Starring Crusoe Kurddal, Jamie Gulpilil. Written by Rolf de Heer.
Directed by Rolf de Heer and Peter Djigirr. (STC) 92 min. Opens June 1.
See Interview page 15.
Times may change over the centuries but a good fart joke never gets
old. That's just one lesson to be learned from Ten Canoes, an enjoyably
bawdy and stylistically inventive collaboration between director Rolf
de Heer and the members of the Yolngu community in the Arnhem Land, a
swampy stretch of Australia's Northern Territory. Like an Aussie
equivalent to Atanarjuat (The Fast Runner), it's a rare
and exciting film that presents an Aboriginal culture from an insider's
vantage, creating a view heretofore unseen on screen.
Reinventing and reordering the vocabulary of cinema as they
see fit, de Heer and his collaborators – including co-director Peter
Djigirr, seen here as a canoeist – hew closely to Yolngu storytelling
traditions. Though Ten Canoes is ostensibly a cautionary tale
about coveting other men's wives, the narrative soon becomes a thicket
of stories within stories that are further interrupted by amusing
digressions, a useful primer on canoe building and the aforementioned
incidents involving the passing of wind. Anything but a staid exercise
in ethnographic filmmaking, it's unique and thoroughly engaging.