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Rocketship "Friede" from "Frau im Mond" (1929) |
IN STOCK |
Retail Price: $70.00 + Shipping |
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ABOUT THE DESIGN: | ABOUT THE MODEL: | |
In 1927, in the wake of his
stunning success with his sci-fi opus "Metropolis,"
German director Fritz Lang decided his next movie would be a sprawling
silent melodrama based on mankind's first trip to the moon. To make
his movie as technically accurate as possible, Lang enlisted the aid of
already-famous spaceflight cheerleader Wiley Ley who, in turn, corralled
Romanian-born rocket pioneer Hermann Oberth into the project. The
centerpiece of Lang's new feature, "Frau im Mond" ("The
Woman in the Moon,") was the spaceship "Friede" (named after the movie's
titular character), based on the Modell E rocket from Oberth's treatise "Die
Rakete." An extra stage was added to the E, making the "Friede"
longer and more cylindrical than its predecessor, but keeping in place the
rectangular "legs" that provided support as well as additional
aerodynamic stability
for the spacecraft. Although "Frau im Mond" was not a commercial success -- it had the misfortune of being a silent film released just when talkies were taking off -- it could be argued that it lead directly to the actual moon landing 40 years later. As a pre-release publicity stunt, Lang's studio, Ufa, agreed to finance the development of an actual liquid-fuel based scale model of the "Friede" that would be flown just prior to the film's premiere. (Note: In 1929, liquid-fueled rockets had yet to be flown in Europe.) Although the project failed, leading Oberth to suffer a literal nervous breakdown, the project was subsequently taken up by Germany's nascent VfR (German Rocket Society) whose membership included a then-18-year-old Werner von Braun. The rest, as they say, is history. Additional note: After Hitler came to power, "Frau im Mond" was considered so technically authentic that the Reich ordered all prints destroyed for fear it could compromise its secret ballistic missile program. Those prints that currently survive tend to be highly edited versions of Lang's 2-1/2-hour-long original. |
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Rocketship "Friede" - What You Get |
Completed Model & Stand (Included) |
Frieda Plan View by Jon Rogers |
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Original Movie Poster |
Friede as "Pop Mechanics" Cover Girl |
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