Roger Ebert
There is an astonishing sequence in Robert J. Flaherty's "Nanook of the North" (1922) in which his hero, the Inuit hunter Nanook, hunts a seal. Flaherty shows the most exciting passage in one unbroken shot. Nanook knows that seals must breathe every 20 minutes, and keep an air hole open for themselves in the ice of the Arctic winter. He finds such a hole, barely big enough to be seen and is poised motionless above it with his harpoon until a seal rises to breathe. Then he strikes and holds onto the line as the seal plunges to escape.
There is a desperate tug of war. Nanook hauls the line 10 or 12 feet out of the hole, and then is dragged back, sliding across the ice, and pulls again, and again. We can't see, but he must have the line tied to his body -- to lose would be to drown. He desperately signals for his fellow hunters to help him, and we see them running across the ice with their dogs as he struggles to hold on. They arrive at last, and three or four of them pull on the line. The seal prevails. Nanook uses his knife to enlarge the hole, and the seal at last is revealed and killed. The hunters immediately strip it of its blubber and dine on its raw flesh.
There has been some discussion among critics of a possible interruption in the filming; we never see the seal actually being pulled up to the surface. Was the quarry shot with a gun that Flaherty did not want to show, because that would affect the purity of his images of man against nature? Such questions are part of a decades-old debate about the methods of a man who has been called the father of the documentary, whose films are masterpieces, and yet whose realities were admittedly assisted.
Seeing "Nanook of the North" a week ago at the Toronto Film Festival, magnificently projected in 35mm and accompanied by a live performance of a new musical score, I did not much care about the purity of Flaherty's methods. He shot his footage in 1920, when there were no rules for documentaries and precious few documentaries, certainly none shot so far north that nothing grows except a little moss, and 300 Inuit could inhabit a space the size of England. (At about the same time, at the other pole, a photographer named Frank Hurley was filming Shackleton's expedition, which ended with his ship, the Endurance, broken by the ice, and the crew escaping to South America on a 700-mile journey in an open boat, with not a life lost. That film is also on DVD.)
We know, because Flaherty was frank about it, that he recruited the cast for his film. Nanook was chosen because he was the most famed of the hunters in the district, but the two women playing his wives were not his wives and the children were not his children. Flaherty's first footage was of a walrus hunt, and he revealed that Nanook and his fellow hunters performed the hunt for the camera. "Nanook" is notcinema verite.And yet in a sense it is: The movie is an authentic documentary showing the creation of itself. What happens on the screen is real, no matter what happened behind it. Nanook really has a seal on the other end of that line.
The movie shows Nanook during a few weeks in the life of his family. Countless details fill in a way of life that was already dying. We see the hunters creeping inch by inch upon a herd of slumbering walruses, and then Nanook springing up and harpooning one, and then a fierce struggle in which the mate of the walrus joins the battle. Such scenes simplify Inuit life to its most basic reality: In this land the only food comes from other animals, which must be hunted and killed. Everything the family uses -- its food, fuel, clothing and tools -- comes in some way from those animals, except for the knives and perhaps harpoon points, which they obtain at a trading post. They are a luxury; before there were trading posts, there were already Inuit.
One of the film's most fascinating scenes shows the construction of an igloo. Nanook and his friends carve big blocks of snow and stack them in a circle, carving new ones from the floor so that it sinks as the walls rise and curve inward to form a dome. Then he finds sheets of ice, cuts holes in the igloo walls, and inserts the ice to make windows. There is another igloo, a smaller one, for the dogs. And inside the big igloo, the tiniest igloo of all, for puppies, which the big dogs would quickly eat.
Nanook has a small son named Allee, and a baby, Rainbow, 4 months old; they travel inside the hoods of their mothers. There are scenes of unstudied grace and love as his wives, Nyla and Cunayou, care for the children, the children play with the puppies, and the whole family strips to crawl under their furs, which act as blankets for the night. There are also moments of hazard, as they are nearly lost in a sudden snowstorm, and times of great hunger and desperation. These are suggested in the film, but became real in the aftermath: Nanook, lost in a storm, died of starvation two years after Flaherty filmed him.
