The Ascent Of Man
1 9 7 3 (UK)
13 x 50 minute episodes
The most praised
British documentary series of the early 70s was The Ascent of Man,
a thirteen-part scientific and philosophical treatise by Dr Jacob
Bronowski which explained how man came to be drawn, step by step, from
one field of scientific discovery to the next. The doctor's confident
and careful words were heard as his hunched figure bestrode the
deserts or climbed the monuments and exciting pictures unfurled. His
face reflected in a bubble of mercury was one of these. The air waves
as a spear cut its high-speed path was another.
Hours of experiments
had gone into perfecting the technical effects of course. The prop for
one sequence, filmed in Holkham, Norfolk, explaining the early methods
of x-ray photography and radar, gave the producers headaches and the
locals something of a scare. It was a large human head, made from
canvas over a chicken-wire base; and it appeared, apparently from
nowhere, on the beach one day, staring eerily out to sea.
The Ascent Of Man took
four years to reach the screen and when it did Jacob Bronowski was in
hospital suffering from the fatigue of it all. He died the following
year.
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