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The Conquest of the Pole

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Wikipedia article




'The Conquest of the Pole' is a 1912 French silent science fantasy film directed by and starring Georges Mlis. The film, loosely inspired by contemporary events and by Jules Verne's 'Voyages Extraordinaires', follows the comic misadventures of an international group of explorers on an expedition to the North Pole, where they encounter a man-eating frost giant and a dangerous magnetic needle.

The film, one of Mlis's last cinematic works, was released by Path Frres to critical acclaim in France and the United Kingdom, but was a box-office failure and contributed to Mlis's mounting financial difficulties. It continues to be seen as one of his masterpieces and is sometimes named as his greatest work.

Plot



At an International Congress at an Aero Club, explorers from around the world argue about the best way to fly to the North Pole. All are in disagreement until the congress's president, the engineer Maboul of France, explains his plans for an "Aero-Bus," an airplane with a passenger car and a huge figurehead in the shape of a bird head. The proceedings are interrupted by a group of militant suffragettes, who announce their intention to go to the Pole themselves. When they have been chased off, the Congress nominates an international group of experts to accompany Maboul to the Pole: Run-Ever of England, Bluff-"Allo"-Bill of America, Choukroutman of Germany, Cerveza of Spain, Tching-Tchun of China, and Ka-Ko-Ku of Japan. Maboul takes his colleagues to his office to study the model of his invention, and then to the electricity-powered factory where the real thing is being constructed. The leader of the suffragettes moves on with her own plans to get to the Pole, building a machine fitted with propellers and a multitude of toy balloons, but it fails to get off the ground.

The completed Aero-Bus lifts off to great acclaim, though it meets with two difficulties; first the suffragette leader tries to board with the expedition at the last moment, and then the explorer Tching-Tchun, arriving late, is accidentally left behind. The race to the Pole attracts many other adventurers, who depart in their own machines; soon the sky is full of aircraft of every shape and size. Both Tching-Tchun and the suffragette leader attempt to make it to the Pole in a balloon, but again meet with failure. (The explorer falls a short distance to the ground and gives up; the suffragette, having held on longer, falls onto a church steeple and explodes.) Meanwhile, the Aero-Bus continues through the sky unimpeded, passing various planets and constellations.

The aircraft skims down over the ice of the Arctic and finally crash-lands. The delegates make it out of the wreck, safe and sound. Almost immediately, however, they run into an obstacle: the Giant of the Snows, a pipe-smoking, man-eating frost giant who has to be scared off with cannon fire. They come at last to the pole proper, where they find a huge magnetic needle. Stuck by magnetic attraction to the needle, which breaks under their weight and plunges them into the icy waters, they signal for help and are picked up by a passing airship. Penguins, seals, and Arctic birds wave goodbye. The explorers return in triumph to the Aero Club, where they bow to all assembled.

Inspirations



Although the film's story is treated in a vein of fantasy, it took much of its inspiration from current affairs. Robert E. Peary and his team had set foot on the North Pole on 6 April 1909, and Roald Amundsen had made it to the South Pole on 14 December 1911, four months before Mlis started filming. The claims of the rival explorer Frederick Cook, who tried unsuccessfully to prove that he had beaten Peary to the North Pole, were also a thematic inspiration. Mlis later recalled:

The presence of suffragettes in the film was another nod to recent events; the women's suffrage movement was highly present in the news at the time, and would remain a contemporary issue in France until the Second World War, when women were granted the right to vote. (Indeed, the leader of the suffragettes was conceived as a caricature of the well-known British suffrage campaigner Emmeline Pankhurst.) Even the scene in which a suffragette attempts to join the aviation race was topical in France; Thrse Peltier had recently made headlines as the first woman aviator to fly solo, and Raymonde de Laroche became the first woman in the world to receive an airplane pilot's licence in 1910.

Although many contemporary write-ups about the film suggested a connection with Jules Verne's works (see the Release and reception section below), the film is not an adaptation of any of his famous 'Voyages Extraordinaires' novels; rather, it is a parodic, satiric homage to the entire 'Voyages Extraordinaires' series, in something of the same style as Albert Robida's Verne-spoofing comic novel 'Voyages trs extraordinaires de Saturnin Farandoul' (18791880). If anything, the film may be said to be inspired very loosely by Verne's 'The Adventures of Captain Hatteras' or his 'The Sphinx of the Ice Fields'.

Other possible sources came from the theatre and the cinema. 'Pif Paf Pouf', a spectacular 'ferie' staged in 1906 at the Thtre du Chtelet, included a Giant of the Pole operated by wires as well as a powerful magnet at the Pole, two elements borrowed for the film. The eleven-scene film 'Voyage of the Arctic, or How Captain Kettle Discovered the North Pole', directed by the pioneering British filmmaker Robert W. Paul in 1903, features a Polar giant, strongly suggesting a direct influence on Mlis. Mlis may also have remembered that the Lumire Brothers had filmed a staged reenactment of Polar exploration, 'The Explorer Andre at the North Pole', in 1897.

