April 4, 2003
Filmmaker shares knowledge and
love of storytelling
Zacharias Kunuk tells
workshop participants to dream and be creative
Award-winning
filmmaker Zacharias Kunuk led a three-day workshop last week in Iqaluit on traditional
storytelling in TV, film and video.
(PHOTO BY MIRIAM HILL)
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MIRIAM
HILL
Saimataq Michael is all
smiles as she stands up from her seat at the Mariner Lodge in Iqaluit and stretches
her arms.
Michael, one of a group
of four, has just finished the last morning of a workshop on traditional storytelling
in television, film and video with world-renowned film director Zacharias Kunuk.
The workshop is one of
six being held by Inuit Communications Systems Ltd. for professionals in the
Nunavut TV, film and video production industries.
Michael, a long-time employee
with IBC, says she has been to workshops in the past, but this is the first
time shes attended one in Inuktitut. "Heres its more
flexible and its easier to speak in Inuktitut and we understand each other,"
she says.
The workshop, funded in
part by the Kakivak Association, was a perfect venue for Kunuk, who has spent
years trying to bring oral Inuit stories to the screen.
"What Im trying
to do is get them to dream," he says in an interview during a break. "We
talk about a lot of things, talk about stories and even night dreams, because
with todays technology people can see it."
Making a commitment to
a project and being creative in working through it is of the utmost importance,
he says, and if his experiences in filmmaking can help others, then hes
done his job.
"Inuktitut filmmaking
is totally different to the southern way of filmmaking, which is like a military
undertaking," he explains, speaking softly and sipping coffee from a Styrofoam
cup. "In Inuktitut its horizontal youre always talking
with your crew, your actors, and everybody has to understand whats going
on."
Sometimes actors wait for
an entire day on the set before their scene is called and they need to understand
this process to put up with it, he says.
Kunuk has been working
with this group of four for three days, discussing every aspect of storytelling
in TV, film and video, from the logistics of shooting on the land, to script
writing, to costumes. He is also engaging them in exercises to help them think
more creatively.
"Yesterday I had my
students draw their interpretation of heaven and hell," he says. "Its
part of imaging because before you make a film you have to imagine the scene,
imagine whos there and why they are there."
While the stories are there,
waiting to be told, he says, the most challenging aspect of reproducing them
on film is working with animals and with the weather things that arent
controllable. There are also cultural norms that are stretched.
"In our culture we
have to respect the elders," he says. "In my experience of directing
a 63-year-old to Do it again, do it again. It was all right, but you have
to do it again, theyre supposed to be telling us what to do, but
now were telling them what to do."
He said its fine
if the elders know whats going on. Its just one aspect of the commitment
that a filmmaker makes when he or she undertakes a project.
Following the success of
his feature film Atanarjuat, The Fast Runner, Kunuk has given lectures around
the world, but this is the first time he has offered a workshop to Inuit students
and, he says, its been easier and more fun than the others.
He hopes to instill them
with a greater sense of confidence and knowledge of how to take a project from
inception to completion in a creative way.
Michael says it has broadened
her sense of broadcasting. "Although I have been with broadcasting for
a number of years it never really occurred to me that I was so narrow-minded
and this has shown me that," she says, adding that she hasnt been
as creative as maybe she should have been over the years.
"It has been a most
excellent workshop," she says, and admits that maybe shell be able
to produce something of her own this summer.
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