
The Yellow Cruise
The Yellow Cruise is a French documentary film initially directed by André Sauvage and taken over by Léon Poirier following the intervention of André Citroën. The film was presented in Paris in 1934. André Sauvage was hired by the Pathé-Natan company to follow the yellow cruise through Asia. In 1931 and 1932, forty-two men, including Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, scholars and doctors traveled thirty thousand kilometers on the Silk Road through the Middle and Far East, in caterpillar propellants. Together, despite the bad weather, the difficulties of the terrain, the mechanical failures and the political conflicts, they reached Beijing on February 12, 1932. André Citroën who asked to see the film, dissatisfied with the result, bought it from Bernard Natan and entrusted the editing by Léon Poirier, who had filmed La Croisière Noire in Africa in 1926. This film will mark the break in the film career of André Sauvage.
You may like

Antarctica

Journey to the Seventh Planet

Time Hoppers: The Silk Road

The Land Unknown

Tarzan the Ape Man

The Abominable Snowman

The Great Achievement

Man in the Wilderness

Imphal Bazaar

Night of the Howling Beast

S.O.S. Iceberg

Eight Below

Al Oriente

The Mask of Fu Manchu

Dr. Cyclops

Anaconda

Expedition Amelia

Ivohiboro, The Lost Forest

National Treasure

The Dawn Wall

180° South

The Alpinist

Free Solo

The Art of Flight