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The Viking (1931 film)

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Screenplay
  
Garnett Weston

Duration
  

Language
  
English

6.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Adventure, Drama, Romance

Story by
  
Garnett Weston

Country
  
Newfoundland United States

The Viking (1931 film) movie poster

Director
  
George Melford Varick Frissell

Release date
  
March 5, 1931 (1931-03-05) (Newfoundland) June 21, 1931 (1931-06-21) (United States)

Writer
  
Garnett Weston (story), Garnett Weston (scenario and dialogue)

Directors
  
Varick Frissell, George Melford

Cast
  
Charles Starrett
(Luke Oarum),
Louise Huntington
(Mary Joe),
Arthur Vinton
(Jed Nelson),
Bob Bartlett
(Captain Barker (as Captain Bob Bartlett)),
Wilfred Grenfell
(Prologue Speaker)

Similar movies
  
Related George Melford movies

Tagline
  
Actually produced during the Great Newfoundland Seal Hunt and You see the REAL thing

The viking 1931


The Viking (a.k.a. White Thunder and Vikings of the Ice Field) is a 1931 Newfoundland/American adventure film about sealing directed by George Melford. This was "the first film to record sound and dialogue on location". It is best known for the explosion aboard the ship SS Viking (an actual sealing ship) during filming, in which many members of the crew, including producer Varick Frissell, were killed. It remains the incident with the largest loss of life in film history.

Contents

The Viking 1931 film Wikipedia

Plot

Film and Death On Ice The Viking 1931 Secret East

Set on the coast of Newfoundland, a rivalry develops between Jed Nelson (Arthur Vinton), a seal hunter, and Luke Oarum (Charles Starrett), a local man considered a jinx. Worried that his rival may try to steal his girlfriend Mary Joe (Louise Huntington), calling him a coward, the seal hunter goads Luke into accompanying him on an Arctic sealing expedition on the Viking, commanded by Capt. Barker (Robert Bartlett).. They both end up in a hunting party on the ice floes and eventually find themselves stranded. Jed tries to kill Luke, but the snow blinds him and his gunshot misses.

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Despite the attempt on his life, Luke helps walk the blinded Jed across the ice flows back to Newfoundland after they are unable to return to the ship. On recovering his sight at home, Jed gains new respect for his rival and vows that he will beat senseless any man who derides the character of his new friend.

Cast

As listed in the credits:

  • Louise Huntington as Mary Joe
  • Charles Starrett as Luke Oarum
  • Capt. Robert Abram Bartlett as Capt. Barker
  • Arthur Vinton as Jed Nelson
  • Production

    American-born producer Varick Frissell's previous short films, The Lure of Labrador and The Swilin' Racket (also known as The Great Arctic Seal Hunt), prompted him to make a full-length feature entitled Vikings of the Ice Field. Paramount Pictures put up $100,000 to finance the production, while insisting that Hollywood personnel be used. Frissell hired director George Melford, who had attended McGill University in Montreal and had experience in filming Canadian subjects previously.

    By 1930, Frissell had completed most of the principal photography on location in Quidi Vidi. For realistic footage, Frissell then took his crew to the Grand Banks and Labrador to film action sequences. The film was privately shown at the Nickel Theatre at St. John's on March 5, 1931. After this screening, Frissell decided that his film needed more real scenes from the Labrador ice floes. Within days, Frissell and his crew had joined the SS Viking for its annual seal hunt. The ship got trapped in ice near the Horse Islands.

    On March 15, 1931, while trying to film an iceberg, Frissell, Alexander Penrod, 25 crew members and a stowaway were killed in an explosion. Some of the survivors made the over-ice trek to the Horse Islands, while others were rescued by vessels dispatched to the area.

    Despite the fatal accident, the film was completed and released in June 1931. The title was changed from White Thunder to The Viking. A French-language version Ceux du Viking was released in 1932.

    Reception

    Reviews for The Viking varied, while the story was generally panned. The New York Times review referred to the film's story as "sketchy". The reviewer, however, noted: "'The Viking', like Mr Varick's silent work, 'The Swilin' Racket', has many marvelous scenes of the ice fields and of the adventures of men on a seal hunt off Labrador. It is enhanced by being made with sound effects, but the dialogue, like the story, is merely incidental."

    The Theater Guild Magazine found the story "melodramatic" and the screenplay uninteresting in comparison to the cinematography. The Film Daily gave a negative review, noting the "weakness" of the story.

    White Thunder, a National Film Board documentary on Varick Frissell's life, directed by Newfoundlander Victoria King, was released in 2002.

    References

    The Viking (1931 film) Wikipedia
    The Viking (1931 film) IMDb The Viking (1931 film) themoviedb.org