Georges Méliès is widely regarded as the first person to recognize the potential of
narrative film, and his
A Trip to the Moon (1902),
The Kingdom of the Fairies (1903), and
The Impossible Voyage (1904) were among the most popular films of the first few years of the twentieth century. However, by the time of
The Conquest of the Pole his fortunes were in decline. In 1911, Méliès entered into a deal in which the
Pathé Frères company became the sole distributor of his films. Though they continued to be filmed at Méliès's
Star Film Company studio in Paris,
Charles Pathé had executive control over the films, including power to edit their structure and length. All of Méliès's films from 1911 onward, including
The Conquest of the Pole, were therefore made under Pathé's supervision and released by his company.
The Conquest of the Pole is Méliès's longest cinematic work: 650 meters of film, which, at his preferred projection speed of 12 to 14 frames per second, is about 44 minutes. It was also the last of Méliès's "journey" films, The film was made by Méliès in the winter of 1911–1912, with Méliès himself taking on the lead role of Professor Maboul.
Fernande Albany, who had previously appeared in Méliès's films
The Impossible Voyage,
An Adventurous Automobile Trip, and
Tunnelling the English Channel, played the leader of the suffragettes. During his career, Méliès had built two glass-and-metal film studios in
Montreuil, Seine-Saint-Denis. The first one was relatively small, with a stage measuring 16 by 13 feet. The second one, Studio B, was built in 1905 with considerably larger dimensions, including a stage about thirty feet wide and an elevator crane allowing large objects to be carried up and down.
The Conquest of the Pole took full advantage of Studio B's facilities, especially for the scene with the Giant of the Snows. Méliès created the film's special effects using a wide array of techniques, including stage machinery,
pyrotechnics, scenery rolling horizontally and vertically,
miniature models, real water,
substitution splices, and
superimpositions. which required twelve men to operate. Its head alone was two meters high; two of the puppeteers hid inside the head to control the Giant's eyes, ears, mouth, and pipe. Most of the film is shot in Méliès's usual style, in which a stationary camera allows the viewer to watch the film as if it were being played in scenes on a theatre stage. However, the scene in which the airplane lands in the Arctic is notable for an advanced editing technique in which the point of view becomes mobile rather than stationary. First, the plane is first seen coming directly toward the camera; then, in the next shot, the motion of the plane continues seamlessly, but the viewpoint has been rotated ninety degrees. In previous films, Méliès had sometimes used
nonlinear editing for such moments, such as in
A Trip to the Moon and
The Impossible Voyage, in which the space capsule and dirigible, respectively, are shown landing twice. This scene in
The Conquest of the Pole marks the first time Méliès fluently uses the mobile point of view, which had been pioneered by the "
Brighton School" of filmmakers in England. However, Méliès revealed in 1929 that he had never found mobile techniques to be natural or particularly useful and that he still preferred the stationary camera techniques he had used. ==Release and reception==