Flaherty (1884-1951), born in Michigan, traveled in northern Canada with his father as a young man, then returned as a scout looking for iron ore. He took along a camera and shot some footage of Eskimos, which was destroyed by fire. That inspired him to return and shoot a proper film, financed by a French fur trading company. He took along a generator, developing equipment and a projector; after filming the walrus hunt, he wrote:
"I lost no time in developing and printing the film. That walrus fight was the first film these Eskimo had ever seen and, in the language of the trade, it was a 'knock-out.' The audience -- they thronged the post kitchen to the point of suffocation -- completely forgot the picture. To them the walrus was real and living. The women and children in their high shrill voices joined with the men in shouting admonitions, warnings and advice to Nanook and his crew as the picture unfolded on the screen. The fame of that picture spread through all the country. ... After this it did not take my Eskimo long to see the practical side of films and ... from that time on, they were all with me."
The film is not technically sophisticated; how could it be, with one camera, no lights, freezing cold, and everyone equally at the mercy of nature? But it has an authenticity that prevails over any complaints that some of the sequences were staged. If you stage a walrus hunt, it still involves hunting a walrus, and the walrus hasn't seen the script. What shines through is the humanity and optimism of the Inuit. One of the film's titles describes them as "happy-go-lucky," and although this seems almost cruel, given the harsh terms of their survival, they do indeed seem absorbed by their lives and content in them, which is more than many of us can say.
Flaherty went on to make more sophisticated films, notably "Tabu" (1931), an uneasy collaboration with the great German filmmaker F.W. Murnau, who was more interested in story and style than documentation; "Man of Aran" (1934), about the hard lives of the Aran Islanders off the coast of Ireland; "Elephant Boy" (1937), starring Sabu in a fiction based on a Kipling story, and "Louisiana Story" (1948), in which a young bayou boy watches as an oil rig invades his unspoiled domain. The later films are smoother and more conventionally beautiful, but "Nanook" stands alone in its stark regard for the courage and ingenuity of its heroes. Nanook is one of the most vital and unforgettable human beings ever recorded on film.
Note: The movie is available in a Criterion DVD edition, restored by David Shepard with a score by Timothy Brock. At the Toronto screening, the composer Gabriel Thibaudeau, from Quebec, led nine musicians (four flute players, a soprano, a bass, a drummer, and the Inuit throat-singers Akinisie Sivuaraapik and Caroline Novalinga) in the premiere of his score that celebrates the beauty of the land and, during scenes of crisis, expresses urgency, surprise, fear and triumph in throat-sounds both musical and elemental. Now that do-it-yourself commentary tracks can be downloaded from the Web and played with DVDs, I wonder if this performance could be made available the same way -- or offered as an alternative track on the next DVD edition.
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Furthermore, it allows him to bring attention to parts of the film that otherwise may have been overlooked in the excitement that someone in the audience may have. Such a method is essentially a bait and switch that allows him to bring up issues that require critical analysis.
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You cannot start the review off with something that would less likely grasp the readers example.
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By just talking about the seal, he is giving an example of the way the film was shot, and also the critiques about it. He soon after talks about how some people couldn’t believe his credibility because there were some fabricated details. Starting off with the seal scene, he gives way for questions that are to be answered in the following paragraphs.
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It makes Ebert’s review more closely tied to the documentary, therefore it attracts readers’ attention.
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It is very possible that if Elbert decided to start with the story of building the igloo or Nanooks family then it might not get the readers attention as much as Elbert talking about the battle scene between Nanook and the seal. It would have the same effect if it were a trailer, because by showing that scene first, you grab the viewers attention.
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Ebert grabs the reader attention by briefing explaining what type of character Nanook is. A scene explain in words can often be a draw in a striking image for the readers to picture.
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This being a form of a documentary, Ebert begins his review with a very rememberable scene. This scene portrays the realness that Nanook faces through his life. I think that Ebert began with this scene in the review to grab the attention of the reader.
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This seal scene could be the most intense scene in the film. Ebert chooses this “teaser” to talk about in the beginning so the audience would want to read/ watch the rest of the review/film.
The scene is also a good example of what this whole documentary is about. It explains Nanook’s character and what he does for living. This"…desperate tug of war" between Nanook and the seal reflects the conflict between the Eskimos and the nature.
