|
July 9, 1999
Nunavik's caribou
set to become Imax movie stars
JANE GEORGE
Nunatsiaq News
KUUJJUAQ So far, Nunavik's caribou have resisted commercial
harvesters, but they are collaborating with a film crew who want
to make them into movie stars.
Caribou, and their Scandinavian cousins, the reindeer, are
the focus of a new 45-minute film on the life cycle of these
animals in Nunavik and Sweden.
"It's called 'Symbol of the North'," said director
Bill Reeve. "And it makes for a good story."
Over the past year, his crew has been following caribou around
Nunavik, visiting the region four times. They've already caught
the animals in rut, during calving and with their young.
Now the crew is back in Kuujjuaq for three weeks, at the height
of the bug season, to film caribou as they try to escape these
insects by migrating to higher land.
Although there are nearly one million caribou in Nunavik,
Reeve hasn't yet seen as many as he expected.
"The big bubble for me was the numbers," he said.
"We were told that we could see 20,000-30,000 at a time."
But they haven't.
"And somehow we have to illustrate this," Reeve
said.
This task is made harder because he's shooting the film with
Imax technology.
An Imax production is expected to deliver breathtaking sight
and sound. Finished Imax movies are shown on huge screens up
to eight stories high that sometimes wrap around the spectators.
An Imax movie can be an awesome experience.
To produce those spectacular visual effects, Imax relies on
unique cameras. These cameras shoot larger and faster film, at
24 "credit card sized" frames per second. The results
have unparalleled clarity and sharpness.
But these Imax cameras are also heavy around 45 kilos,
and take three people to operate. Their weight is a disadvantage
when filming caribou, because the film crew must position itself
in one place and can't chase after the animals.
And the cameras are only able to shoot three minutes of film
at one time. This, says Reeve, means that many "marvellous
Imax moments" are lost while the camera operators stop to
change film.
It took crew members a week to successfully film a caribou
calving because they had to catch the event in a single three-minute
segment.
"It's exhausting work," said Reeve. "And it's
largely experimental."
The technology originally developed in Canada, but it's been
in existence only for the past 30 years and remains a specialized
arm of the film industry.
Reeve, whose previous Imax productions include 'Super Speedway',
'Survival Island' and the recently released 'Extreme', has had
the Imax bug for 15 years
While some 30,000 regular movie theatres are found around
the world, there are only 127 Imax theatres. Most are located
at science centres or museums, such as the Montreal's Old Port
facility or the Canadian Museum of Civilisation in Ottawa.
Yet the audience for Imax films is growing. Approximately
50 million people see Imax films every year, and by 2000, there
will be 200 Imax theatres.
Imax films are also relatively expensive to produce, costing
up to $150,000 per minute.
Among this film's financial sponsors and investors are Hydro-Québec,
Tourisme Québec, Nunavik Tourism, Falconbridge Ltd. and
the Stockholm Museum of Nature.
Yet producer Martin Dignard said that he has been struggling
to stay within the limits of a $6 million budget. To move the
crew and equipment around Nunavik he's had to rent a entire Hawker
Siddely 748. A helicopter will be in standby in Kuujjuaq for
the next three weeks simply to ferry the crew out to the caribou.
Then, in September, everyone travels to Sweden where the story
of Sami and their reindeer will complete the film.
The film also plans to include elements of circumpolar culture.
Inukjuak resident Adamie Inukpuk who has previously appeared
in the films Shadow of the Wolf and Kabloonak, introduces elements
of Inuit culture, such as hunting, mussel-gathering, igloo-building
and throat singing, into the action.
"Symbol of the North" should be finished by March,
2000.
|