Uncorrected (sorry) OCR text reads, in part: "Wendy & Forry Ackerman Visit the Moon, by Wendayne Mondelle.
Do you want to havce a foretaste of thrills to come? Then Just imagine you had accompanied us to the set of DESTINATION MOON. Enter with us through the gate of General Service Studios,
wind your way through the maze of soundstages, office buildings, parkinglots…and finally here we are; on soundstage 3, the only place on earth that ever came as near to looking like the moon as the
real thing. . Clinch your eyes a bit end you will 1ind yourself in
the midst of the crater Harpalus; walk on the lava-scarred ground, jump across the deep crevices, where eons ago the solidified lava- flow has cracked. Let your eyes sweep around the awe-inspiring heights of the encircling mountain chains. .Wild, steeprising crags, receding in bluish shadows. Upward your glance roves, and meets the immensity of the spaceblue skyroof, sprinkled ell over with a plan less array of stars...and there you catch yourself; come back to earth, and laugh at yourself.
For a few moments you had yourself fooled riright, or, rather, Chesley Bonestell had made you imagine
with his lifelike reproduction of the moonlendscape that you had made the 240,000 mile jump to "up there". With photographic preci sion he has created an 173 foot by 120 by 25 mooncrater, which is actually based on photos taken by the Mount Wilson Observatory.
[They meet screenwriter Robert Heinlein & producer George Pal.]
Forry shows Pal some of the stills of FRAU IM MOND, a German sciencefiction film
of 25 yesrs ago. Pal gets very interested. "Pichel, come over here," he calls- to Irving Pichel, director "Look at
how Fritz Lang has pictured the moonlandscape." And soon a large group is gathered around us; everyone wants to have a look at these rare stills, which are part of Forry’s large collection of Fantasy-
film-Fotos.
Mr. Breuer, the Technicolor specialist; the makeup artist; the actors, Werner Anderson, alias Dr. Cargreves
Uncorrected (sorry) OCR text reads, in part:
(the scientist whose invention of an atompowered driven spaceship will enable an American crew of four to take off to our neighbor in
the- sky 10 years hence); jolly Tom Powers, alias General Thayer, re tired Army man who finds out sone wicked foreigners have done it e- gain, and sabotaged the attempt to establish the first artifical earth satellite of anno 1954; which led to the abandonment of all further plans to fly beyond the earth’s atmosphere by the Army,
.< No, the enemy is not through yet, even in 1960, and so the General de
cides : either we. are going to be bombarded from high up there by
our dear neighbors, or they Will meet the same fate at our hands. So the obvious conclusion: Let us get up there in a hurry, before they beat us to it, but keep it hush-hush and get ready for the moonhop
in, oh, let me say, in p couple of weeks, But where are we going to get the necessary money? Thank God, here he is, John Archer, alias Jim Barnes, the inspired industrialist, who is financing the trip.
And now we have met all the pctors, with the exception of Dick Wesson, the ship’s radar man, who does not believe in the practica bility of spaceflight, but who is asked just to go through the motions. Well, now I see him over there, trying to join our crowd, strutting along in his cumbersome spacesuit.
But carrying on your frame 100 lbs. of space outfit might be alright on the moon; down here it gives
the little elegant'*effect of a deep sea diver. The spacesuit is a skyblue affair (we are told that the various actors have to wear dif ferently coloured suits, so they can be easily distinguished from each other, and more important, readily discerned from the drab-colored background of the moonset). Walkie-t?Ikie strapped around the
waist, oxygen cylinder on the back, diver’s helmet and heavy black rubber boots, with supposedly magnetized soles, complete our first space hero's outfit.
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Uncorrected (sorry) OCR text reads, in part:
"Come on, let’s break it up," Director Pichel reminds us after everyone.has duly admired Worry’s treasures, and af
ter George Pal has managed to borrow several of the stills to have photostats made for his own private collection. "Let’s move over to
stage 2* We still have to shoot the scene where Dr. Cargraves will
float in space."
A whole procession takes place in the direction of sound stage 2. An immense hell, full of scaffoldings, wires strung
through the air, an enormous technicolor camera, workmen busily ham mering, shouting instructions. Noise, rush and confusion, How ever
do they get anything done?
But in the meantime, Dr, Cargraves has been strung up cm the wires and-is dangling helplessly in the air like a
marionette. This, incidently, is one of the high lights of the film, which is, straight told; serious reportage of what in all likelihood will take place when, in the near future, the trip
to the moon will become a reality. Every effort has been made, Hein lein told us, to make the picture a documentary of the future, "as true to actual conditions ps we possibly could make it". And judging
by all we have seen, we enthusiastically believe him.
When we came back the second day, the huge bottom part of the
space ship had been erected on the moonset. We saw the lower 25 feet, of.the 150 high space ship… The interior of the ship’s control room was constructed gimbal-like, so that for the scenes in free fall, ceiling could be come floor, walls turn to ceiling, by simply rotating the whole contraption. Cost only $25,000 to build that contraption alone.
Chesley Bonestell took the trouble to explain each one of the sets designed by him in a charmingly conducted tour for us. He showed us all the models and sketches right from the planning stage on the drawing board to the completed nonsurplussable end product. One word of advice while
closing this article: DON’T DARE MISS THIS PICTURE!
Scene from the film DESTINATION MOON. On the Moon, four crewmen, wearing brightly colored space suits and white helmets, stand near a ladder. The latter is attached to the bottom of their shiny metal rocket ship. The floor of the crater they've landed it is flat, but cris-crossed with black cracks. In the background is much rougher terrain; rocks, boulders, and in the distance, the high crater wall, giving the appearance of a mountain range. Above, the black sky is dotted with white stars. Photo copyright 1950 by Eagle-Lion Classics.
I'm interested in the topic of "Visitors to the set of DESTINATION MOON in late 1949."
Just came across Wendayne Ackerman's account in the LASFS fanzine SHANGRI-LA #18, Feb 1950.
Many thanks to Fanac.org volunteers for digitizing old $fanzines!
#ScienceFiction #DestinationMoon