Nanook of the North
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| Nanook of the North | |
|---|---|
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| Directed by | Robert J. Flaherty |
| Produced by | Robert J. Flaherty |
| Written by | Robert J. Flaherty |
| Starring | Nanook Nyla Cunayou |
| Music by | Stanley Silverman |
| Cinematography | Robert J. Flaherty |
| Release date(s) | Image:Flag of the United States.svg June 11, 1922 |
| Running time | 79 min. |
| Language | English |
| All Movie Guide profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
Nanook of the North is a silent documentary film by Robert J. Flaherty, released in 1922. In the tradition of what would be called salvage ethnography, Flaherty captured the struggles of the Inuit Nanook and his family in the Canadian arctic. The film is considered the first feature-length documentary, though Flaherty has been criticized for staging much of the action and distorting the reality of his subjects' lives.
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[edit] Film
The film was shot near Inukjuaq, on Hudson Bay in arctic Quebec, Canada. Having worked as a prospector and explorer in arctic Canada among the Inuit, Flaherty was familiar with his subjects and set out to document their lifestyle. Flaherty had shot film in the region prior to this period, but that footage was destroyed in a fire started when Flaherty dropped a cigarette onto the original camera negative (which was highly flammable nitrate stock). Flaherty therefore made Nanook of the North in its place. Funded by French fur company Revillion Frères, the film was shot from August 1920 to August 1921.
As the first nonfiction work of its scale, Nanook of the North was ground-breaking cinema. It captured an exotic culture in a distant location, rather than a facsimile of reality using actors and props on a studio set. Traditional Inuit methods of hunting, fishing, igloo-building, and other customs were shown with accuracy, and the compelling story of a man and his family struggling against nature met with great success in North America and abroad.
[edit] Criticism
Flaherty has been criticised for deceptively portraying staged events as reality. Much of the action was staged and gives an inaccurate view of real Inuit life during the early 20th century. "Nanook" was in fact named Allakariallak, for instance, while the "wife" shown in the film was not really his wife. And although Allakariallak normally used a gun when hunting, Flaherty encouraged him to hunt after the fashion of his ancestors in order to capture what was believed to be the way the Inuit lived before European influence. The ending, in which Nanook and his family are supposedly in peril of dying if they can't find shelter quickly enough, was implausible, given the reality of nearby French-Canadian and Inuit settlements during filming (although Allakariallak himself died of exposure two years after the film was made, when he was caught in a snowstorm). On the other hand, while Flaherty made his Inuit actors use spears instead of guns during the walrus and seal hunts, the hunting itself did involve actual wild animals.
Flaherty defended his work by stating that a filmmaker must often distort a thing to catch its true spirit. Later filmmakers have pointed out that the only cameras available to Flaherty at the time were both large and immobile, making it impossible to effectively capture most interior shots or unstructured exterior scenes without significantly modifying the environment and subject action. For example, the Inuit crew had to build a special three-walled igloo for Flaherty's bulky camera so that there would be enough light for it to capture interior shots.
At the time, few documentaries had been filmed and there was little precedent to guide Flaherty's work. Nonetheless, since Flaherty's time both staging action and attempting to steer documentary action have come to be considered unethical among documentarians, as has any sort of re-enactment which is not introduced as or immediately obvious as a re-enactment.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Nanook of the North at the Internet Movie Database
- Great Movies: Nanook of the North (1922) by Roger Ebert
- Criterion Collection essay by Dean W. Duncan
| Preceded by: Oliver Twist | The Criterion Collection 33 | Succeeded by: Andrei Rublev |
es:Nanuk el esquimal eo:Nanook of the North fr:Nanouk l'Esquimau tr:Kuzeyli Nanook zh:北方的南奴克