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this scene because not many people know what it means to hunt a seal. I, for one, did not know that a seal comes up every 20 minutes to breathe. Furthermore, when Ebert goes into great detail to discuss how the hunter hovers motionless over the hole for the 20 minutes and waits, it starts of his review with a sort of admiration for the Nanook. Many of us have not experienced this and it says a great deal about the patience and character of the Nanook just by describing their hunting habits.
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Nanook proves that he can perfectly complete more menial tasks like fishing and installing an ice window in his igloo. But, catching the walrus shows just how difficult it is to live in a world where nature can be your greatest aid or biggest detriment.
He also begins with this one, astonishing sequence because it is the most controversial. It may not have happened. This one scene encompasses everything that is positive and negative about the film, including that it ultimately is just a reenactment. Does that take away from the reality of Nanook’s life?
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The beginning of the review is like the beginning of a suspensful book, it paints a scenario to grap ones attention. Not only this, but as you continue to read the review, if something is mentioned about the seal, this picture he panted pops back up in ones mind.
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Ebert began his review by focusing on said sequence because it is captivating to the audience. Reviews are not the most fascinating thing to read sometimes, so Ebert knew by focusing on the most adventurous part of the film that he could entice people to read further.
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Ebert’s statement means that the scenes shown are not true reality, or actual events that happened. Why? Because there was a camera, catching Nanook’s every move, which Nanook and the other Inuit people were aware of. When people are being filmed, their actions are no longer 100% true because the fact that they are being filmed is always on the back of their mind.
In addition, Ebert’s statement also hints that the producer (Flaherty) had a say in what type of scenes he wanted. By having an idea and discussing it with the star of the film is in a way, assisting reality; things will happen because it was planned out.
Ebert also reveals that he is not really upset with Flaherty’s documentary. Before he says “realities admittedly assisted,” he says that Flaherty is “a man who has been called the father of the documentary, whose films are masterpieces.” By leading into the comment with these statements, Ebert is bringing attention to the fact that Flaherty is known for his works for a reason, even though they may not fit into today’s definition of a documentary. At the same time, by putting “realities admittedly assisted” in his review, I think Ebert wants people to at least be aware of the fact that not everything in the film is completely true.
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Yes exactly. And I think it is a good choice to begin the class with Ebert’s review. Because Ebert points out that that the film cannot be reality, it is important to keep in mind that a lot of documentaries – whether made today, or almost a hundred years ago – can be true reality (because people in them know they are being filmed, which in turn changes the way they act). The only way it can be 100% truthful is if people are filmed without their knowledge.
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Performing applies to not only actors when we have intentions about how we want to be viewed. In this sense, we are our own directors as well.
The notion of acting creates another challenge for documentary film especially when its participants are aware of the camera. They can form particular characters for themselves, so potentially they have influences and even controls on the “realities” the documentary aims at showing. Therefore, realities are “admittedly assisted” by both filmmakers and participants.
When viewers have doubt about people in a documentary are acting, the film will be very disappointing and losing significant value.
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However, this doesn’t mean that Ebert outright dislikes the film. Instead, he acknowledges it as a kind of a limitation or necessary evil, as films need to have some kind of interesting aspect to them to have an audience.
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I mean, yes, to interest people means popularity of the film. But at the same time, there are some daily routines of reality that I find (and I’m sure others) find interesting.
What if Flaherty made his documentary boring? If that were the case, maybe the general public wouldn’t expect incredible excitement from documentaries and instead would have adapted to appreciate the mundane more.
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I think it has more to do with the actual footage not adding anything to actual story, or maybe it was what Ebert suggested, and Flaherty did not want to show Nanook shooting it. That could possibly take away from Flaherty’s overall image.
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entertaining a specified audience.
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The reason I say that is because he argued that you cannot stage a walrus being capture. He also credited his work by mentioning the fact that Flaherty only had one camera, no lights, and was in the blistering cold and still managed to make a knock out film.
