The Silent World
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The Silent World | |
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File:Monde silence.jpg
original film poster
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Directed by | Jacques-Yves Cousteau Louis Malle |
Written by | Jacques-Yves Cousteau and James Dugan |
Release dates
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May 26, 1956(Cannes) August 15, 1956 (Japan) September 24, 1956 (USA) |
Running time
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86 minutes |
Country | France Italy |
Language | French |
The Silent World (French: Le Monde du silence) is a 1956 French documentary film co-directed by the famed French oceanographer Jacques-Yves Cousteau and a young Louis Malle. The Silent World is noted as one of the first films to use underwater cinematography to show the ocean depths in color.[1][2] Its title derives from Cousteau's 1953 book The Silent World: A Story of Undersea Discovery and Adventure.
The film was shot aboard the ship Calypso. Cousteau and his team of divers shot 25 kilometers of film over two years in the Mediterranean Sea, the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean, of which 2.5 kilometers were included in the finished documentary.
The film later faced criticism for environmental damage done during the filmmaking. In one scene, the crew of the Calypso massacre a school of sharks that were drawn to the carcass of a baby whale, which itself had been mortally injured by the crew, albeit accidentally (Cousteau had the ship driven into a pod of whales to get a close-up view, striking one whale in the process before the baby was lacerated by the prop.) In another, Cousteau uses dynamite near a coral reef in order to make a more complete census of the marine life in its vicinity. The crew also generally touched (harassed) every creature they came across (including riding giant tortoises). Cousteau later became more environmentally conscious, involved in marine conservation, and was even called "the father of the environmental movement" by Ted Turner.[3]
The Silent World was the first of Cousteau's documentary films to win an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature; World Without Sun also won in 1964. The film also won the Palme d'Or award at the 1956 Cannes Film Festival,[4] being the only documentary film to win the award until Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11 repeated the feat in 2004.
See also
References
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External links
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). The Silent World at IMDb
- The Silent World at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Silent World at AllMovie
- Jacques Cousteau's "The Silent World" by Greg Rubinson at salon.com, July 15, 2002, retrieved June 14, 2011
- Pages with reference errors
- Pages with broken file links
- French-language films
- Articles containing French-language text
- 1956 films
- Best Documentary Feature Academy Award winners
- French films
- Palme d'Or winners
- Documentary films about nature
- Films directed by Louis Malle
- French documentary films
- 1950s documentary films
- Jacques Cousteau