VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,0/10
6010
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Il primo adattamento cinematografico del classico romanzo "Il Mondo Perduto" di Sir Arthur Conan Doyle su un territorio dove creature preistoriche ancora vivono e prosperano.Il primo adattamento cinematografico del classico romanzo "Il Mondo Perduto" di Sir Arthur Conan Doyle su un territorio dove creature preistoriche ancora vivono e prosperano.Il primo adattamento cinematografico del classico romanzo "Il Mondo Perduto" di Sir Arthur Conan Doyle su un territorio dove creature preistoriche ancora vivono e prosperano.
- Premi
- 2 vittorie e 2 candidature totali
Wallace Beery
- Prof. Challenger
- (as Mr. Wallace Beery)
Bessie Love
- Paula White
- (as Miss Bessie Love)
Lloyd Hughes
- Ed Malone
- (as Mr. Lloyd Hughes)
Lewis Stone
- Sir John Roxton
- (as Mr. Lewis S. Stone)
Alma Bennett
- Gladys Hungerford
- (as Miss Alma Bennett)
Arthur Hoyt
- Prof. Summerlee
- (as Mr. Arthur Hoyt)
Margaret McWade
- Mrs. Challenger
- (as Miss Margaret McWade)
Bull Montana
- Ape-man
- (as Mr. Bull Montana)
Frank Finch Smiles
- Austin
- (as Mr. Finch Smiles)
Jules Cowles
- Zambo
- (as Mr. Jules Cowles)
George Bunny
- Colin McArdle
- (as Mr. George Bunny)
Charles Wellesley
- Maj. Hibbard
- (as Mr. Charles Wellsley)
Jocko the Monkey
- Jocko - the Monkey
- (as Jocko)
Mary the Chimpanzee
- Mary - the Chimpanzee
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Malcolm Denny
- Undetermined Secondary Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Virginia Brown Faire
- Marquette - Half-Caste Girl
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Holmes Herbert
- Undetermined Secondary Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIn April 1925, on a London-Paris flight by Imperial Airways, Un mondo perduto (1925) became the first film to be shown to airline passengers. As film stock of the era was nitrate and highly flammable, this was a risky undertaking on a wood and fabric-hulled plane, a converted WWI bomber, the Handley-Page 0 400.
- BlooperProfessor Challenger travels to the Lost World to prove his claims that dinosaurs still live, yet no one on the expedition seems to have brought a camera.
- Curiosità sui creditiJocko [the monkey] ... by himself
- Versioni alternativeA longer version was released in 1925 but cut in the 1930's.
- ConnessioniEdited into The Wacky Adventures of Ronald McDonald: Scared Silly (1998)
- Colonne sonoreThe Lost World
(1925) (uncredited)
Music by Rudolf Friml
Lyrics by Harry B. Smith
Published in connection with the movie
Recensione in evidenza
In this 1925 silent era film, a Professor Challenger (Wallace Beery) leads a group of British explorers to South America, to prove to the civilized world that there exists a land of living prehistoric creatures. What the explorers find is exactly that ... a rugged Amazon plateau inhabited by all kinds of dinosaurs. It's a wonderful film concept befitting Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's adventure novel. The dinosaurs were brought to cinematic life via stop-motion animation, the first time that the then new technique had been applied, on such a grand cinematic scale. For its visuals alone, "The Lost World" is an important film.
The problem I have is not with the film, but with the way the film has been mishandled in the eighty years since it was released. Much of the original film was lost or cut out, a sad commentary on the way our culture has underestimated the value of silent films. Recently, the film has been at least partially restored. That, in turn, has led to confusion as to the extent to which the film being watched reflects the original.
My understanding is that there is or was: (1) an original full length version, no longer available; (2) a thirty-two minute version shown as a short film; (3) a sixty-three minute original DVD version; and (4) a ninety minute restored, extended DVD version complete with soundtrack and commentary. None of these versions are exactly alike, and there may be other versions as well.
The version I watched was on DVD, and was sixty-three minutes in length; there was no soundtrack, no commentary. Since this version is vastly different from the original, and different from other versions, a conventional critique would be unfair. All that I can do is to make a couple of general observations.
The special effects were impressive for their time. But what I most liked was the film's sense of three-dimensional scale, as shown in many scenes, the tree bridge to the plateau, for example, or the rope ladder hanging down the side of the cliff with a person climbing down. Such scenes convey a sense of distance and height, important to any physical adventure or risk. What I found disconcerting was the scenes of dinosaurs detached from the characters. Most of the time, but not always, these dinosaur scenes were shown from the POV that would be optimal for the cinematic viewer, rather than from the POV of the characters. In other words, the dinosaurs were usually shown out of context to the film's narrative.
"The Lost World" (1925) is an important contribution to early cinema. Although the film may be somewhat tedious to watch and technically crude by today's standards, depending on version, the film will most surely be appreciated by film historians and by technicians interested in the evolution of cinematic special effects.
The problem I have is not with the film, but with the way the film has been mishandled in the eighty years since it was released. Much of the original film was lost or cut out, a sad commentary on the way our culture has underestimated the value of silent films. Recently, the film has been at least partially restored. That, in turn, has led to confusion as to the extent to which the film being watched reflects the original.
My understanding is that there is or was: (1) an original full length version, no longer available; (2) a thirty-two minute version shown as a short film; (3) a sixty-three minute original DVD version; and (4) a ninety minute restored, extended DVD version complete with soundtrack and commentary. None of these versions are exactly alike, and there may be other versions as well.
The version I watched was on DVD, and was sixty-three minutes in length; there was no soundtrack, no commentary. Since this version is vastly different from the original, and different from other versions, a conventional critique would be unfair. All that I can do is to make a couple of general observations.
The special effects were impressive for their time. But what I most liked was the film's sense of three-dimensional scale, as shown in many scenes, the tree bridge to the plateau, for example, or the rope ladder hanging down the side of the cliff with a person climbing down. Such scenes convey a sense of distance and height, important to any physical adventure or risk. What I found disconcerting was the scenes of dinosaurs detached from the characters. Most of the time, but not always, these dinosaur scenes were shown from the POV that would be optimal for the cinematic viewer, rather than from the POV of the characters. In other words, the dinosaurs were usually shown out of context to the film's narrative.
"The Lost World" (1925) is an important contribution to early cinema. Although the film may be somewhat tedious to watch and technically crude by today's standards, depending on version, the film will most surely be appreciated by film historians and by technicians interested in the evolution of cinematic special effects.
- Lechuguilla
- 29 giu 2005
- Permalink
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- The Lost World
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Biograph Studios, Bronx, New York, New York, Stati Uniti(live action sequences)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 1.194.450 USD
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 2.834.000 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 50 minuti
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.33 : 1
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