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The word “realities” is the goal that every documentary film aims at achieving. However, documentary film is just another genre of film production. As long as it is an work of art, there are pre-arranged efforts that assist realities. The prearrangements include editing, cutting, sounding techniques, etc. Ebert mentions the “decades-old debate.” I think he is on the director Flaherty’s side because Ebert admits there are facts that reduce the authenticity of documentary film in general.
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Yes. Documentary film is a more demanding film genre due to the nature of documenting and also the trust and expectations film viewers have.
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There is a fine line, though, because sometimes truths are best portrayed when they have been manipulated (like in Nanook). I think that the responsibility of the documentary film maker lies less in portraying the “realest real,” which can never actually be captured, but in being honest and forthright about how the film was made. For instance, a documentary filmmaker has a responsibility to resist passing staged situations as natural.
There was a controversy in the theater world a few years ago when Mike Daisey lied about content in his show “The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs” being true, when really it was embellished versions of the truth. After the scandal, the play lost a lot of the political momentum it initially had because of Daisey’s lies. Because of his dishonesty, he became an untrustworthy advocate for the Chinese laborers he represented, which detracted from the truth in their struggle.
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Elbert means that, though Flaherty facilitated many of the situations in the film, he did so in order to capture actual truths (he still calls them “realities”). While some might criticize Elbert, believing it unethical or dishonest to stage aspects of the film yet label it “documentary,” Elbert views Flaherty’s method as a means to achieving greater honesty. To Elbert, Flaherty was simply providing the situations that would allow for the Inuit’s true essence to be captured. In doing so, he was documenting a reality better than had he simply sat back let the camera roll. Flaherty’s intention, it seems, was to capture the Inuit’s spirit, not their day-to-day actions. Elbert believes that this was achieved and allows Flaherty the artistic license necessary to best get the job done.
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In today’s time – when we think of realities being assisted in various medias – we may think of certain shows such as Big Brother, MasterChef etc., where people behind the scenes have an outline or agenda of what they want to capture, but doesn’t necessarily have a script. The same goes for “Nanook of the North,” with Flaherty having an agenda/outline for what he wants to achieve with his documentary, but he doesn’t exactly know how the end result will look like.
In some sense, one could argue that all documentaries have assisted realities. Why? Well, the director has an idea of what he wants to portray, and what he wants to achieve with the documentary, but he/she doesn’t necessarily know how it will turn out. A great example is when Nanook is catching the seal. Ebert wanted to capture Nanook in a vulnerable moment while trying to provide food – and maybe clothes – for his family. It’s literally a matter of life or death. Ebert knows that he wants to capture Nanook fishing, but he doesn’t know how the actual fishing part turns out.
According to IMDB and Wikipedia, the documentary is classified as a docudrama, and dramas are all known to be pure fiction, thus it is a mix of some reality as well as some fiction. That’s maybe also why Ebert is trying to point out that not everything one sees in the documentary is original, meaning that the film is not shot randomly. There will always be retakes or more takes on one scene, for example, Nanook fishing more than once. The one that is most dramatic is most likely to be chosen for the documentary.
Ebert is not too critical in his review of the film, and he gladly uses words as: “magnificently projected”, “masterpiece”, and “father of documentaries.” Ebert also justifies the reality of Nanook really having a seal on the other end of the line. This proves to me that he is trying to defend Flaherty, and that he supports his way of making films.
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Ebert refers to the documentary having “realities admittedly assisted.” I think he is saying that the film that is suppose to be based on truth and real life experiences isn’t all that true. Ebert’s attitude toward the documentary is negative because he sees the flaws of the truth in the film.
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Ebert might saying that although documentaries are showing realities, but the “realities” audience see are being edited; any scene in the film was chose to be shoot and edited into the film.
According to John Greerson, documentaries are “the creative representation of reality.” For me, the word “creative” means the realities are no longer untouched.
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He credited his work by specifying the way that Flaherty just had limited resources, the weather and still made a good film
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Because Flaherty’s documentaries were created at a time where the standards for the “documentary” hadn’t yet been solidified, he got away with manipulating the scenes for the sake of cinematography. Ebert chose the words, “realities admittedly assisted” because essentially the reality that was being shown on screen was being “assisted” to look the way Flaherty wanted it to. i.e. the fake wives and children, while they existed, Flhaerty had actors for whatever reason, but he admitted to it.
