|
WSWS
: Arts Review
: Film
Festivals
53rd Sydney Film Festival--Part 2
Ten Canoes: a dramatic exploration of ancient Aboriginal
culture
By Richard Phillips
19 July 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
This is the second part of a series of articles on the 2006
Sydney Film Festival, held June 9-25. The
first part was posted July 17.
Over the past two years the number of features made in Australia
has dropped to record lows. By contrast, this year has seen a
substantial increase, and, over the next three months, 16 local
movies will be released, the largest number at any one time in
Australian cinemas. Hopefully some of these will be of the same
standard as Ten Canoes, a valuable and visually striking
film about ancient Aboriginal life, directed by Rolf de Heer and
Peter Djigirr.
Ten Canoes, which recently won a special jury prize
at Cannes and opened this years Sydney festival, is set
thousands of years ago and is about a tribe of Aborigines living
near the 130,000-hectare Arafura Swamp in far north Australia.
The movie, which is the product of a two-year collaboration between
de Heer, veteran Aboriginal actor David Gulpilil and local Aborigines
from Rampagining, is a long overdue introduction to Aboriginal
social life and cultural traditions before European settlement,
just over two centuries ago.
The first-ever movie made in the Ganalbingu language, its story
is relatively simple and bound together by a light-hearted English-language
narration by Gulpilil.

Ten men, under the leadership of tribal elder Minygululu (Peter
Minygululu), are preparing to hunt magpie geese, a wild bird that
provides eggs and meat for the tribe. This involves the construction
of bark canoes to traverse the crocodile infested swampland that
surrounds their territory, and lengthy periods spent on raised
platforms in the swamp.
Minygululu discovers that one of the young men in the hunting
party has taken a fancy to Minygululus third and youngest
wife, and decides to tell him a lengthy morality tale to teach
him about the dos and donts of life.
Without repeating the entire story, Minygululus tale
involves sexual jealousy, kidnapping, sorcery, inter-tribal conflict
and customary law. Those elements of the movie set in ancestral
times are filmed in colour, while the hunting trip is shot in
black and white. None of the actors has any formal training.
Ten Canoes opens with a long helicopter tracking shot
along a river and into the spectacularly wild Arafura Swamp. As
the camera records this stunning country, narrator Gulpilil playfully
explains to non-Aboriginal audiences: Once upon a time in
a land far, far away.... No, its not like that. Its
not like your storybut its a good story all the same.
Many of the films memorable visuals are recreations of
photographs taken in the mid-1930s by Donald Thomson, a University
of Melbourne anthropology professor who spent almost two years
with the Arafura Swamp people. Thomson shot more than 4,000 photographs
and thousands of feet of film during this time, carefully recording
every aspect of daily life. One of these photographsa picture
of ten men in bark canoesbecame the key image around which
the films story was developed.
The concluding scenes, dramatising the passing of Ridjimiraril
(Crusoe Kurddal), one of the ancient tales central characters,
are memorable. Ridjimirarils final dance and the traditional
ceremonies of fellow tribe members coming to terms with his death,
have a luminous beauty.
De Heers film is certainly not a revolutionary work and
some scenes lack dramatic tension. In fact, the canoe making and
hunting sequences are mainly of anthropological interest. But
overall it is a sincere and audacious attempt to explore subject
matter never before dramatised on film. No previous local movie
about AboriginesJedda (1955), Walkabout (1971),
The Chant of Jimmy Blacksmith (1978), Women of the Sun
television miniseries (1981), Radiance (1998), Yolngu
Boys (2001), One Night the Moon (2001) or The Tracker
(2002)has ever tried to recreate pre-European Aboriginal
life.
At the same time, de Heers film does not indulge in suggestions
that a return to the old ways would provide an answer
to the appalling social problems now facing Australias aboriginal
population, amongst the poorest and most oppressed in the world.
Ten Canoes simply, but with optimism and confidence, employs
Aboriginal story-telling traditions to present an authentic picture
of life in the past. Under conditions where most Australians,
let alone the rest of the world, know little about Aboriginal
society, this is not a minor issue.
Moreover, by demystifying the Aborigines hunter-gatherer
existence, Ten Canoes educates its audiences and provides
a much-needed corrective to the historical falsification and racist
lies that have long polluted Australias cultural atmospherewhich
seek to blame the Aboriginal people themselves for the horrendous
oppression and poverty they continue to suffer.
* * *
Rolf de Heer spoke with the World Socialist Web Site
about Ten Canoes during the film festival. The Dutch-born
director, who immigrated to Australia with his family in 1959,
worked at the Australian Broadcasting Corporation for seven years
before embarking on a filmmaking career. He has made 11 features
since 1984 including, Incident at Ravens Gate, The
Quiet Room, The Old Man Who Loved to Read Stories,
Dance to Me My Song, Bad Boy Bubby, The Tracker
and Alexandras Project.
Richard Phillips: Could you tell me about anthropologist Donald
Thomson and how his photos helped inspire Ten Canoes?
Rolf de Heer: Thomson was a serious
anthropologist who worked for extended periods in northern Queensland
and the Northern Territory during the 1930s. He was sent to Arnhem
Land in 1937 because there were moves to send a punitive expedition
against local Aboriginesin other words a killing party.
There had been strife between the tribes and Japanese pearl fishermen,
and some police had also been killed. These conflicts were usually
over women.
