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Wings Over Everest
1934 film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Wings over Everest is a 1934 British short documentary film directed by Geoffrey Barkas and Ivor Montagu.[1]
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Scenario
The film describes the 1933 Houston–Mount Everest flight expedition, in which Douglas Douglas-Hamilton, 14th Duke of Hamilton, otherwise known as Lord Clydesdale, piloted a single-engined biplane on 3 April 1933, just clearing Everest's southern peak by a few feet, having been caught in a powerful downdraught.[2] The film used mixture of real footage of Everest from the record-breaking flight and theatrically produced scenes using the actual people rather than actors.[3]
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Production
The flight used two aircraft that took off from Purnea, India on 3 April 1933.[4] One aircraft was Westland PV-3 which had undergone some additional changes, and the other aircraft was a Westland PV-6.[4] Lord Clydesdale flew the PV-3 and Lieutenant David McIntyre in the PV-6.[4] The aircraft were not pressurized but they did use bottled oxygen.[4]
Aerial photos would go onto be used by mountaineers including Tenzing and Hillary's expedition which reached the summit on foot.[5] The aerial photos were made on a second flight on 19 April 1933 as during the first flight there was a dusty haze that obscured the photographs from the 3 April flight.[6]
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Reception
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "The flight itself is genuinely exciting, in spite of the difficulty of conveying a vivid impression of great heights by aerial photography, due to the expert camera work of S. R. Bonnett. Material has been well arranged without over-dramatisation, and the commentary is admirable. ... Occasionally a grotesque vista of rock breaks through the rolling waves of cloud, like an islet in the sea. Everest itself is dwarfed by the nonchalance of its conquerors."[7]
Preservation status
Wings over Everest was preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2014, in partnership with the UCLA Film and Television Archive.[8]
Accolades
The film an Academy Award in 1936 for Best Short Subject (Novelty).[9]
See also
References
External links
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