Facing Your Danger (1946) Poster

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7/10
Excellent white rapids adventure, though likely more "breath-taking" in the forties than now
jlewis77-128 December 2009
Occasionally shown on TCM and now available on the DVD for Bette Davis' DECEPTION, this one-reeler acquired by Warner Brothers in 1945 (and given spiffy narration by Knox Manning) makes impressive use of Grand Canyon scenery. The dangers of riding the Colorado River are pretty obvious and not to be viewed by the faint-of-heart. There's even a brief shot of a skeleton to add a grim touch of reality to the fun.

Although today's viewers may pass this off as a forties "home movie", the close-up footage of white water rapids certainly would look great on the big screen; the Oscar voters were impressed. It is interesting to compare this with some of the 1950s CinemaScope portraits of the Colorado, like the Disney featurette GRAND CANYON. Today, this type of adventure would probably be made with greater technical sophistication for the IMAX screen... and a bigger crew, a longer end-credit roll and none of the personal "touch" of a cameraman like Edwin E. Olsen.

Early information from 1946 periodicals suggest that this was planned as a "Technicolor Adventure" (a more fitting umbrella title), but it went into general release as one of the 160+ "Sports Parade" shorts, which Warner Bros.cranked out between 1940 and 1956. These were often less "sport" and more "human interest" and travelogue. Their key advantage over the competition (Paramount Sportlight, RKO Sportscope, Fox Sport Review and Columbia World Of Sports) was the consistent use of Technicolor (though 16mm "blown up" to 35 often looked quite grainy).
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6/10
White Water
boblipton7 December 2019
Here's an early and quite beautifully shot short subject about white-water boating. It is startlingly beautiful, with its images of of the Colorado River canyons above Lake Meade. It's no wonder that it won an Oscar for Best Short Subject in its day.

The copy that TCM runs occasionally is a bit unfocused, alas. I think it likely this was drawn from a 16-mm. print. Warner Brothers seemed to take poor archival care of their short subjects, even the Oscar-winners, and the difficulties of storing Technicolor, which requires three prints, all of which must age at precisely the same rate; this is just about impossible.

Knox Manning narrates this in an excited voice. He always narrated as if people were going to die, whether he was talking about soldiers in war, or a county-fair pie contest. We'll give him the benefit of the doubt on this one, even though logic tells us if they boaters were killed, this movie wouldn't have made the theater.
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10/10
My favorite short subject..
bergennelson30 August 2008
Edwin E. Olsen was a business partner in the home building business with my father, Leslie Howard Nelson, during the final years of the Great Depression. I remember watching the first version of this movie in the basement of our home in Pleasant Hills, Pa. He then showed it locally and finally at Carnegie Hall. World War 2 forced them to shut down their construction business and then we all moved to California in 1943. My father retired to a ranch in San Fernando Valley and eventually moved to Santa Barbara. Ed Olsen's movie was purchased by a professional film company and Ed went on to film many short subjects for them. I am now the last living member of both families and would love to watch "Facing Your Danger" with my family. Is there any way that I could obtain a copy of this movie? Thanks, Bergen Nelson
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Great Short
Michael_Elliott26 February 2008
Facing Your Danger (1946)

**** (out of 4)

Excellent short documenting the first group of men to take boats down the Colorado River, which was considered to have the worst rapids. The footage is pretty exciting to watch as are the very dangerous rapids. Oscar winner for Best Short.

Great all the way around.

As of writing this, the film has yet to be released on DVD but Turner Classic Movies show it every Feb. during their Oscar month. Right now that's the only way to see this.
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9/10
Rare Middlearth footage documents . . .
oscaralbert20 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
. . . the Lost World of the 1900s (akin to contemporary film of China's Lost "World Heritage" Natural Wonders of the early 2000s). Before easily-bought politicians destroyed it with the infamous Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona's stretch of the Grand Canyon's Colorado River featured 233 rapids. More than half of the first 125 river runners to attempt it failed this torrent's test, and paid for it with their lives. The skeleton of one such flunker is shown at the start of Norman Nevill's apparently successful run to the Hoover (a.k.a., Boulder) Dam's Lake Mead in the mid-1940s. At the time FACING YOUR DANGER was shot, this churning and boiling water was 15% silt and sand, by weight, and NOT icy at all. Since that Glen Canyon monstrosity destroyed this river, its meager flow is crystal clear, and too frigid to stand in for more than 8 seconds. So many thousands of fat cat tourists have tube-rafted down this desecrated former Natural Wonder that it can now be fairly described by imagining Disney's original "Pirates of the Caribbean Ride" of the late 1900s turned into a sewage lagoon. The only way to "save" the Colorado would be for PIRATES' Capt. Jack Sparrow to use his supernatural powers to erase that dam and drain "Lake Powell," while yelling, "Flow, Baby, Flow!"
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