|
April 5, 2002
Action figures next step for Atanarjuat
Filmmakers want to fill
Nunavut stores with Inuit toys
MIRIAM
HILL
First there was the movie.
Now there are action figures on the horizon for Atanarjuat, the first full-length
Inuktitut feature film produced, written, directed and acted by Inuit.
The legend-based film has
received numerous awards including the Camera DOr for best first feature
film at the Cannes Film Festival in France, helping to promote and raise awareness
of Inuit culture.
Now it may follow in the
footsteps of other great motion pictures by producing merchandise, namely action
figures, with the hope of offering positive role models for Inuit children in
Nunavut.
Producer Norman Cohn says
the people behind the movie had the action figure idea in mind from the beginning.
"You go into the Northern
Store or Co-op store in any Nunavut community, the toy shelves are filled with
Star Wars action figures and World Wrestling Federation action figures and when
kids take them home they are going to play with them in the World Wrestling
Federation language and culture," he says.
"When we talk about
it, people laugh but when we talked about the film people laughed in the first
place. But were very serious, we know its a big job to do something
like that and someones going to have to invest some money in order to
make it happen."
Cohn says the movie has
proven to be very popular with children and suggests action figures would be
a fantastic tool for culture and language development and preservation.
"Kids all over Nunavut
are playing Atanarjuat in the streets," he says. "We heard one story
of some kid who went running around naked crying, Im Atanarjuat,
Im Atanarjuat!"
Not only are the young
embracing the movie, he says, now that the film has been released on video and
shown in most Nunavut communities, he says hes heard stories of adults
making remarks that are lines from the movie, or telling jokes similar to those
in the film.
Research is being done
on how much it would cost to have action figures made, and Cohn suggests the
Canada Nunavut Language Agreement, which provides several million dollars every
year for initiatives that are designed to promote and enhance and preserve the
Inuktitut language, might be able to help.
"We think that this
would be a wonderful and quite unusual language project for the government to
put up enough money to at least create the initial set-up costs to create a
set of figures based on as many characters in the film as we can afford and
get them out into stores all over Nunavut," he says. But hes not
stopping there.
Atanarjuat is currently
wowing audiences in France, selling more than 200,000 tickets and playing in
more than 80 theatres after its seventh week. Atanarjuat action figures would
be a very hot item right now in French department stores, Cohn says.
If the film, which is being
released in theatres in southern Canada April 12, and in the U.S. June 7, does
as well in North America, Atanarjuat action figures could theoretically find
a spot on the shelves in Zellers or Toys R Us. This could help people understand
and become more familiar and sympathetic with Inuit culture, Cohn says, and
encourage people to think in a more positive way about Inuit objectives.
If the figures are manufactured
for a market wider than the 15,000 children in Nunavut, Cohn says, Igloolik
Isuma Productions Inc., the film company that made the movie, would need help
from other outside sources, perhaps from the Nunavut Government.
Sylvia Ivalu, who plays
Atuat in the movie, giggles when asked how she would feel about being immortalized
as an action figure.
"The thought of action
figures from our movie it would be an honour I guess, because all you
see are GI Joes and wrestling action figures, but it would be a whole new area
for action figures," she says, adding it would be a positive thing for
all Inuit.
"It would put more
spotlight on Inuit and on our traditional culture. It would be showing our clothes
if they were to make those figurines, because thats what we wore."
She would like to see her
likeness dressed in a miniature version of the atigi (traditional jacket) that
Atanarjuat gives her in the movie and suggests it would be realistic to have
tools like they did in the igloo and qamma (tent).
Cohn says he cant
say how or how soon this project could happen because they havent secured
a sponsor, but he remains positive it will happen.
"Like everything with
this film, people have to jump over their initial low stereotype expectations
and think large, which is what weve been doing from the beginning and
we havent been wrong yet."
|