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| name = S.O.S. Eisberg
| name = S.O.S. Eisberg
| image = Eisburgsos-poster.jpg
| image = Eisburgsos-poster.jpg
| border =
| alt =
| alt =
| caption = German theatrical release poster
| caption = [[Film poster|German theatrical release poster]]
| director = [[Arnold Fanck]]
| director = [[Arnold Fanck]]<br>Tay Garnett (U.S. version)
| producer = {{Plainlist|
| producer = {{Plainlist|
* [[Carl Laemmle Jr.]]
* [[Carl Laemmle Jr.]]
* [[Paul Kohner]]
* [[Paul Kohner]]
}}
}}
| writer = Edwin H. Knopf
| writer = [[Edwin H. Knopf]]
| screenplay = Tom Reed
| screenplay = [[Tom Reed (screenwriter)|Tom Reed]]
| story = Arnold Fanck<br />[[Friedrich Wolf (writer)|Friedrich Wolf]] (uncredited)
| story = Arnold Fanck<br />[[Friedrich Wolf (writer)|Friedrich Wolf]] (uncredited)
| starring = {{Plainlist|
| starring = {{Plainlist|
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| distributor = {{Plainlist|
| distributor = {{Plainlist|
* Deutsche Universal-Film
* Deutsche Universal-Film
* Universal Pictures
* [[Universal Pictures]]
}}
}}
| released = {{Film date|1933|08|30|Germany|1933|09|22|USA|df=y}}
| released = {{Film date|1933|08|30|Germany|1933|09|22|USA|df=y}}
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}}
}}


'''''S.O.S. Eisberg''''' (''S.O.S. Iceberg'') is a 1933 German-US drama film directed by [[Arnold Fanck]] and starring [[Gustav Diessl]], [[Leni Riefenstahl]], [[Sepp Rist]], [[Gibson Gowland]], Rod La Roque, and [[Ernst Udet]]. Written by Tom Reed based on a story by Arnold Fanck and [[Friedrich Wolf (writer)|Friedrich Wolf]] (uncredited in the credits after the seizure of power by the [[Nazism|Nazis]] in 1933 because he was [[Jewish]] and a member of the [[Communist Party of Germany]]), the film is about an Arctic expedition that goes in search of a party that was lost the previous year. ''S.O.S. Eisberg'' was filmed on location in [[Umanak]], on the west coast of Greenland, in [[Iceland]], and in the Bernina Alps, on the border between Italy and Switzerland.<ref name="tcm-notes"/> It was filmed simultaneously in German and English, and released by [[Universal Studios]] in both [[Nazi Germany]] and the [[United States]]. The film premiered on 30 August 1933 in [[Berlin]].
'''''S.O.S. Eisberg''''' (aka '''''S.O.S. Iceberg''''' and '''''Iceland''''') is a 1933 German-US [[pre-Code]] drama film directed by [[Arnold Fanck]] and starring [[Gustav Diessl]], [[Leni Riefenstahl]], [[Sepp Rist]], [[Gibson Gowland]], [[Rod La Rocque]], and [[Ernst Udet]]. The film was written by Tom Reed based on a story by Arnold Fanck and [[Friedrich Wolf (writer)|Friedrich Wolf]]. {{#tag:ref| Wolf's involvement in ''S.O.S. Eisberg'' was uncredited because he was [[Jewish]] and a member of the [[Communist Party of Germany]], a fate that befell others, after the seizure of power by the [[Nazism|Nazis]] in 1933.|group=N}} ''S.O.S. Eisberg'' follows the account of the real-life [[Alfred Lothar Wegener]] polar expedition of 1929-30.<ref>Williams, Karl. [https://www.allmovie.com/movie/sos-eisberg-v108580#xrApeLUCwVsxyGzX.99. "Review: 'S.O.S. Eisberg' (1933)."] ''allmovie.com'', 2019. Retrieved: 23 July 2019.</ref> [[Fritz Loewe]] and Ernst Sorge, two members of the ill-fated [[Wegener Expedition]] served as technical consultants to [[Universal Pictures|Universal]].<ref name="Variety">[https://variety.com/1932/film/reviews/s-o-s-iceberg-1200410714/ "Review: 'S.O.S. Eisberg'."] ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'', 31 December 1932. Retrieved: 23 July 2019.</ref>


