Dr. Thomas Barlow, one of the few doctors in the frozen Arctic region, fights to bring help to an isolated, virtually inaccessible Eskimo village in the Arctic that had been devastated by pl... Read allDr. Thomas Barlow, one of the few doctors in the frozen Arctic region, fights to bring help to an isolated, virtually inaccessible Eskimo village in the Arctic that had been devastated by plague. Based on a true story.Dr. Thomas Barlow, one of the few doctors in the frozen Arctic region, fights to bring help to an isolated, virtually inaccessible Eskimo village in the Arctic that had been devastated by plague. Based on a true story.
Alfred Delcambre
- Dr. Thomas Barlow
- (archive footage)
- (as Del Cambre)
Dan Riss
- Director of the Thompson Institute
- (as Don Riss)
Merrill McCormick
- Mack - The Trapper
- (archive footage)
- (as Merril McCormick)
Frank Baker
- White Man from Noonak
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Earl Dwire
- Trading Post Owner
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Wally Howe
- Trapper
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Jack Santos
- Half Breed
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Robert Flaherty's masterpiece, "Nanook" (1922), awakened people to the harsh reality of the struggle for survival in the Alaskan wilderness. And Nanook became a household name. "Arctic Fury" revisits that world, by reworking an earlier film about the same subject, "Tundra" (1936), with a new edit and new footage. Norman Dawn directed Alfred Delcambre in both. The nature footage and animals are wonderful and the story of a dedicated and courageous doctor, risking his life, to bring medicine to native people in a remote location, is suspenseful and involving. Quibbles about narration and music cannot diminish this achievement.
This film is exactly what is it supposed to be. Footage taking from other films and spliced together with a human story attached to it. It's not a lousy film yet it's not a swell film. It's what it is meant to be. Something to watch.
The viewer can get past critiquing by simply watching it. If a viewer is looking for something spectacular try a ten star film.
The viewer can get past critiquing by simply watching it. If a viewer is looking for something spectacular try a ten star film.
When talent could create a movie simply around 1 actor, in black and white, hilarious writing, and captivate your audience.
This is a cobbled-together movie, composed of a couple of abortive semi-documentaries produced in the mid-1930s with new linking material added to produce a story.
The story is that Alfred Delcambre is a Doctor up in Alaska, flying off to deal with an incipient plague. His plane is forced down and he has to walk back home. Along the way he makes friends with a couple of bear cubs and sees a lot of wild life -- reindeer and muskoxen and otters and such, much of which is explained by a narrator while a happy score of stock music plays.
The nature photography is the best part of the movie, even if the shots of the wild life seem to have degraded before they could be matched up with the rest of the movie -- the careful observer will notice the wide variation in film stock. The story is potentially engaging in its Odyssey-like simplicity, but that narrator got on my nerves pretty quick!
The story is that Alfred Delcambre is a Doctor up in Alaska, flying off to deal with an incipient plague. His plane is forced down and he has to walk back home. Along the way he makes friends with a couple of bear cubs and sees a lot of wild life -- reindeer and muskoxen and otters and such, much of which is explained by a narrator while a happy score of stock music plays.
The nature photography is the best part of the movie, even if the shots of the wild life seem to have degraded before they could be matched up with the rest of the movie -- the careful observer will notice the wide variation in film stock. The story is potentially engaging in its Odyssey-like simplicity, but that narrator got on my nerves pretty quick!
Way too harsh on the criticism. Totally enjoyed the awesome wildlife footage, staged model airplane footage & the baby bear cub co-stars.
Yes its contrived & implausible, but lots of fun on an early Saturday morning.
Did you know
- TriviaThis film was cobbled together from the 1936 independent film "Tundra." It was originally intended as a prestige film by Carl Laemmle's Universal regime in its last days. The idea of spending seven months in Alaska was abandoned and stock footage from "Alaskan Adventures (1926"and "SOS Iceberg (1933) were incorporated. Thirteen years later original actors Delcambre and McCormick were included in some new footage with Eve Miller and Gloria Petroff under the direction of Fred R. Feitshans, and was released under the now new title, "Arctic Fury"
- GoofsBlack bears do not inhabit the Colville River region of northern Alaska. They are primarily forest dwellers, and the farthest north they have ever been observed co-mingling with grizzlies and polar bears is at Wapusk National Park, Manitoba, Canada, west of Hudson's Bay.
- ConnectionsEdited from Tundra (1936)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- In der Hölle der Antarktis
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 1m(61 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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