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Ebert reviewed the film in 2005, 83 years after the film released. In 2005, the general public knew what a documentary was, and the criteria that it was supposed to follow (to show events that actually happened). Here, when Ebert notes on the “purity of Flaherty’s methods,” he is pointing out the fact that in 1922, there were different (or really no) rules and expectations for filmed documentaries.
Here, although some of the events in the film were staged, Ebert points out that these events still took place. In other words, although a person can tell another person to do something, a person cannot tell nature what to do. In this review, Ebert focuses on Nanook catching a seal. Flaherty might have told Nanook to catch a seal, but that did not mean Nanook was to be successful. In the end, the film shows a seal being caught. The scene, which would be called ‘staged’ today, still expresses the actual way the Inuits captured their food.
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Therefore, this film from the 1920s is precious enough to be a masterpiece. In 1920, there should also be less commercial pressure on filmmakers to make profits out of their production (I assume), so Nanook of the North contains great artistic and historical value despite the methods of the director.
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Flaherty’s methods involved total fascination in these cultures in order to realize the basic patterns of life.
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The mere fact that Flaherty was so far up north shooting footage in the 1920s was impressive enough. Had the footage been shot today then there may be a higher standard for the staging of the scenes and choices made while shooting. However, the time and place that Flaherty chose to document almost feels revolutionary. He was documenting a real life style in a time when no one else was, and that’s pretty hard to critique. Anything that is tried for the first time isn’t going to be perfect, and “Nanook of the North” is a perfect example of that.
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When he uses the word real in terms of describing documentary film making, or just Flaherty’s way of film making, he means that despite whatever is directed behind the camera, the footage caught is as natural as any documentary can get.
He clearly doesn’t care too much for technicalities such as who is casted as what family members, as long as what is happening in front of the camera is really happening, which in this case it is. This is also why he reinforces this idea by ending the paragraph with the fact that the seal was indeed at the end of that line, because that is the reality we should pay attention to.
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However, if we agree with the quote "the ends justify the means, then we should be okay with how the seal hunt was structured and controlled and just accept that in the end, a seal was caught.
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There are no faked actions in front of the camera. The hunting sequence means to show how brave and simple Eskimos are. The spirit is the key, not necessarily if they really hunted a walrus or seal.
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Nanook of the North had actually ambitioned to show a part of the world from a diverse viewpoint, this means, not portraying it through a fictional story or through a plot modified from literature, but from real life.
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Ebert’s definition of “the real” is the actions of what is being seen is real, even if the action was directed. The scene when Nanook and his hunters hunt the walrus was staged by being told to go hunt but the hunt was real. The killing of the walrus and the eating of it was real too. To be able to catch these scenes on film they need time and direction before shooting the realness.
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Ebert says that this film “is not cinema verite…and yet in a sense it is”. It’s not real because what is presented on the screen is not the reality; the wives and children are not Nanook’s children and the hunting was a performance. It’s also real because the film posed the problem of reality; the struggle and life of Eskimos.
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It seems that Ebert has the same notion of “real” that some morally-questionable photojournalists might have. For example in photojournalism, one is not allowed to manipulate photos, but by using functions such as “crop” you are in fact doing that, because while it is still real (you didn’t photoshop anything into the photo) you are still distorting the original overall picture. Which is essentially what Flaherty did, and it seems that Ebert is condoning it.
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This most likely led to him not being able to find seals to hunt. It also shows the circle of life as this paragraph speaks of his 4 month old child (new life) and the death of Nanook.
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Despite the modern day requirements to be listed as sophisticated, this film thrives on being authentic, which is not something that a fancy, digitally enhanced film can say.
He says that what shines through is the humanity and optimism of the inuit, something like that cannot easily be copied by hired actors. The authenticity of nature’s reaction is a larger influence in documentary films than regular acting.
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The actions, such as hunting, contribute to describing the Inuit spirit. In Ebert’s words, the details will fade away as “what shines through is the humanity and optimism of the Inuit.” The hunting sequence is staged to show how Nanook is trying to survive, and authenticity is achieved when the film presents and delivers Nanook’s spirit.