Among its stars were [[Leni Riefenstahl]], who had just made her directorial debut in ''[[The Blue Light (1932 film)|The Blue Light]]'' (1932). Riefenstahl co-starred with [[Gustav Diessl]] and [[Ernst Udet]] in the German version ''S.O.S. Eisberg'', and with [[Gibson Gowland]] and [[Rod La Rocque]] in the English version ''S.O.S. Iceberg''.
Among the stars in ''S.O.S. Eisberg'' were Leni Riefenstahl, who had just made her directorial debut in ''[[The Blue Light (1932 film)|The Blue Light]]'' (1932). Riefenstahl, in her last film as an actress, co-starred with Gustav Diessl and Ernst Udet in the German version ''S.O.S. Eisberg'', and with Gibson Gowland and Rod La Rocque in the English version, ''S.O.S. Iceberg''.<ref>Riefenstahl 1995, pp. 104, 108–122, 131, 133–134.</ref> Ernst Udet, a former German [[ace (aviation)|ace]] in the [[World War I|First World War]], in a cameo performance, flew in both versions.<ref>Paris 1995, p. 90.</ref>{{#tag:ref|Ernst Udet scored 62 aerial victories, the second-highest German ace in the First World War, then became a "stunt pilot, explorer and hunter" after the war.<ref>Pendo 1985, p. 52.</ref>|group=N}}{{TOC limit|limit=2}}

==Plot of ''S.O.S. Eisberg''==
At a banquet at the International Society for Arctic Research, the members toast scientist Dr. Carl Lorenz ([[Gustav Diessl]]), about to recreate famed explorer Wegener's ill-fated expedition. Lawrence's team consists of two scientists, Dr. Johannes Brand ([[Sepp Rist]]) and Dr. Jan Matushek ([[Max Holzboer]]), his friend, Fritz Kuemmel ([[Walter Riml]]), their financial backer, John Dragan ([[Walter Riml]]), and their pilot to the Arctic, Lorenz's wife Hella ([[Leni Riefenstahl]]).

After Hella drops them at their base camp, the men begin their long trek to recover Wegener's records and prove his theories on ice floes. As the weeks pass, Brand and the others fear they will not survive when the ice breaks up, but Lorenz scoffs and refuses to wait until winter.

Early one morning, Lorenz sets out on his own. His companions fear he is lost. They find a hut Wegener occupied and a note from Lorenz saying that he is trying to reach a native village. Suddenly, the break up of the ice leaves their sleds of food supplies tumbling into a ravine. The rescuers take refuge on a huge iceberg where they discover that Lorenz is there, dazed and uncommunicative.

Brand begins sending out an S.O.S. on his wireless and Hella immediately leaves to search for her husband. Disaster strikes, with Dragan going mad, and as Kümmel fights with him to prevent their dog, Nakinak, from being killed, Kümmel falls to his death.

When Hella finds the survivors, she misjudges her landing and crashes but is able to swim to the iceberg. Brand seeing they are drifting out to sea, dives into the water, and is picked up by another pilot ([[Ernst Udet]]) following Hella's flight path. The pilot flies Brand to the nearby Inuit village.

Matushek sees two polar bears fighting over a seal but is killed when he tries to spear the bears. Dragan then attacks Hella, but by then her husband has come to his senses, and she is saved. The iceberg begins to come apart, throwing Dragan into the sea.

Lorenz, Hella and Nakinak are rescued by the Inuit. The three survivors later are aboard a ship bound for home, but Lorenz is haunted by the deaths incurred in his misguided expedition.


