The Boy Who Saw the Iceberg

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Directed byPaul Driessen
Written byPaul Driessen
Produced byMarcy Page
David Verrall
Music byNormand Roger
The Boy Who Saw the Iceberg
Directed byPaul Driessen
Written byPaul Driessen
Produced byMarcy Page
David Verrall
Music byNormand Roger
Color processTechnicolor
Production
company
Release date
  • June 4, 2000 (2000-06-04)
Running time
9 minutes
CountryCanada

The Boy Who Saw the Iceberg (French: Le garçon qui a vu l'iceberg) is a 2000 animated short by Paul Driessen, which uses a split screen to portray the real life (on the left side) and imaginary life (on the right) of a young boy. A film without words, the 8 minute and 49 second National Film Board of Canada short is a retelling of the 1912 sinking of the Titanic through the eyes and active imagination of a young boy.[1][2]

Over a period of three days, the film shows how the boy's fantasies of peril and adventure are frustrated by adults, who interrupt his fantasies, forcing the boy to start a new imaginary story line each time. Once aboard the ocean liner, however, the perils facing the boy are no longer the stuff of fancy. When he spots an iceberg and tries to warn the ship's captain, he is rebuffed. The film does not show the actual collision or disaster, going instead to white out. However, in an epilogue sequence, the film shows the final moments of the boy's consciousness: unable to warn anyone or make any heroic escape from this real peril, he returns to his bed, and his mind's view is extinguished. The film ends with the silent iceberg in both the left and right panels.[1][2]

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