Scott of the Antarctic


1h 51m 1948

Brief Synopsis

A British commander fights to beat a Norwegian team in the search for the South Pole.

Film Details

Genre
Adventure
Biography
Drama
Historical
Release Date
1948
Production Company
Ealing Studios

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 51m
Sound
Mono (RCA Sound System)
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1

Synopsis

The true story of the British explorer Robert Falcon Scott and his ill-fated expedition to try to be the first man to discover the South Pole - only to find that the murderously cold weather and a rival team of Norwegian explorers conspire against him

Film Details

Genre
Adventure
Biography
Drama
Historical
Release Date
1948
Production Company
Ealing Studios

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 51m
Sound
Mono (RCA Sound System)
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1

Articles

Scott of the Antarctic


Ealing Studios put its distinctively British stamp on Scott of the Antarctic (1948), a documentary-like account of the ill-fated expedition to the South Pole led by Robert Falcon Scott in 1910. Scott and his small party battled all-but-unbearable conditions on the two-year expedition, through which they hoped to be the first explorers to reach the pole. They arrived at their destination in January 1912 - only to discover that Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen had planted his country's flag there a month earlier. On the return trip Scott and his party died of hunger and exposure, only 11 miles from a depot where they would have found food and shelter.

Scott of the Antarctic, in its understated way, celebrates the epic courage of Scott and his men - even though in real life Scott was regarded by many as being too casual and foolhardy in his planning for the tragic expedition. The final shot is of the cross Scott and his men had planted in the snow near where their bodies were found. It bore the message: "To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield." Scott of the Antarctic, nominated as Best Picture at the British Academy Awards, was chosen as the Royal Command Performance film of 1948.

Cast as Scott is John Mills (later to win the title "Sir"), who had established himself during the World War II years as an English screen hero in the understated, stiff-upper-lip tradition. In the documentary Forever Ealing (2002), Mills recalls the hazards of location filming, during which the actors could not rehearse because it was imperative that they walk on virgin snow. On one occasion Mills took one step and disappeared into a crevice because he unwittingly had stepped onto a "bridge" of snow. He says in the documentary that, "If I hadn't had my harness on, I wouldn't be here today."

The film was shot partly in the Swiss Alps and Norway, where the then-new Technicolor monopack system eliminated the necessity of three-strip cameras and their 70-pound film magazines. Additional filming was at Ealing, where the cast learned to abhor the artificial snow known as "fuff."

In Forever Ealing, actor Derek Bond tells of fretting about the delivery of the final words spoken by his character, Captain Oates, who did not want the severe frostbite in his feet to slow down the others and purposely left his tent to wander into a blizzard. As recorded by Scott, Oates said, "I am going outside, and I may be some time," and was never seen again. Bond says director Charles Frend finally cut short his agonizing over the line by snapping, "For God's sake, just say it!" This led to Bond's memorably offhand delivery.

The production was lent many of the personal effects of the explorers, including Captain Scott's log, to add to its authenticity. The stirring score was a rare venture into the world of cinema for the distinguished composer Ralph Vaughan Williams, who later transformed it into his seventh symphony, the "Sinfonia Antarctica." In 2001, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, another acclaimed British composer, presented the world premiere of a sequel to "Sinfonia Antarctica" called "Antarctic Symphony (Symphony No. 8)."

Producer: Michael Balcon, Sidney Cole (Associate)
Director: Charles Frend
Screenplay: Walter Meade, Ivor Montagu, Mary Hayley Bell (additional dialogue)
Cinematography: Osmond Borradaile, Jack Cardiff, Geoffrey Unsworth
Art Direction: Arne Akermark
Original Music: Vaughan Williams
Editing: Peter Tanner
Principal Cast: John Mills (Captain Scott), Diana Churchill (Kathleen Scott), Harold Warrender (Dr. Wilson), Anne Firth (Oriana Wilson), Derek Bond (Captain Oates), Reginald Beckwith (Lt. Bowers), James Robertson Justice (P.O. Taff Evans), Kenneth More (Lt. Teddy Evans).
C-96m.