==Cast==
==Cast==
;German version
;German version
* [[Gustav Diessl]] as Dr. Karl Lorenz
* [[Gustav Diessl]] as Dr. Karl Lorenz
* [[Leni Riefenstahl]] as Hella
* [[Leni Riefenstahl]] as Hella Lorenz
* [[Sepp Rist]] as Dr. Johannes Krafft
* [[Sepp Rist]] as Dr. Johannes Krafft
* [[Ernst Udet]] as Ernst Udet
* [[Ernst Udet]] as Ernst Udet
* [[Gibson Gowland]] as John Dragan
* [[Gibson Gowland]] as John Dragan
* [[Max Holzboer]] as Dr. Jan Matuschek
* [[Max Holzboer]] as Dr. Jan Matuschek
* [[Walter Riml]] as Fritz Kümmel
* [[Walter Riml]] as Fritz Kümmel
* Arthur Grosse
* Tommy Thomas
* Nakinak as Hund


;English version
;English version
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* [[Max Holzboer]] as Dr. Jan Matuschek
* [[Max Holzboer]] as Dr. Jan Matuschek
* [[Walter Riml]] as Fritz Kümmel
* [[Walter Riml]] as Fritz Kümmel
* Nakinak as Nakinak, the Eskimo dog
* Nakinak as Nakinak, the Inuit dog


==Production==
==Production==
''S.O.S. Eisberg'' was filmed on location in Umanak, on the west coast of [[Greenland]], in Iceland, and in the [[Bernina Alps]], on the border between [[Italy]] and [[Switzerland]].<ref name="tcm-notes">{{cite web|title=S.O.S. Iceberg: Notes |work=Turner Classic Movies |url=http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/88825/S-O-S-Iceberg/notes.html |accessdate=7 March 2014}}</ref>
Under the working title ''Iceland'', ''S.O.S. Eisberg'' was filmed on location in [[Umanak]], on the west coast of Greenland, in [[Iceland]], and in the Bernina Alps, on the border between Italy and Switzerland.<ref name="tcm-notes">[http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/88825/S-O-S-Iceberg/notes.html "Notes: 'S.O.S. Iceberg'(1933)."] ''Turner Classic Movies'', 2019. Retrieved: July 23, 2019.</ref> Prior to principal photography, pre-production development and location shooting took a year.<ref name="AFI"/> The film's opening credits stated that it was produced "under the auspices of the Danish government and under the protectorate of the renowned polar explorer [[Knud Rasmussen]].<ref name="AFI">[https://catalog.afi.com/Film/7785-SOS-ICEBERG?sid=25a6f650-68cd-4630-bf5e-5286a14a4bdf&sr=8.286798&cp=1&pos=0 "Catalog: 'S.O.S. Iceberg'."] ''afi.com'', 2019. Retrieved: July 23, 2019.</ref>

A total of 38 men and women, three polar bears and two sea lions of the Hagenbeck circus making up the crew of the ''S.O.S. Eisberg'' boarded the ''Borodino'' at the end of June 1932. Filming was especially arduous with "Leni Riefenstahl, whose life he (Fanck) had often put in danger", after her repeated swimming in frigid waters, had to leave the production, "before the others, to be hospitalized in Copenhagen".<ref name="Aeromovies"/>

Modern sources have identified real dangers that occurred in the filming of ''S.O.S. Eisberg'': "... none of the film's actors had doubles" and actors including Riefenstahl endured extreme cold and performed dangerous stunts. "... Udet nearly lost his life when his plane's engine lost power and crashed at the base of an iceberg. Udet was rescued by the Inuit, but minutes later, the iceberg which was supporting some of the crew crumbled to bits, casting men and equipment into the water below. The production unit ship anchored nearby was so shaken by the event that it nearly capsized, throwing people on board the deck into the water. All were rescued, but considerable sound equipment was destroyed."<ref name="AFI"/>

