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*In the cartoon ''[[Hey Arnold!]]'', Grandpa Phil's pet name for Arnold is Nanook.
*In the cartoon ''[[Hey Arnold!]]'', Grandpa Phil's pet name for Arnold is Nanook.
*The title of an episode of ''[[The Powerpuff Girls]]'', "Nano of the North", is a clear parody of Nanook's title.
*The title of an episode of ''[[The Powerpuff Girls]]'', "Nano of the North", is a clear parody of Nanook's title.
*The 1993 ''[[Rugrats]]'' episode, "The Blizzard",<ref>http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1291350/combined</ref> featured an attempt by the babies to reach the "North Pole" in their back yard, aided by "Angelinook of the North">
*The 1993 ''[[Rugrats]]'' episode, "The Blizzard",<ref>http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1291350/combined</ref> featured an attempt by the babies to reach the "North Pole" in their back yard, aided by "Angelinook of the North".
*In the 1988 ''[[Night Court]]'' episode "Danny Got His Gun: Part 2," episode 103 (season 6), Dan is rescued from a plane crash in Alaska by an Inuit family. The episode contains several overt and situational references to Nanook of the North.
*In the 1988 ''[[Night Court]]'' episode "Danny Got His Gun: Part 2," episode 103 (season 6), Dan is rescued from a plane crash in Alaska by an Inuit family. The episode contains several overt and situational references to Nanook of the North.



Revision as of 13:42, 25 August 2012

Nanook of the North
Directed byRobert J. Flaherty
Written byRobert J. Flaherty
Produced byRobert J. Flaherty
StarringAllakariallak
Nyla
Cunayou
CinematographyRobert J. Flaherty
Edited byRobert J. Flaherty
Charles Gelb
Music byStanley Silverman
Release date
June 11, 1922
Running time
79 minutes
LandVereinigte Staaten
LanguagesSilent film
English intertitles

Nanook of the North (also known as Nanook of the North: A Story Of Life and Love In the Actual Arctic) is a 1922 silent documentary film by Robert J. Flaherty. In the tradition of what would later be called salvage ethnography, Flaherty captured the struggles of the Inuk Nanook and his family in the Canadian Arctic. The film is considered the first feature-length documentary, though Flaherty has been criticized for staging several sequences and thereby distorting the reality of his subjects' lives.[1]

In 1989, this film was one of the first 25 films to be selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".

Plot

Nyla, wife of Nanook.
Nanook (Allariallak),[2] 1920

The documentary follows the lives of an Inuit, Nanook, and his family as they travel, search for food, and trade in in northern Quebec, Canada. Nanook, his wife, Nyla, and their baby, Cunayou, are introduced as fearless heroes who endure rigors "no other race" could survive.

Production

Development

In 1910, Flaherty was hired as an explorer and prospector along the Hudson Bay for a Canadian railroad company. Learning about the lands and people there, Flaherty decided to bring a camera with him on his third expedition in 1913, but knowing nothing about film, Flaherty took a three-week course on cinematography in Rochester, New York.[3]

Filming

Using a Bell & Howell camera, a portable developing and printing machine, and some lighting equipment, Flaherty spent 1914 and 1915 shooting hours of film of Eskimo life. By 1916, Flaherty had enough footage that he began test screenings and was met with wide enthusiasm. However, in 1916, Flaherty dropped a cigarette onto the original camera negative (which was highly flammable nitrate stock) and lost 30,000 feet of film.[4] With his first attempt ruined, Flaherty decided to not only return for new footage, but also to refocus the film on one Eskimo family as he felt his earlier footage was too much of travelogue. Spending four years raising money, Flaherty was eventually funded by French fur company Revillon Frères and returned to the North and shot from August 1920 to August 1921. As a main character, Flaherty chose the celebrated hunter of the Itivimuit tribe, Nanook. The full collaboration of the Eskimos was key to Flaherty's success as the Eskimos were his film crew and many of them knew his camera better than he did.[5]

Controversies

Flaherty has been criticized for deceptively portraying staged events as reality.[6] "Nanook" was in fact named Allakariallak, while the "wife" shown in the film was not really his wife. According to Charles Nayoumealuk, who was interviewed in Nanook Revisited (1988), "the two women in Nanook - Nyla (Alice [?] Nuvalinga) and Cunayou (whose real name we do not know) were not Allakariallak's wives, but were in fact common-law wives of Flaherty."[7] And although Allakariallak normally used a gun when hunting, Flaherty encouraged him to hunt after the fashion of his recent ancestors in order to capture the way the Inuit lived before European influence. On the other hand, while Flaherty made his Inuit actors use spears instead of guns during the walrus and seal hunts, the prey shown in the film were genuine, wild animals. Flaherty also exaggerated the peril to Inuit hunters with his claim, often repeated, that Allakariallak had died of starvation two years after the film was completed, whereas in fact he died at home, likely of tuberculosis.[8][9]

Building of the igloo

The building of the igloo is one of the most celebrated sequences in the film, but interior photography presented a problem. Building an igloo large enough for a camera to enter resulted in the dome collapsing, and when they finally succeeded in making the igloo it was too dark for photography. Instead, the images of the inside of the igloo in the film were actually shot in a special three-walled igloo for Flaherty's bulky camera so that there would be enough light for it to capture interior shots.[5]

