Playing to a full house at the Robert Burns Centre Film
Theatre Film Club was a documentary that was originally shoot in 1924. The
filming of The Epic of Everest was the responsibility of mountaineer and
filmmaker Captain John Noel whose father was the younger son of the second earl
of Gainsborough. Noel was educated in Switzerland where he first fell in love
with the mountains. Spending his summers near the Himalayas, it was in 1913
that he first travelled to Tibet to reconnoitre the approaches to Everest. He
had disguised himself as a ‘Mohammedan from India’ darkening his skin and hair
and, travelling by pony with a Garhwali, a Nepalese Sherpa and a Bhotia, had
slipped into Tibet without permission, avoiding villages, and got within forty
miles of the mountain before being turned back by Tibetan troops.
Joining the 1922 Everest expedition as its official
photographer and filmmaker he produced a short film called Climbing Mount Everest (1922).
But it was in 1924 that Noel formed a private company which paid £8000,
a very large sum of money in 1924, for all photographic and film rights to the
expedition, this generous offer guaranteed that the trek would take place. He
used a specially adapted camera and an early
telephoto lens that enabled spectacular shots of the summit and climbers on the
mountain including, of course, the last shots of Mallory and Irvine within what
later climbers have described as striking distance of the top. Though he had no
climbing responsibilities he did get to over 7000m with his kit.
The host for this screening was a very enthusiastic Michael
Gray who told us that the reason we were able to watch this great technical
achievement was due to the restoration carried out by the BFI National Archive
which had transformed the
quality of the surviving elements of the film and reintroduced the original
coloured tints and tones and was premiered in October 2013. It included a newly
commissioned score composed, orchestrated and conducted by Simon Fisher Turner which
features a haunting combination of electronic music, found sounds, western and
Nepalese instruments and vocals.
The 1924 Expedition. |
Mike
went on to tell us that the classic silent film feature has been retained,
which makes the ‘plot’ unfold slowly, erratically and even a little
mysteriously by modern standards, the narrative story being told through
‘inter-titles’. Prior to the actual ascent the first part of the film focuses
on the peoples that reside at the bottom of the mountain, although John Noel had
a very condescending attitude to these people!
The
film was followed by a short but enthusiastic discussion where most of the
audience seemed to appreciate a chance to see this important historical
documentary. My own assessment was not so favourable; having no real ambition
to climb cold and inhospitable mountains of any kind. Other than the technical
achievement of Captain Noel the film did not entertain nor captivate me. In
fact the only part I found interesting was the section that was filmed in the
villages and temples of the areas indigenous peoples. We never learned anything
about the climbers and a silent documentary is certainly not a very informative
tool. But to be fair the majority of the audience did not share my views.
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