Although "conceived and started by Germans", ''S.O.S. Eisberg'' was "turned over to Universal when the originators were unable to carry it through."<ref name="AFI"/> [[Universal Studios]] made the decision to film simultaneously in German and English. Released by Universal Studios in both countries, with the German edition slightly longer with 10 additional minutes, the English version was retitled, ''S.O.S. Iceberg'' and released in the [[United States]].<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/universalweekly100movi_1#page/n1021/mode/2up “S.O.S. Iceberg is unbelievably beautiful.”] ''Universal weekly'', vol 33#6:18-19, 21 October 1933. Retrieved: 16 July 2018.</ref>

The highlights of the action included air crashes; the aircraft in ''S.O.S. Eisberg'' were:
* [[de Havilland DH.60 Moth|de Havilland 60 Genet Moth]] c/n 271, D-1651
* [[BFW M.23]]bW c/n 511, D-1970
* [[Klemm|Klemm VL 26b]] c/n 278, D-2269
* [[Udet U 12]]b Spezial Flamingo D-822
* [[Junkers A 35|Junkers A 20]] c/n 862, D-574<ref name="Aeromovies">Santoir, Christian. [http://aeromovies.fr/articles.php?lng=en&pg=217#z2 "Review: 'S.O.S. Eisberg'."] ''Aeromovies'', 29 July 2011. Retrieved: 23 July 2019.</ref>

Aviation film historian James H. Farmer in ''Celluloid Wings: The Impact of Movies on Aviation'' (1984) noted, "... some outstanding, though brief aerial sequences are featured."<ref>Farmer 1984, p. 325.</ref>


==Reception==
==Reception==
The film was a box office disappointment for Universal.<ref>By, D. W. (1934, Nov 25). TAKING A LOOK AT THE RECORD. New York Times (1923-Current File) Retrieved from https://search-proquest-com.ezproxy.sl.nsw.gov.au/docview/101193306?accountid=13902</ref>
''S.O.S. Eisberg'' premiered on 30 August 1933 in [[Berlin]]. The film was a box office disappointment for Universal.<ref>D. W. [https://search.proquest.com/docview/101193306 "Taking a look at the record."] ''The New York Times'', 25 November 1934.</ref>

''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' in their contemporary review of ''S.O.S. Iceberg'' noted, "The result is an authentic and authoritative series of polar pictures which scarcely need the pressbook assurance that no miniatures were used to supplement the straight shots."<ref name="Variety"/>

==See also==
==See also==
* [[List of German films 1933–1945]]
* [[List of German films 1933–1945]]


==References==
==References==
;Notes
===Notes===
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist|group=N}}

;Bibliography
===Citations===
{{Reflist|30em}}

===Bibliography===
{{Refbegin}}
{{Refbegin}}
* Fanck, Arnold (1933). ''S.O.S. Eisberg. Mit Dr. Fanck u. Ernst Udet in Groenland. Die Groenland-Expedition des Universal-Films S.O.S. Eisberg''. München: F. BruckmannAG OCLC 219890420.
* Fanck, Arnold. ''S.O.S. Eisberg. Mit Dr. Fanck u. Ernst Udet in Groenland. Die Groenland-Expedition des Universal-Films S.O.S. Eisberg''. München: F. BruckmannAG, 1933. OCLC 219890420.
* Farmer, James H. ''Celluloid Wings: The Impact of Movies on Aviation''. Blue Ridge Summit, Pennsylvania: Tab Books Inc., 1984. {{ISBN|978-0-83062-374-7}}.
* Riefenstahl, Leni (1933) ''Kampf in Schee und Eis''. Leipzig: Hesse und Bacher Verlag.
* Paris, Michael. ''From the Wright Brothers to Top Gun: Aviation, Nationalism, and Popular Cinema''. Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 1995. {{ISBN|978-0-7190-4074-0}}.
* Sorge, Ernst (1935). ''With Plane, Boat, and Camera in Greenland: An Account of the Universal Dr. Fanck Greenland expedition''. London: Hurst & Blackett, Ltd.
* Pendo, Stephen. ''Aviation in the Cinema''. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1985. {{ISBN|978-0-81081-746-3}}.
* Riefenstahl, Leni (1995). ''A Memoir''. New York: Picador, {{ISBN|0-312-11926-7}}, pp. 104, 108–122, 131, 133–134.
* Riefenstahl, Leni. ''Leni Riefenstahl: A Memoir''. New York: Picador, 1995. {{ISBN|978-0-31211-926-3}}.
* Riefenstahl, Leni. ''Kampf in Schee und Eis''. Leipzig: Hesse und Bacher Verlag, 1933.
* Sorge, Ernst. ''With Plane, Boat, and Camera in Greenland: An Account of the Universal Dr. Fanck Greenland expedition''. London: Hurst & Blackett, Ltd., 1935.
{{Refend}}
{{Refend}}


