American Ethnographic Film and Personal Documentary. Scott MacDonald
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Название: American Ethnographic Film and Personal Documentary

Автор: Scott MacDonald

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Кинематограф, театр

Серия:

isbn: 9780520954939

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ after which Marshall says, “But they do what he says.” Marshall adds that the head man “watches over his people,” and that his wife is a “lively woman”: “One felt she would not be easily imposed upon.” Throughout Lorna Marshall’s voice-over in First Film, and despite what seem to be moments of humor meant to amuse the audience, one can feel Marshall’s immense, unpatronizing respect and affection for the people she is introducing to us; these people, she suggests, are not simply types, generic representatives of a way of life, but individuals that she is coming to know and working to know better.

      JOHN MARSHALL: THE HUNTERS

      John has 6000 feet of film—He created a documentary—to be called The Water Hole. I yearn to see it. He will edit it. He has 2 more sequences to make. How he has opened to this and taken hold! At last his creative powers are geared to achievement. Laurence and I are deeply happy. Laurence and John are planning to order more film, so John can feel an abandon of creation, not worry about using or wasting some footage.

      LORNA MARSHALL’S DIARY9

      The filmmaker’s response is in many ways the reverse of that of other viewers. For the filmmaker, the film is an extract from all the footage shot for it, and a reminder of all the events that produced it. It reduces the experience onto a very small canvas. For the spectator, by contrast, the film is not small but large: it opens onto a wider landscape. If the images evoke for the filmmaker a world that is largely missing, in the spectator they induce endless extrapolations from what is actually seen. . . . But for the filmmaker the same images only reaffirm that the subject existed. Instead of imagining, there is remembering; instead of discovery, there is recognition; instead of curiosity, there is foreknowledge and loss.

      DAVID MACDOUGALL10

      The Hunters (1957), shot and edited by John Marshall (with some postproduction assistance by Robert Gardner),11 remains, by far, the best-known film in the Marshall family’s saga of Ju/’hoansi life, and among the best-known of all ethnographic films. Indeed, in the United States The Hunters seems to have revived a tradition of representing far-flung cultures that was begun by Edward Curtis in In the Land of the Head-Hunters (also known as In the Land of the War Canoes) (1914) and Robert Flaherty in Nanook of the North (1921) and Moana (1926). In some senses, of course, The Hunters has much in common with Nanook and Moana, and over the years, it has been critiqued in much the same way. While all three films communicate a level of reality that Flaherty and Marshall understood as basic to the Inuit , the Samoans, and the Ju/’hoansi at the time when they shot these films, the Flaherty films and The Hunters are not simply candid records of events as they unfolded. As most everyone who is introduced to these films now knows, the events we see were constructed in the editing—even though the editing in all three films allows many viewers to believe they are seeing events unfold precisely as they unfolded in reality at the time of the shooting. This, it seems to me, has always said more about the hunger of film audiences to believe in the candidness of what they see than it does about any attempt on the part of the filmmakers to fool anyone; indeed, the current generation of college students seems convinced that candid recording is documentary and that any fabrication subtracts from reality—despite the obvious fact that simply turning on a camera and recording what is going on and presenting the results is revealing of almost nothing at all.

      The feeling of betrayal on the part of some critics of The Hunters seems particularly naïve, since from the beginning of the film Marshall is at pains to make clear that he is not simply providing information about a far-flung cultural group but is artistically constructing a tale. Of course, in 1957, when The Hunters was completed and first shown, it was such a departure from the lecture-documentaries that had dominated nonfiction filmmaking for a quarter century that, by comparison, it must have seemed astonishingly candid.

      The Hunters opens with a brief montage of nineteen shots of the Kalahari environment and its flora and fauna. The first three shots (10, 8, and 7 seconds, respectively) draw immediate attention to the filmmaker as visual artist, in that the tiny sequence is sutured together on the basis of subtle movements: in the first two shots, of a bush moving in the breeze, and in the third, by the slightly unsteady movement of the handheld camera as it records a long shot of a vulture (?) in a distant tree. After a brief shot of a lizard, at first still, then moving, we see, through some brush, a tree underneath which we gradually realize are at least two antelope. These first five shots are silent, but the longer sixth shot introduces a wide-angle shot of two men walking through a field, hunting (this image is carefully composed so that one man walks at the right edge of the frame; the other man at the left edge; the shot is accompanied by phrases of what we assume is a bit of music indigenous to this environment). Once the men are visible, our sense of the earlier shots takes on another level: we realize that our carefully noting the tiny movements in this environment has been an evocation of what these hunters must do as they search for game. This conflation of our sensitivity to Marshall’s composition and editing and the hunters’ sensitivity to their environment is maintained through the remaining thirteen shots, and concludes with a 14-second close-up of one hunter, which fades out just as the title of the film is presented.

      After the title, Marshall places The Hunters within the tradition established by Nanook and Grass: a map guides us to the Nyae Nyae region of the Kalahari Desert, after which Marshall’s voice-over introduces the place and the people who live there: “The northern Kalahari is a hard, dry land. In this bitter land live a quiet people who call themselves !Kung or Ju/’hoansi.” In his introduction, and during the brief survey of !Kung life that follows, Marshall’s comments are not so different from those of the voices-of-god narrators so familiar from informational and polemical documentaries of the 1940s and early 1950s, but once he has provided some context for what will become his focus on the hunters—the distinction between women’s gathering work and men’s hunting, the process through which boys become hunters, the poison that allows the !Kung arrows to kill large animals—the nature of Marshall’s narration turns increasingly literary and evocative not merely of earlier films and Nanook but of epic literature. His introductions of the four hunters who will form the nucleus of the hunt constructed for the film are heroic in content, and poetic in diction and rhythm; for example:

      ≠Toma, the leader,

      ≠Toma, the vigorous and able,

      He was a man of many words and a lively mind,

      One who had traveled to the edges of his world.

      and

      Tao, the beautiful,

      Tao was a natural hunter,

      Taking great pleasure in the chase.

      His arrows were keen and each point was shaped in his own fashion. . . .

      On the day he consummated his marriage, Tao shot five wildebeest out of a herd of thirty and found and killed four of them and brought home the meat.

      From this he got his name . . . Tao Wildebeest.

      The introductions of the four hunters are followed by the hunt itself. Bill Nichols has suggested that Marshall was using San culture as a pretext for a universal story with an implicit message: “Men will venture into a dangerous world to bring back food for people who might otherwise starve. They will show us knowledge, skill patience, humor. Their success in the face of adversity commands respect; their qualities are qualities of enduring value. We must celebrate them.”12 At the time, Marshall might have said that the film was less a pretext than a demonstration of a traditional way of life, the source of myth, that he felt he had found, still alive, in the present-day real world.

      Once the hunters have wounded the giraffe, Marshall constructs the adventure of tracking the animal by intercutting between the hunters СКАЧАТЬ