by Roger Fristoe
Scott Of The Antarctic

Scott of the Antarctic

Ealing Studios put its distinctively British stamp on Scott of the Antarctic (1948), a documentary-like account of the ill-fated expedition to the South Pole led by Robert Falcon Scott in 1910. Scott and his small party battled all-but-unbearable conditions on the two-year expedition, through which they hoped to be the first explorers to reach the pole. They arrived at their destination in January 1912 - only to discover that Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen had planted his country's flag there a month earlier. On the return trip Scott and his party died of hunger and exposure, only 11 miles from a depot where they would have found food and shelter. Scott of the Antarctic, in its understated way, celebrates the epic courage of Scott and his men - even though in real life Scott was regarded by many as being too casual and foolhardy in his planning for the tragic expedition. The final shot is of the cross Scott and his men had planted in the snow near where their bodies were found. It bore the message: "To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield." Scott of the Antarctic, nominated as Best Picture at the British Academy Awards, was chosen as the Royal Command Performance film of 1948. Cast as Scott is John Mills (later to win the title "Sir"), who had established himself during the World War II years as an English screen hero in the understated, stiff-upper-lip tradition. In the documentary Forever Ealing (2002), Mills recalls the hazards of location filming, during which the actors could not rehearse because it was imperative that they walk on virgin snow. On one occasion Mills took one step and disappeared into a crevice because he unwittingly had stepped onto a "bridge" of snow. He says in the documentary that, "If I hadn't had my harness on, I wouldn't be here today." The film was shot partly in the Swiss Alps and Norway, where the then-new Technicolor monopack system eliminated the necessity of three-strip cameras and their 70-pound film magazines. Additional filming was at Ealing, where the cast learned to abhor the artificial snow known as "fuff." In Forever Ealing, actor Derek Bond tells of fretting about the delivery of the final words spoken by his character, Captain Oates, who did not want the severe frostbite in his feet to slow down the others and purposely left his tent to wander into a blizzard. As recorded by Scott, Oates said, "I am going outside, and I may be some time," and was never seen again. Bond says director Charles Frend finally cut short his agonizing over the line by snapping, "For God's sake, just say it!" This led to Bond's memorably offhand delivery. The production was lent many of the personal effects of the explorers, including Captain Scott's log, to add to its authenticity. The stirring score was a rare venture into the world of cinema for the distinguished composer Ralph Vaughan Williams, who later transformed it into his seventh symphony, the "Sinfonia Antarctica." In 2001, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, another acclaimed British composer, presented the world premiere of a sequel to "Sinfonia Antarctica" called "Antarctic Symphony (Symphony No. 8)." Producer: Michael Balcon, Sidney Cole (Associate) Director: Charles Frend Screenplay: Walter Meade, Ivor Montagu, Mary Hayley Bell (additional dialogue) Cinematography: Osmond Borradaile, Jack Cardiff, Geoffrey Unsworth Art Direction: Arne Akermark Original Music: Vaughan Williams Editing: Peter Tanner Principal Cast: John Mills (Captain Scott), Diana Churchill (Kathleen Scott), Harold Warrender (Dr. Wilson), Anne Firth (Oriana Wilson), Derek Bond (Captain Oates), Reginald Beckwith (Lt. Bowers), James Robertson Justice (P.O. Taff Evans), Kenneth More (Lt. Teddy Evans). C-96m. by Roger Fristoe

Quotes

Great God! this is an awful place.
- Captain Scott
I'm just going outside; I may be away some time.
- Capt. L.E.G. Oates

Trivia

Ralph Vaughan Williams later transformed the score into his seventh symphony, the "Sinfonia Antarctica."

Captain Scott's log and many of the personal effects of the explorers were loaned by The British Museum to add to the authenticity of this near-documentary.

Chosen as the Royal Command Performance film of 1948.

Vaughan Williams wrote nearly 1000 bars of music for the film, much of it before filming had even started. In the event, less than half of what he wrote was actually used.