Production



Georges Mlis is widely regarded as the first person to recognize the potential of narrative film, and his 'A Trip to the Moon' (1902), 'The Kingdom of the Fairies' (1903), and 'The Impossible Voyage' (1904) were among the most popular films of the first few years of the twentieth century. However, by the time of 'The Conquest of the Pole' his fortunes were in decline. In 1911, Mlis entered into a deal in which the Path Frres company became the sole distributor of his films. Though they continued to be filmed at Mlis's Star Film Company studio in Paris, Charles Path had executive control over the films, including power to edit their structure and length. All of Mlis's films from 1911 onward, including 'The Conquest of the Pole', were therefore made under Path's supervision and released by his company.

'The Conquest of the Pole' is Mlis's longest cinematic work: 650 meters of film, which, at his preferred projection speed of 12 to 14 frames per second, is about 44 minutes.Frame rate calculations produced using the following formula: 845 feet / (('n' frame/s * 60 seconds) / 16 frames per foot) = 'x'. See . It was also the last of Mlis's "journey" films, a genre that comprises some of his most significant works, such as 'A Trip to the Moon' and 'The Impossible Voyage'. The film was made by Mlis in the winter of 19111912, with Mlis himself taking on the lead role of Professor Maboul. (Mlis also appears briefly in a second role in the balloon ascension scene, as one of the workers holding the balloon.) Fernande Albany, who had previously appeared in Mlis's films 'The Impossible Voyage', 'An Adventurous Automobile Trip', and 'Tunnelling the English Channel', played the leader of the suffragettes.

During his career, Mlis had built two glass-and-metal film studios in Montreuil, Seine-Saint-Denis. The first one was relatively small, with a stage measuring 16 by 13 feet. The second one, Studio B, was built in 1905 with considerably larger dimensions, including a stage about thirty feet wide and an elevator crane allowing large objects to be carried up and down. 'The Conquest of the Pole' took full advantage of Studio B's facilities, especially for the scene with the Giant of the Snows. However, like a few other scenes in Mlis's works, the parade of vehicles was filmed outdoors. Mlis created the film's special effects using a wide array of techniques, including stage machinery, pyrotechnics, scenery rolling horizontally and vertically, miniature models, real water, substitution splices, and superimpositions. The Giant of the Snows was a gigantic marionette which required twelve men to operate. Its head alone was two meters high; two of the puppeteers hid inside the head to control the Giant's eyes, ears, mouth, and pipe.

Most of the film is shot in Mlis's usual style, in which a stationary camera allows the viewer to watch the film as if it were being played in scenes on a theatre stage. However, the scene in which the airplane lands in the Arctic is notable for an advanced editing technique in which the point of view becomes mobile rather than stationary. First, the plane is first seen coming directly toward the camera; then, in the next shot, the motion of the plane continues seamlessly, but the viewpoint has been rotated ninety degrees. In previous films, Mlis had sometimes used nonlinear editing for such moments, such as in 'A Trip to the Moon' and 'The Impossible Voyage', in which the space capsule and dirigible, respectively, are shown landing twice. This scene in 'The Conquest of the Pole' marks the first time Mlis fluently uses the mobile point of view, which had been pioneered by the "Brighton School" of filmmakers in England. However, Mlis revealed in 1929 that he had never found mobile techniques to be natural or particularly useful and that he still preferred the stationary camera techniques he had used.

Release and reception



's works

'The Conquest of the Pole' was released by Path on 3 May 1912. The film was advertised as a 'voyage extraordinaire en 34 tableaux', and announcements and reports about it frequently suggested a connection to Verne's 'Voyages Extraordinaires' series; for example, Path's weekly bulletin promoted the film by saying that "There isn't one of [Mlis's] works that hasn't achieved the success, the vogue, and the popularity of a Jules Verne novel."

In France, the weekly 'Le Cinma' gave the film a highly favorable review, calling it "a masterpiece from the Jules Verne of the film camera." The British journal 'Bioscope' described the film as an "extraordinary voyage," calling Mlis "the H. G. Wells of picturedom, the wizard who gives the fillip to our imagination, and provides us with scientific phenomena of his own making."

The film was a marked failure with contemporary audiences, who almost completely ignored it. The film's failure is usually attributed to changing times; Mlis's theatrical, fantasy-based style, which had been innovative and influential early on in his career, had fallen out of popularity by 1912. The film critic and historian Georges Sadoul, who called the film "perhaps [Mlis's] most perfect creation," elaborated on this point:

Mlis's deal with Path put the Star Film studio even further into debt than it had been before. The six works Mlis made under Path's supervision in 1911 and 1912 were his last films.

'The Conquest of the Pole' is generally considered to be one of Mlis's greatest films, and some critics have described it as his very best work.

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