Visit to the trade post of the white man

Another scene that is continually discussed is the visit to the "Trade Post of the White Man." In this scene, Nanook and his family arrives in a kayak at the trading post and one family member after another emerge from a small kayak, akin to a clown car at the circus. Going to trade his hunt from the year, including foxes, seals and polar bears, Nanook comes in contact with the white man and there is a funny interaction as the two cultures meet. The trader plays music on a gramophone and tries to explain how a man 'cans' his voice. Bending forward and staring at the machine, Nanook puts his ear closer as the trader cranks the mechanism again. The trader removes the record and hands it to Nanook who at first peers at it and then puts it in his mouth and bites it. The scene is meant to be a comical one as the audience laughs at the naivete of Nanook and people isolated from Western culture. In truth, the scene was entirely scripted and the Nanook knew what a gramophone was.[10]

Hunting of the walrus

The film's main action sequence, when Nanook hunts a walrus, was also a staged event. Walrus hunting was no longer a practice of the Inuit and hadn't been for some time, but Flaherty and the Inuit staged the scene to create a high-tension event. In addition, the characters’ authentic clothes were actually a nostalgic hybrid as the Inuit had started to integrate Western wear some time previously.[11]

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.

Reception

As the first nonfiction work of its scale, Nanook of the North was ground-breaking cinema. It captured an exotic culture (that is, Indigenous and considered exotic to non-Inuit peoples) in a remote location. Hailed almost unanimously by critics, the film was a box office success in the United States and abroad. In the following years, many others would try to follow in Flaherty's success with "primitive peoples" films.[5]

Legacy

At the time, few documentaries had been filmed and there was little precedent to guide Flaherty's work. Since Flaherty's time both staging action and attempting to steer documentary action have come to be considered unethical amongst cinéma vérité purists, because they believe such reenactments deceive the audience.

In its earliest years (approx. 1895–1902), film production was dominated by actualities, short pictures of real people in real places. Robert Flaherty’s great innovation was simply to combine the two forms of actuality, infusing the exotic journey with the details of indigenous work and play and life.[12]

Home Media

In 1999 Nanook of the North was digitally remastered and released on DVD by The Criterion Collection. It includes an interview with Flaherty's widow (and Nanook of the North co-editor), Frances Flaherty, photos from Flaherty's trip to the arctic, and excerpts from a TV documentary, Flaherty and Film."[13]

In literature and publications

In music

Onscreen, in film

Onscreen, in television

  • In the Deep Space Nine episode "His Way", the station Chief of Security Odo is compared to Nanook of the North because of his icy personality.
  • In the cartoon Hey Arnold!, Grandpa Phil's pet name for Arnold is Nanook.
  • The title of an episode of The Powerpuff Girls, "Nano of the North", is a clear parody of Nanook's title.
  • The 1993 Rugrats episode, "The Blizzard",[14] featured an attempt by the babies to reach the "North Pole" in their back yard, aided by "Angelinook of the North".
  • In the 1988 Night Court episode "Danny Got His Gun: Part 2," episode 103 (season 6), Dan is rescued from a plane crash in Alaska by an Inuit family. The episode contains several overt and situational references to Nanook of the North.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Essay by Dean W. Duncan". Criterion Collection. Retrieved May 18, 2007.
  2. ^ "MP-0000.596.1 | Le chasseur au harpon, 1920-1929 | Impression | Robert J. Flaherty | Musée McCord". Mccord-museum.qc.ca. Retrieved 2012-06-13.
  3. ^ Barnouw, Eri (1993). Documentary:A History of the Non-Fiction Film. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 33–35.
  4. ^ Barnouw, Erik (1993). Documentary:A History of the Non-Fiction Film. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 33–35.
  5. ^ a b c . pp. 34–36. {{cite book}}: Missing or empty |title= (help) Cite error: The named reference "Barnous" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  6. ^ "Richard Leacock Essay (Flaherty's Cameraman in the '40's and later MIT professor of film studies)".
  7. ^ Julia Emberley. Defamiliarizing the aboriginal: cultural practices and decolonization in Canada. p. 86 (citing Fatimah Tobing Rony, Taxidermy and Romantic Ethnography: Robert Flaherty's Nanook of the North).
  8. ^ Pamela R. Stern, Historical Dictionary of the Inuit (Lanham, MD:Scarecrow Press, 2004), p. 23.
  9. ^ Robert J. Christopher, Robert and Frances Flaherty: A Documentary Life, 1883-1922 (Montréal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2005), pp. 387-388
  10. ^ Rothman, William (1997). Documentary Film Classics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 9–11.
  11. ^ Duncan, Dean W. "Nanook of the North". Criterion Collection. Retrieved 3 April 2012.
  12. ^ Duncan, Dean. "Nanook of the North". Criterion Collection. Retrieved 3 April 2012.
  13. ^ "Nanook of the North". The Criterion Collection. Retrieved 3 April 2012.
  14. ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1291350/combined