Rivers of Fire and Ice

1968 G 1h 38m 6.9

An engrossing, intriguing look at the exciting and sometimes hair-raising adventures of animal collector Ronald E. Shanin, as he travels through Central and East Africa.

Ronald E. Shanin, an aeronautical engineer turned animal collector, filmed this documentary while traveling 25,000 miles through Africa over a five-and-a-half-year period. Included in the footage are scenes of lionesses on the prowl for food and caring for their young; Shanin capturing a cobra and a black mamba with his bare hands; shots of an eagle whose wingspread reaches seven feet; scenes of leopards, chimpanzees, a hyena, elephants, gazelles, cheetahs, and rhinoceros; and visits with the Bambuti Pygmies and with Masai tribesmen. Shanin is filmed as he hunts a lion which has been killing dogs in a bush village. The final two episodes of the film are devoted to the scaling of the fog-shrouded peaks of the "Mountains of the Moon" to map uncharted glacial floes that form the source of the Nile; and to photographing the newly-erupting Congo volcano Kitsimbanyi both from the air and at a distance of fifteen yards as it spreads lava through forests and villages.


Info about Rivers of Fire and Ice

Studio(s): Crown International Pictures

Originally Released: Nov 27, 1968

Production Countries: Kenya, United States

Genres:Documentary