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* {{IMDb title|0024514|S.O.S. Eisberg}} {{small|(German version)}}
* {{IMDb title|0024514|S.O.S. Eisberg}} {{small|(German version)}}
* {{IMDb title|0446201|S.O.S. Iceberg}} {{small|(English version)}}
* {{IMDb title|0446201|S.O.S. Iceberg}} {{small|(English version)}}
* {{Internet Archive film|id=S.O.S.Iceberg1933_201702}}
* {{TCMDb title|88825|S.O.S. Iceberg}}
* {{AllMovie title|108580|S.O.S. Eisberg}}

* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090528054508/http://www.nbrmp.org/features/SOSICEBERG.cfm John Gallagher review of 2005 DVD released by Kino International]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090528054508/http://www.nbrmp.org/features/SOSICEBERG.cfm John Gallagher review of 2005 DVD released by Kino International]


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[[Category:1933 films]]
[[Category:1933 films]]
[[Category:1930s adventure films]]
[[Category:American aviation films]]
[[Category:1930s drama films]]
[[Category:1930s adventure drama films]]
[[Category:German adventure films]]
[[Category:American adventure drama films]]
[[Category:German drama films]]
[[Category:German adventure drama films]]
[[Category:Adventure drama films]]
[[Category:German films]]
[[Category:Films of the Weimar Republic]]
[[Category:Films of the Weimar Republic]]
[[Category:Films of Nazi Germany]]
[[Category:Films of Nazi Germany]]
[[Category:German-language films]]
[[Category:1930s German-language films]]
[[Category:English-language films]]
[[Category:1930s English-language films]]
[[Category:Multilingual films]]
[[Category:American multilingual films]]
[[Category:Mountaineering films]]
[[Category:Climbing and mountaineering films]]
[[Category:German multilingual films]]
[[Category:Films directed by Arnold Fanck]]
[[Category:Films directed by Arnold Fanck]]
[[Category:Films set in the Arctic]]
[[Category:Films set in the Arctic]]
[[Category:Films shot in Greenland]]
[[Category:Films shot in Greenland]]
[[Category:Films scored by Paul Dessau]]
[[Category:Films scored by Paul Dessau]]
[[Category:1933 multilingual films]]
[[Category:1933 drama films]]
[[Category:1930s American films]]
[[Category:1930s German films]]

Revision as of 18:07, 26 May 2024

S.O.S. Eisberg
Directed byArnold Fanck
Tay Garnett (U.S. version)
Written byEdwin H. Knopf
Screenplay byTom Reed
Story byArnold Fanck
Friedrich Wolf (uncredited)
Produced by
Starring
Cinematography
Edited by
  • Hermann Haller
  • Andrew Marton
Music byPaul Dessau
Production
company
Deutsche Universal-Film
Distributed by
Release dates
  • 30 August 1933 (1933-08-30) (Germany)
  • 22 September 1933 (1933-09-22) (USA)
Running time
90 minutes
CountriesGermany, US
LanguagesGerman, English

S.O.S. Eisberg (aka S.O.S. Iceberg and Iceland) is a 1933 German-US pre-Code drama film directed by Arnold Fanck and starring Gustav Diessl, Leni Riefenstahl, Sepp Rist, Gibson Gowland, Rod La Rocque, and Ernst Udet. The film was written by Tom Reed based on a story by Arnold Fanck and Friedrich Wolf. [N 1] S.O.S. Eisberg follows the account of the real-life Alfred Lothar Wegener polar expedition of 1929-30.[1] Fritz Loewe and Ernst Sorge, two members of the ill-fated Wegener Expedition served as technical consultants to Universal.[2]

