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Flight of the Lost Balloon
(1961)
Directed by Nathan Juran
Marshall Thompson (Dr. Joseph Faraday), Mala Powers (Ellen Burton), James Lanphier
(“The Hindu”), Douglas Kennedy (Sir Hubert Warrington)
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Don't see this picture unless you take the special motion sickness pill provided free at this theater!
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Flight of the Lost Balloon is one of the more interesting failures in the Fireside
cycle. Rarely seen today, the movie has a game cast, a director with excellent
genre credentials, and some outstanding widescreen photography to display. You
can tell that the filmmakers wanted desperately to emulate the major epics that
had gone before, offering a Verne-inspired plot, lots of stock Fireside situations,
and a lilting theme song crooned over elaborate animated title work. Unfortunately,
you can also tell that they didn’t have nearly enough cash on hand to
follow through with these grand ambitions. Flight of the Lost Balloon
is not only a low-budget film, it’s a cheap film…and way too cheap
to have attempted anything like the continent-spanning adventure story we see
sketched out here.
The movie seems to be based, if
only in spirit, on Verne’s very first novel Cinq Semaines en ballon
(Five Weeks in a Balloon). Commissioned by the London Geographical
Society, Dr. Joseph Faraday (Marshall Thompson) attempts an aeronautical voyage
across Africa to rescue a lost explorer. Along the way, a mysterious, nameless
“Hindu” commandeers the expedition for purposes of his own. Despite
a lengthy cannibal episode played mostly for laughs, Flight of the Lost
Balloon was definitely intended as a straightforward action-adventure movie
(quite unlike the “official” version of Five Weeks that
would appear a year or so later). The story features several interesting plot
twists and includes some effective villainy by James Lanphier, in an oily performance
reminiscent of Vincent Price. Sadly, the meager budget ruins everything. The
production, apparently, couldn’t even afford a real hot-air balloon: every
single aerial shot in the picture appears to have been accomplished with the
miniature balloon Thompson proudly displays (as a “test model”)
in the first reel!
Actually, I wonder whether the budget wasn’t cut drastically
during the shooting of the film itself. That’s the only way I can account
for several of this movie’s many curiosities. The music score, for instance,
disappears completely about half way through, leaving nothing but a long inexplicable
silence. Likewise, a major special effects sequence seems half-finished. In
fact, I wouldn't be surprised to learn that the giant condor attack over Lake
Tanganyika had originally been intended as a stop-motion set piece ala Ray Harryhausen.
Director Nathan Juran had just scored a hit with Harryhausen's 7th Voyage
of Sinbad, and the “Projects Unlimited” effects group hired
for Lost Balloon included several expert stop-motion animators. As
it stands however, the episode is laughably bad, with two or three see-through
condors-on-a-stick buzzing the miniature balloon to no apparent effect. The
scene must have looked especially ridiculous on theatre screens.
Marshall Thompson went on to star
in the “Verne-flavored” Around the World Under the Sea
later in the decade, and Juran made one of the best pictures in the entire cycle
with 1964’s First Men in the Moon. But Flight of the Lost
Balloon is little more than a curio—a footnote in the history of
Fireside Science Fiction. Yet who knows what it might have been like with just
a bit more finance available?
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