the Antarctic / Movie
A must for all polar exploration enthusiasts Director Charles Frend showed he could turn real life stories into stirring drama with war films like The Foreman Went to France, and here turned his hand to a different sort of heroism. Whilst the war films showed small victories in what we hoped would prove to be a big victory, Scott Of The Antarctic shows a peculiar sort of victory, that of the human spirit in the midst of failure.
Whilst Scott is held up as a role model to every schoolboy, he was a flawed man, sometimes putting his own vanity and the desire to win above the safety of his crew. The film does not dwell on this, but the shoestring budget and hasty preparations are shown, as are some of Scott's own misgivings. The war had honed Ealing studios' skills in making films in the drama-documentary style and the realism of the sets is to be applauded. Photographs of the hut Scott built look almost identical to that shown on screen and the recreation of the Antarctic on Soundstage 1 in Ealing Studios is a marvel (though some scenes are shot on location in Norway).
The casting is very nice, with square jawed leading men Kenneth More and John Gregson in supporting roles here, James Robertson Justice in an unusually subtle role as Taff Evans and of course John Mills as Scott. The length of Mills's career, spanning from 1932 to date is surely tribute to his acting skills, as well as his amiablity. He isn't the John Gregson type you would necessarily associate with the heroic lead, but a smaller man, more human than super-human, and this probably works better in portraying a man like Scott.
A major contribution to the film's success is the rousing music by Vaughan Williams, which somehow adds a sense of realism and scale to the landscapes. Vaughan Williams cited this score as a particular favourite of his, and it makes a change from the usual Benjamin Frankel music that Ealing employed during this period.
Meticulously researched account of Scott's final expedition
The producers obviously went to great lengths to re-create the final, tragic Scott expedition. Robert F. Scott, Edward (Bill) Wilson, 'Birdie' Bowers, and others are faithfully portrayed by actors who seem to have been selected for their physical resemblance to them. The interior sets obviously were designed from Ponting's photographs, and indeed, many of the scenes in the movie are hauntingly realistic recreations of Ponting's photographs. This film is especially recommended to anyone who has read Scott's diaries, or any of the popular accounts of the expedition. The only caveat is that this version is reproduced in EP mode, with the slight loss of audio and video quality of that process. This is more than compensated for by the low price. A good value, a great movie.