|
July 04, 2003
Isuma series to run
nationally starting July 9
Bravo Channel to show
Nunavut Our Land series
ODILE
NELSON
The Canadian mainstream
has finally embraced Igloolik Isuma Productions, the film company responsible
for the award-winning film Atanarjuat - The Fast Runner, after two nationally
renowned arts organizations purchased a docudrama series first produced by the
company in the mid-1990s.
For
Zacharias Kunuk, the recognition he's getting for the Nunavut Our Land series
is better later than never. (FILE PHOTO)
|
The Art Gallery of Ontario,
which has one of the largest collections of Inuit sculputures and prints in
Canada, and Bravo NewStyleArtsChannel, a division of Toronto-based CHUM Television,
both recently bought Nunavut Our Land - Zacharias Kunuk's 13-part series
chronicling the life and experiences of Igloolik-area Inuit in the 1940s.
Bravo begins showing the
series on July 9. The event is the first time a national broadcaster will air
Nunavut Our Land , even though it predates the international success
of The Fast Runner by six years.
The AGO, which is undergoing
major renovations, hopes to include the series in its Inuit-art exhibit sometime
in the near future.
The purchases mark the
first national success for the series. Smaller broadcasters such as British
Columbia's Knowledge Network, TelevisionOntario and Television Francais Ontario
have all shown episodes of Nunavut. The Aboriginal People's Television
Network showed one cycle of the series in 1999-2000.
Nunavut has also received
a warm reception in the international art world. The AGO did a one-time, all-day
screening of the series in the late 1990s.
It has been shown by museums
and art festivals the world over - including Documenta 11, the world's premiere
contemporary art exhibition.
But until now national
broadcasters such as the CBC, the History Channel, and the Discovery Channel
have shied away from it.
"It's long overdue
but that seems to be normal for us," Kunuk said. "I'm glad it's finally
getting out, but we would have been happier if it, when we submitted it to the
networks, if they would have picked it up right away but I guess it is better
late than never."
Kunuk, Norm Cohn, the late
Paul Apak Angilirq and Paul Qulitalik started Igloolik Isuma Productions, Canada's
first Inuit independent film company, in 1990.
But it was not until Atanarjuat
received international acclaim, including winning the 2001 Camera d'or for best
first feature at the Cannes Film Festival, that the production company won even
marginal attention from southern Canada.
Cohn said the box-office
success of Atanarjuat, it has grossed more than $3.7 million in North
America, may have played a part in convincing Bravo to pick up the series.
"The success of Atanarjuat
makes it clear if we don't fit, it's not our problem. It's someone else's problem,"
Cohn said. "We now have, for the first time, mainstream networks recognizing
that our work does fit somewhere. That's a tremendous change for us. And it
should not be underestimated that it took us about 18 years to achieve this."
Prior to the film's success,
Kunuk and the company produced many other short films, including Nunaqpa
, in 1991, which tells the story of a family's summer migration to replace caribou
meat stores.
Kunuk filmed the Nunavut
Our Land series on video in 1994-1995 with the financial support of a coalition
of minor educational broadcasters.
The series dramatizes true
stories remembered by the village's elders. It is made up of 13 30-minute episodes
that use modern actors to recreate the life and story of five fictional Inuit
families living in the Igloolik region in the 1940s.
The actors speak in Inuktitut, and the series uses English subtitles.
|