Thomson persuaded the government to send him and told them
he could sort the problems outand he did. He was an astonishing
person and his travel diaries are amazing. Theyre amongst
the most graphically descriptive suffering journey writings that
Ive read. He is a revered figure and rightly so. When the
war came he went back up there and organised native patrols.
He took thousands of photographs and lots of film of a people
who had resisted previous incursions, but were largely an unconquered
nation, and whose way of life was still pretty much intact. Unfortunately
all the film footagemore than 20,000 feet of itwas
destroyed in a Melbourne warehouse fire in the 1960s, which was
a real tragedy.
The photographs provided us with a wonderful reference. The
shot looking down on the ten canoeists in the swamp near the beginning
of the film was recreated from one of his classic photos. The
original individuals in that picture have all been identified
and there are many people up there related to them.
The photos were therefore something quite special and were
used to develop sequences for the film. There was a collection
of goose-egg hunting photos, so those sequences were developed
around them. Other photos werent as dramaticwomen
digging for food, etcbut they were used as the staging point
for particular scenes and this is how the film developed.
RP: How much discussion was involved in developing the story?
RH: There was a lotabout the photographs and many other
things.
For me, the goose-egg hunting had to be a major element in
the film but, of course, this is not very dramatic and the locals
wanted it set in old times. But what was meant by
this? Nobody was exactly clear. So we decided that it had to be
thousands of years ago, before the influence of any other cultures.
The next major issue was they didnt want the old
times portrayed as a period of conflict. This presented
me with another problem because conflict is the essence of drama.
It meant that if there was to be any conflict, it had to occur
in a much earlier period, so the main part of the film is set
in mythical times.
Story-telling traditions are very strong in Aboriginal society
and these had to be reflected in some way. So the story developed
through the resolution of all these issues.
RP: How do you conceive of your role as director in this sort
of process?
RH: Its quite different, because its not about
imposing or hijacking the process. I was simply the means through
which they could tell their story.
I had the expertise, but they had the power of veto, the power
of inclusion and the creative expertise. My job was to show them
how to make what they wanted work for them, and for a cinema audience
in the rest of the world. The film couldnt be made if they
didnt feel that they had ownership of the process. But with
patience and care we did it.
RP: Ten Canoes is being released under conditions where
the government and the media continuously claim that the social
problems facing Aboriginal people today are caused by welfareor
what they call sit down moneyand the use of
tribal customary law in sentencing. Can you comment and were you
trying to counter this?
RH: The most recent media campaign started the day I left for
Cannes,so I dont really know all the latest details about
what theyve been saying.
Did these sorts of things encourage me to make the film? I
actively avoid analysing what I do, because if I have a special
reason in mind for making a film and the themes I want to deal
with, it becomes contrived. This is anathema for my sort of filmmaking.
Obviously there were many different reasons why I made Ten
Canoes, but I guess overall it did provide an opportunity
to make something that would help balance our views on Aboriginal
society.
Most people are so ignorant about this society and its complexities,
and there are so many faulty judgments made about how Aboriginal
people live.
For example, one of the most pervasively damaging images of
Aboriginal dwelling camps is the rubbish.
When I was in Rawapingi for the first time, I stayed in a house
that seemed fairly well built and designed for the conditions.
There was this veneer of western civilisation, but inside, the
house was like a garbage tip, with rubbish everywhere. The reasons
for this are really complex.
Culturally, cosmologically these people are still in the bush.
In fact, a generation ago there was no concept of what garbage
wasit didnt exist in their society. Everything is
from the bush. You use it and when you throw it away, it breaks
downits recycled. There was no tin, no plastic, everything
was degradable. And yet most white people judge them viciously
on this issue, which is wrong. So I began to realise that I should
never judge the situation in Aboriginal camps and dwellings on
this level again.
Fifty years ago, white people thought nothing about throwing
whatever rubbish they had out the car window, as they were driving
along. This attitude has changed, of course, but it took time.
So yes, in a way, one of the reasons for making this film was
to somehow subvert our skewed views of things, by showing aspects
of Aboriginal society and culture, which are largely not understood
and falsely judged to be worthless.
And this is what Aboriginal people wanted from the film, because
most of them have such low self-esteem. The dominant culture has
told them often enough that they are useless, they dont
work, they dont get the kids to school, they throw rubbish
out, etc., etc. It is terribly important for Aboriginal people
to say I have value, have a look at me and listen to my stories,
and to show their own kids and the rest of the world.
That is why winning a prize at Cannes was so important for
them, because it was evidence that the world has seen their culture
and valued it.
RP: Ten Canoes certainly educates its audience and undermines
the right-wing ideologues and racists who seek to blame Aboriginal
people for their own demise.
RH: Thats true. But I hope the film doesnt find
an audience because it is used in this particular debate. I dont
want people to think that it is part of this discussion and not
go and see it, which would be a real pity. It is an important
film and, I hope, one that people will go along and just enjoy.
To be continued
See Also:
53rd Sydney Film FestivalPart
1
Not deep enough
[17 July 2006]
Another sign of popular disgust Australian
film festival audience invites Mamdouh Habib to speak about Guantánamo
documentary
[1 July 2006]
A failure to confront
reality
Yolngu Boy directed by Stephen Johnson, script by Chris
Anastassiades
[17 May 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |