In 1953, in an old cabinet of a former photographer from Zermatt, a first mountaineering film was found. It was a silent film from the first era showing the ascent of the Matterhorn by a group of guides across the Hornli ridge. The film is attributed to the American Frederick Burlingham and dated 1901 and is therefore the first mountaineering film in history. The story of the discovery was also dressed in a certain aura of legend and mystery as it was told that the original copy of the film had been lost forever in a shipwreck in the Atlantic and was the only copy printed that remained. The film was renamed Cervin 1901 or Cervino 1901, and in 2014, after being restored again. But the truth is that this whole story, which has somehow held together throughout this period, is full of inaccuracies...
Title | Cervino 1901 |
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Year | 1901 |
Genre | Documentary, History |
Country | United Kingdom |
Studio | Charles Urban Trading Company |
Cast | Frank Ormiston-Smith |
Crew | Frank Ormiston-Smith (Director) |
Keyword | mountain, mountaineering, alpinism, cervin, matterhorn, mountain pioneer, alps |
Release | Jan 01, 1901 |
Runtime | 12 minutes |
Quality | HD |
IMDb | 10.00 / 10 by 1 users |
Popularity | 1 |
Budget | 0 |
Revenue | 0 |
Language | No Language |