The Bridge on the River Kwai

Started by Peter Hausamann · 186 · 6 years ago
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    Peter Hausamann said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    This movie came out in 1957. I was just a small boy when it came to Sydney. (I was born in 1954). This was my first film and cinema experience. I was with my mother. We both travelled by train. On the way home I would not stop attempting to whistle the Colonel Bogey March music. Passengers thought it was funny, though I did not think so.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bridge_on_the_River_Kwai

    Scratch build.
    Scale 1:76
    Scene (still undecided).

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    Paul Barber said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    Peter, your skills are wide-ranging, but if anyone is going to build a bridge - you are that guy!

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    Peter Hausamann said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    That made me laugh, Paul.
    Well, I am no longer afraid of building bridges. Besides, since the life-span I have acquired a certian liking for them. As a matter of fact, I was just about to post a drawing. See below.

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    gary sausmikat said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    Peter. Great selection...another William Holden classic on the list of models to be done. Can't wait to see which scene you decide to portray. Good luck! "will that be with or without a parachute"

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    Peter Hausamann said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    Couldn't find any plans for the bridge. So, it's back to photo extrapolation. Soon discovered the beautiful simplicity of its geometry and strength. Assuming that they used imperial measurements, such as the standard 'foot', the bridge quickly fell into shape. Measurements below are in feet.

    Using the scale of 1:76. One foot = 305 mm / 76 = 4 mm.
    The Support Tower of 60 feet = 240 mm model height.

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    Peter Hausamann said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    Gary @gwskat.
    "Ha ha ha, with or without parachute, ha ha ha".
    Good one.

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    david leigh-smith said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    “Madness, madness...”

    Unbelievable. Already this group is exceeding all expectations, but really, THE Bridge over the River Kwai is a wonderful and ambitious project that beautifully mirrors the movie itself. Life imitating art.

    I am in debt to you, Peter. Such an undertaking is exceptional and I’ll be cheering (and whistling) with every post!

    @tecko

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    gary sausmikat said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    that's my favorite scene and line in the movie...

    peter, just remember when doing this project to "Be Happy at your work"

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    Peter Hausamann said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    Gary, it's interesting how the POWs adopts and adapts such a saying to suit an unhappy circumstance.

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    Peter Hausamann said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    The 1:76 scale turns out to be quite large (at least 240 x 1280 x ? mm), especially if the diorama has a wide (? mm) base. This would take up too much space at home for my liking. Perhaps a very narrow diorama which focuses on the construction of the bridge. Such a long yet narrow display could fit on top of a bookcase.

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    Peter Hausamann said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    Thanks David @dirtylittlefokker for providing a great modelling group. It really taps into a world of impressions which we all have been, at one time, rivetted to the movie screen. It's been like that since the caveman stared into his campfire of imaginations (our first TV). The group idea certainly invites us to rekindle our imprinted memories. . . but somehow I keep thinking of popcorn, jaffers, and canoodling.

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    Stephen W Towle said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    Of course it took a Englishman played by a Guinness or a true actor who can act...and play the role of a mad guy to make this movie a classic. What to do ? Showing the discovery of the wires or showing the train getting blown up ...there is so much that can be modeled here. Great subject and project. Looking forward to see this one get built.

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    david leigh-smith said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    Peter you have tapped into the very heart of why this Group Build is important to me. As a kid the Movies elicited wonder, escape, fear, empathy, pain, love, sorrow, and more than that, at their best they gave us guidelines on how to deal with these feelings.

    I’m finalising my own builds for this project and my hope is that in representing some of these emotions in scale and sharing them, I’ll be doing my own time traveling, having fun, connecting, and celebrating memories.

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    david leigh-smith said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    Stephen, my money would be on discovering the wires. For me that’s where the tension is, but then, I work as a psych.

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    Peter Hausamann said 6 years, 2 months ago:

    Thanks fellows for sharing your thoughts and time on this. Looking forward to seeing what you and others will be creating.

    Stephen, I don't particularly want to blow the bridge up, and have a train tumbling off into the river. Though that is quite dramatic (I have enough drama in my life, even as a hermit).

    David, though finding the wires from the bridge is interesting, it also requires a wide diorama, even with forced perspective. I really wish to avoid the extra width. Height and length is big enough already.
    Originally, with a wide diorama, I was thinking of forced perspective of the scene where Alec Guiness falls on the detonator handle. For it posses a question.

    Now I am thinking of shortening the width to focus on the construction scenes _ with a twist. A 'what-if' approach, which has a bit of humour.