Among the stars in S.O.S. Eisberg were Leni Riefenstahl, who had just made her directorial debut in The Blue Light (1932). Riefenstahl, in her last film as an actress, co-starred with Gustav Diessl and Ernst Udet in the German version S.O.S. Eisberg, and with Gibson Gowland and Rod La Rocque in the English version, S.O.S. Iceberg.[3] Ernst Udet, a former German ace in the First World War, in a cameo performance, flew in both versions.[4][N 2]

Plot of S.O.S. Eisberg

At a banquet at the International Society for Arctic Research, the members toast scientist Dr. Carl Lorenz (Gustav Diessl), about to recreate famed explorer Wegener's ill-fated expedition. Lawrence's team consists of two scientists, Dr. Johannes Brand (Sepp Rist) and Dr. Jan Matushek (Max Holzboer), his friend, Fritz Kuemmel (Walter Riml), their financial backer, John Dragan (Walter Riml), and their pilot to the Arctic, Lorenz's wife Hella (Leni Riefenstahl).

After Hella drops them at their base camp, the men begin their long trek to recover Wegener's records and prove his theories on ice floes. As the weeks pass, Brand and the others fear they will not survive when the ice breaks up, but Lorenz scoffs and refuses to wait until winter.

Early one morning, Lorenz sets out on his own. His companions fear he is lost. They find a hut Wegener occupied and a note from Lorenz saying that he is trying to reach a native village. Suddenly, the break up of the ice leaves their sleds of food supplies tumbling into a ravine. The rescuers take refuge on a huge iceberg where they discover that Lorenz is there, dazed and uncommunicative.

Brand begins sending out an S.O.S. on his wireless and Hella immediately leaves to search for her husband. Disaster strikes, with Dragan going mad, and as Kümmel fights with him to prevent their dog, Nakinak, from being killed, Kümmel falls to his death.

When Hella finds the survivors, she misjudges her landing and crashes but is able to swim to the iceberg. Brand seeing they are drifting out to sea, dives into the water, and is picked up by another pilot (Ernst Udet) following Hella's flight path. The pilot flies Brand to the nearby Inuit village.

Matushek sees two polar bears fighting over a seal but is killed when he tries to spear the bears. Dragan then attacks Hella, but by then her husband has come to his senses, and she is saved. The iceberg begins to come apart, throwing Dragan into the sea.

Lorenz, Hella and Nakinak are rescued by the Inuit. The three survivors later are aboard a ship bound for home, but Lorenz is haunted by the deaths incurred in his misguided expedition.

Cast

German version
English version

Production

Under the working title Iceland, S.O.S. Eisberg was filmed on location in Umanak, on the west coast of Greenland, in Iceland, and in the Bernina Alps, on the border between Italy and Switzerland.[6] Prior to principal photography, pre-production development and location shooting took a year.[7] The film's opening credits stated that it was produced "under the auspices of the Danish government and under the protectorate of the renowned polar explorer Knud Rasmussen.[7]

A total of 38 men and women, three polar bears and two sea lions of the Hagenbeck circus making up the crew of the S.O.S. Eisberg boarded the Borodino at the end of June 1932. Filming was especially arduous with "Leni Riefenstahl, whose life he (Fanck) had often put in danger", after her repeated swimming in frigid waters, had to leave the production, "before the others, to be hospitalized in Copenhagen".[8]

Modern sources have identified real dangers that occurred in the filming of S.O.S. Eisberg: "... none of the film's actors had doubles" and actors including Riefenstahl endured extreme cold and performed dangerous stunts. "... Udet nearly lost his life when his plane's engine lost power and crashed at the base of an iceberg. Udet was rescued by the Inuit, but minutes later, the iceberg which was supporting some of the crew crumbled to bits, casting men and equipment into the water below. The production unit ship anchored nearby was so shaken by the event that it nearly capsized, throwing people on board the deck into the water. All were rescued, but considerable sound equipment was destroyed."[7]

