Blonde Captive


59m 1932

Film Details

Release Date
Jun 17, 1932
Premiere Information
New York opening: 26 Feb 1932
Production Company
North Western Australian Expedition Syndicate
Distribution Company
Columbia Pictures Corp.; Imperial Distributing Corp.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
59m
Film Length
6 or 8 reels

Synopsis

Lowell Thomas, Paul Withington, M.D. of Harvard University, and Clifton Childs, an archaeologist, gather to recount their trip to Australia. Using information from Professor Henry Fairfield Osborn's book Men of the Old Stone Age , Thomas gives an account of how archaeologists have come to believe that skeletons found in caves around the world are from Middle Paleolithic man. One skeleton in particular, located in a cave in the valley of Neanderthal near Düsseldorf, Germany, has set the standard for all such skeletons, which are deemed to be from one race, now called "Neanderthal." Illustrations of the skull of a Neanderthal reveal a low brow, small brain capacity and large, animal-like jaw. The American Museum of Natural History has created a "life-like" model of a Neanderthal man. The purpose of the following expedition is to determine if any remnant of Neanderthal man exists today. After setting sail, the first stop is in Hawaii, where examples of the hula hula dance are shown, as well as surf riding, an ancient traditional art. The explorers travel on to Bali, where Balinese women are shown carrying baskets on their heads, weaving and dancing. The travelers move on to Pango Pango, which is part of the Samoan Islands, the ancestral home of the relatives of the Hawaiians, who also have their own version of the hula hula dance. Fiji is populated by Black Melanesians, who are shown singing and dancing as part of a ceremony. In Rotorua, New Zealand, examples of the powerful Maori lifestyle are shown, including their carved homes, songs and dances. Finally, the explorers sail into the harbor of Sydney, Australia, which, in addition to 1,000,000 people, is home to the indigenous koala bear. From Sydney, the explorers travel toward Ooldea, where they encounter their first Australian aborigines, whom scientists call the "most primitive on earth." The aborigines have been driven from their original habitat into the desert. Next, the explorers land in Broome along the coast. On the outskirts of town is a chapel with an altar made of mother-of-pearl, originally built by the natives when the missionaries first arrived. Travelling through the desert, the scientists encounter lizards, duck-billed platypuses and kangaroos. They arrive at a reservation for aborigines and note that once there were about 15,000 aborigines, whereas less than half of that number exist today. The explorers return to the coast, where they charter a pearling schooner and sail the Timor Sea to a more remote place. On one small uncharted island, the scientists find sea turtles. Aboard the ship, Dr. Withington dissects a sea turtle and after he removes the heart from the body, it beats for twelve hours. The scientists also dissect a "dugong," also known as a sea cow, which they have pulled from the sea. Finally, a plume of smoke is sighted along the coast, and the ship is greeted by aborigines on the beach. When they are escorted to the village, the explorers are impressed with the "fine physical specimens," and note the scarification on their bodies. On some of the women, this denotes widowhood, and their short hair means that they are with their second husband. Although in the afternoon the heat can climb over one hundred degrees, the evenings are cool, and the aborigines use their pet dogs to keep warm. The scientists study each man of the tribe to find a relation to Neanderthal man, and after they are impressed by the amalgam of many types of humanity, they finally find one man who resembles a Neanderthal. Later, the scientists are shocked to discover that a white woman has been living amidst the aborigines. They find her in a cave with her aboriginal husband, and their blonde child. The woman explains that she is the widow of a pearling captain whose schooner crashed on the reef years before. She was the only survivor, and when she came to the aboriginal village, the widowers believed her to be the ghost of their wives because she was so pale. A boomerang contest determined who was to be her husband, and she has lived there ever since. The scientists offer to return the woman to civilization; however, she prefers to stay with her family. Fearing the onset of the monsoon season, the scientists set sail for home.

Film Details

Release Date
Jun 17, 1932
Premiere Information
New York opening: 26 Feb 1932
Production Company
North Western Australian Expedition Syndicate
Distribution Company
Columbia Pictures Corp.; Imperial Distributing Corp.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
59m
Film Length
6 or 8 reels

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

This film was advertised as "An Absolutely Authentic Amazing Adventure." Although Variety credits Dr. Paul Withington and Clifton Childs with direction, this is not confirmed by any other source. The Harrrison's Reports review noted that two reels were added to the film after its New York release. A news item in Film Daily noted that Powers Cinephone Studio synchronized the sound recording. According to the New York Times review, the authenticity of the white woman's story was challenged and Dr. Withington, the leader of the 1929 expedition, sent a cable from Hawaii to New York to "certify that [the] story of [the] shipwrecked white woman rescued or adopted by blacks is based on facts." Variety speculated that "the white captive legend appears to have been developed as an appeal to public interest to insure ticket selling." Reviews noted scenes in which a twelve-year-old boy has two teeth knocked out during a rite of passage, and a ritual involving scarification, however, these scenes were not in the print that was viewed.