The Challenge
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Milton Rosmer
Robert Douglas
Luis Trenker
Mary Clare
Fred Groves
Joan Gardner
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
In 1865, of all the great peaks, only the Matterhorn remains unconquered by man. Edward Whymper, a British artist, hires the crack Italian guide Jean-Antoine Carrel to help him scale the peak, but when Whymper ignores Carrel's warnings about climbing higher, he falls, and is saved by the guide. The guide then takes the artist to his village, where his mother nurses him back to health. The two men become friends, and when Whymper returns to England, Carrel promises to wait for his return to tackle the peak. In the meantime, Italy forms its own Alpine Club to scale the peak, and when Whymper annnounces his intention to approach the peak from the Swiss side, the Italians band together, out of patriotism and their lust for tourist dollars, to prevent Carrel from leading the British party. When Carrel refuses to listen to the Italians' entreaties, the village leaders trick Whymper into leaving without Carrel, who then joins the Italian climbers. Whymper wins the race to the top, but his victory turns to defeat when, on the way down, the rope breaks, dragging four climbers to their death. Upon reaching the village below, Whymper finds himself threatened by a mob of angry villagers who accuse him of cutting the rope. To discover the truth, Carrel returns to the mountain where he finds the broken rope that proves his friend's innocence.
Cast
Robert Douglas
Luis Trenker
Mary Clare
Fred Groves
Joan Gardner
Frank Birch
Geoffrey Wardwell
Cyril Smith
Moran Caplat
Lyonel Watts
Lawrence Bascomb
Ralph Truman
Reginald Jarman
Tony Simpson
Lloyd Pearson
Violet Howard
Babita Soren
Luis Gerold
Max Holzboer
Emeric Albert
Howard Douglas
Crew
Albert Benitz
Harold Cox
Allan Gray
E. B. Jarvis
Patrick Kirwan
Alexander Korda
Vincent Korda
Muir Mathieson
Georges Perinal
Emeric Pressburger
Frederick Pusey
Milton Rosmer
Gunther Stapenhorst
Luis Trenker
A. W. Watkins
Videos
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Film Details
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Articles
The Challenge (1938)
Robert Douglas stars as British artist and adventurer Edward Whymper, who makes an attempt to scale the Matterhorn from the Italian side, and Trenker plays Jean Antoine Carrel, the Italian guide who cautions Whymper against a dangerous route and then saves his life when Whymper, having ignored the sage advice, meets with an accident. The incident bonds the two men in friendship and Whymper promises to return and conquer the peak with Carrel, "This time as friends." But rival expeditions, political pressures and national pride split the men into competing parties, each man convinced the other has betrayed his trust.
The story takes a decidedly melodramatic turn in the face of a fatal accident that becomes an accusation of murder fueled by jealousy and suspicion. But it's not the story that makes the film memorable. It's the dramatic alpine footage, directed by co-star Trenker, that gives the film its majesty. A real life ski champion and mountaineer turned actor and filmmaker, Trenker is responsible for the stunning footage of the Alps and the climbers on the sheer cliffs and dramatic peaks. He apprenticed with the best, having appeared in numerous German "mountain film" adventures directed by Arnold Fanck, the father of what was a thriving genre in twenties and thirties Germany. He also played opposite Leni Riefenstahl in The Holy Mountain (1926), one of the greatest films of the genre. He had even portrayed the legendary mountain guide Carrel in the 1928 German film Fight for the Matterhorn. As a filmmaker, Trenker directed, wrote and produced dozens of productions, both documentary and fiction but invariably focused on mountain sports and pursuits.
The Challenge proved to be the last directorial effort for British filmmaker Milton Rosmer, but his acting career continued through the 1950s, including performances in Carol Reed's The Stars Look Down (1940) and Michael Powell's The Small Back Room (1949). British star Robert Douglas went on to a lively Hollywood career after the war, specializing in playing aristocrats in costume pieces, before he changed careers and became a busy television director through the 1960s and 1970s.
Apart from the magnificent mountain footage, The Challenge is notable as the first British credit by Emeric Pressburger, a German-born screenwriter who had fled Nazi Germany and landed in England with other European Jews struggling to find work. While the film did little to further his reputation, it led to The Spy in Black (1939), his first collaboration with director Michael Powell. It was the beginning of one of the most successful and creative filmmaking partnerships in film history, resulting in such classics as The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943), A Matter of Life and Death (1946) and The Red Shoes (1948). That makes The Challenge an auspicious English language debut for a future film legend.
Producer: Günther Stapenhorst
Director: Milton Rosmer; Luis Trenker (co-director: alpine sequences); Vincent Korda (uncredited)
Screenplay: Emeric Pressburger (screenplay); Patrick Kirwan, Milton Rosmer (scenario)
Cinematography: Albert Benitz, Georges Périnal
Art Direction: Vincent Korda, Frederic L. Pusey
Music: Allan Gray
Film Editing: E.B. Jarvis
Cast: Robert Douglas (Edward Whymper), Frank Birch (Rev. Charles Hudson), Geoffrey Wardwell (Lord Francis Douglas), Moran Caplat (Mr. Hadow), Lyonel Watts (F.K. Morris - Publisher), Luis Trenker (Jean Antoine Carrel), Mary Clare (Carrel's Mother), Fred Groves (Bruno Favre - Innkeeper), Joan Gardner (Felicitas Favre - His Daughter), Lawrence Bascomb (The Podesta - Mayor).
BW-75m.
by Sean Axmaker
For more information, read the blog entry on TCM Movie Morlocks.
The Challenge (1938)
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
According to modern sources, this was a Denham Production for London Film Productions. Director and actor Luis Trenker was a former mountain climber who made his film reputation by making German "Mountain" films. Modern sources add Robert Krasker as camera operator and add D. J. Williams, Bernard Miles and Tarva Penna to the cast. This historic event was previously filmed by Capital Film Exchange in 1932 as Devil of the Matterhorn.