Although "conceived and started by Germans", S.O.S. Eisberg was "turned over to Universal when the originators were unable to carry it through."[7] Universal Studios made the decision to film simultaneously in German and English. Released by Universal Studios in both countries, with the German edition slightly longer with 10 additional minutes, the English version was retitled, S.O.S. Iceberg and released in the United States.[9]

The highlights of the action included air crashes; the aircraft in S.O.S. Eisberg were:

Aviation film historian James H. Farmer in Celluloid Wings: The Impact of Movies on Aviation (1984) noted, "... some outstanding, though brief aerial sequences are featured."[10]

Reception

S.O.S. Eisberg premiered on 30 August 1933 in Berlin. The film was a box office disappointment for Universal.[11]

Variety in their contemporary review of S.O.S. Iceberg noted, "The result is an authentic and authoritative series of polar pictures which scarcely need the pressbook assurance that no miniatures were used to supplement the straight shots."[2]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Wolf's involvement in S.O.S. Eisberg was uncredited because he was Jewish and a member of the Communist Party of Germany, a fate that befell others, after the seizure of power by the Nazis in 1933.
  2. ^ Ernst Udet scored 62 aerial victories, the second-highest German ace in the First World War, then became a "stunt pilot, explorer and hunter" after the war.[5]

Citations

  1. ^ Williams, Karl. "Review: 'S.O.S. Eisberg' (1933)." allmovie.com, 2019. Retrieved: 23 July 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Review: 'S.O.S. Eisberg'." Variety, 31 December 1932. Retrieved: 23 July 2019.
  3. ^ Riefenstahl 1995, pp. 104, 108–122, 131, 133–134.
  4. ^ Paris 1995, p. 90.
  5. ^ Pendo 1985, p. 52.
  6. ^ "Notes: 'S.O.S. Iceberg'(1933)." Turner Classic Movies, 2019. Retrieved: July 23, 2019.
  7. ^ a b c d "Catalog: 'S.O.S. Iceberg'." afi.com, 2019. Retrieved: July 23, 2019.
  8. ^ a b Santoir, Christian. "Review: 'S.O.S. Eisberg'." Aeromovies, 29 July 2011. Retrieved: 23 July 2019.
  9. ^ “S.O.S. Iceberg is unbelievably beautiful.” Universal weekly, vol 33#6:18-19, 21 October 1933. Retrieved: 16 July 2018.
  10. ^ Farmer 1984, p. 325.
  11. ^ D. W. "Taking a look at the record." The New York Times, 25 November 1934.

Bibliography

  • Fanck, Arnold. S.O.S. Eisberg. Mit Dr. Fanck u. Ernst Udet in Groenland. Die Groenland-Expedition des Universal-Films S.O.S. Eisberg. München: F. BruckmannAG, 1933. OCLC 219890420.
  • Farmer, James H. Celluloid Wings: The Impact of Movies on Aviation. Blue Ridge Summit, Pennsylvania: Tab Books Inc., 1984. ISBN 978-0-83062-374-7.
  • Paris, Michael. From the Wright Brothers to Top Gun: Aviation, Nationalism, and Popular Cinema. Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 1995. ISBN 978-0-7190-4074-0.
  • Pendo, Stephen. Aviation in the Cinema. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1985. ISBN 978-0-81081-746-3.
  • Riefenstahl, Leni. Leni Riefenstahl: A Memoir. New York: Picador, 1995. ISBN 978-0-31211-926-3.
  • Riefenstahl, Leni. Kampf in Schee und Eis. Leipzig: Hesse und Bacher Verlag, 1933.
  • Sorge, Ernst. With Plane, Boat, and Camera in Greenland: An Account of the Universal Dr. Fanck Greenland expedition. London: Hurst & Blackett, Ltd., 1935.