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Flaherty achieves to distribute this sense of reality by giving details of everyday life and intimacy. By shooting a complete action from the end to the beginning, Flaherty creates the impression of the presence, an actual reality.
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I believe Ebert believes what I believe after watching this film. There is an authenticity in filming the daily rituals of the Inuit Eskimos, even when there reasons for doing such rituals boils down to having them recorded. The rituals are things these people actually do in real life, away from the camera. What’s the difference if they do it for sport, hunger or for purposes of documentation?
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Ebert’s definition of authenticity is odd to me. I think he is saying that there is a sense of authenticity because the actions, like the walrus hunt, are real. But, the staging the scene to catch it on film and giving the direction for it isn’t authentic.
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Through the struggles of finding food and the freezing weather, contrasted with the love and joy brought by family and animals, we get a feel of how life must have been like for the Inuits.
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Flaherty made “conventionally beautiful” films later on, but Nanook of the North makes unforgettable. It makes Nanook real. The courage and humanity that the film delivers remain valuable, inspiring, and touching over decades, and these factors are harder to capture than simply making a film “conventionally beautiful.” Therefore, Flaherty and his work are successful.
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As well as calling his work “masterpieces” and calling Flaherty the “father of the documentary.” Ebert would not have stated that if he was not of fan of his wok.
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The staged action in Nanook of the North is as real as it gets.Flaherty merely made them act out scenes from how everyone already thought they did. Nanook remains important for its representation of the an assortment of actions and positions of a workaday life.
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When Ebert talks about the “…courage and ingenuity of its heroes”, he’s talking about not just Nanook, but all the Inuit Eskimos. Flaherty’s original work documented and introduced the world to a people who live in a way that is different than anything most people knew and resourceful to a degree that most would not think possible. Why would you want to attack a man who manages to do something like that?
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Filmmaker. But it didn’t have a subject as powerful or as raw as Nanook and the Inuit people.
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The biographical mode is the best way because it is very touching, reflecting the true lifestyle of a group that is unfamiliar and vanishing. Especially when it centers around one person, I feel like I am there witnessing Nanook and getting to know him as I watch the film.
Flaherty does present a story, but that story is not as typical as a narrative. The story tells about the sense of being Inuit Eskimos and how they lived. The story delivers inner feelings.
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The biographical mode shows that Nanook and his family felt real as their performance show honesty and instinctive was their playing that it was undoubtedly truth of a sort. It is a man and his family performing a usual day of surviving against nature. Though Nanook has no conservative plot, it tells a articulate story through its astonishing images.
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In representing Nanook in biographical form, it both documents his life and the life of the Inuit people. Nanook is meant to represent this specific society and in documenting his struggles, he documents the Inuit’s struggles. You also have to consider Flaherty’s decision to give him a family that was not actually his. This is a way of having the audiences empathize with the character. A lot of people understand what it’s like to toil for their family, although maybe not to this degree. In fact, in that last comment alone, it also brings up a form of humility in the audience seeing what Nanook must go through for his family.
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Flaherty is presenting the biography of Nanook in a narrative style. He adds really interesting facts, for example, when he mentioned that seals form funnel-like holes to breath within twenty minute intervals and when he shows Nanook detecting these holes for hunting. The narration seems almost poetic in my opinion. In this film, the biographical mode is the best way to the story because it captures the most details. A biographical mode allows Flaherty to capture raw footage it also allows the viewer to form a deep connection with Nanook, his family, and even the dogs. This to me is fascinating! Details like Nanook licking the knife in order to cut the snow for his igloo, or when how it takes just one hour to complete an igloo is something we only get to see because the film is a biography.
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We get to witness the different sides of Nanook. His loving and family oriented side, his hunting side, and the side of him that fights but comes to a tragic ending when he freezes to death. This was the best way to tell the story because it captures not only the Inuit lifestyle, but also what it was like for a human like Nanook to live in the harsh circumstances he lived in.
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I think it’s often important for biographies to touch a personal chord with the reader – whether they can directly relate to the story, or imagine themselves in similar circumstances. The range of Nanook’s character is what makes his story so relatable. I would imagine that readers can relate to many aspects of Nanook’s journey.
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