Sertões de Matto-Grosso, Os [The Savannas of Mato Grosso] (1915) – dir. Luiz Thomaz Reis*

Luiz Thomaz Reis [right] with General Cândido Rondon [centre] and a group of  Paresí at the Utiariti falls, probably taken at the time of the shooting of Os Sertões de Matto-Grosso in 1914 or 1915 [Acervo do Museo do Índio/ FUNAI – Brasil, CRNV0614].
Lost, exact duration unknown, though probably between 60 and 90 minutes, b&w, silent with Portuguese titles and intertitles.

Source : a few fragments are held in Museu do Índio, available as part of a broader collection of isolated fragments of films made by the Rondon Commission here.

Background: this was the first major film made by Luiz Thomaz Reis after he had been appointed as head of the Photography and Cinematography section of the Rondon Commission in 1912. It is an expedition film chronicling one or more expeditions to remote regions of Mato Grosso that took place in 1914, and possibly also in 1915, and which were led by the then Colonel (later to be General) Cândido Rondon himself.

The place of Os Sertões in Reis’s overall filmography, and its relationship to an earlier, seemingly prematurely aborted and also lost film about the expedition to the Mato Grosso jointly led by Rondon and the former US President, Theodore Roosevelt, is discussed here.

Although Os Sertões itself may be lost, one can get some sense of it from the intertitles, which are preserved in a Rondon Commission report dating from  1916. These indicate that the film was organised into six parts, each with a number of subsidiary sequences. As the length of the parts of such films at that time could be up to 15 minutes, this suggests that overall duration of the film could have been as much as 1.5 hours. [These intertitles are reproduced in Lasmar 2011: 260-263].

Rondon asked Reis to make Os Sertões because the interior of Mato Grosso was more or less unknown, not only to Brazilian citizens of the great cities of the eastern seaboard of the country, but even within the state of Mato Grosso itself.

The film fulfilled its remit in this sense magnificiently. When it was released on the commercial cinema circuit in 1915, it was a huge success and attracted very large audiences, not only in Rio de Janeiro, but also in a number of other major cities. Indeed, it generated a substantial income that was assigned to various charitable causes, as well as helping to fund the Rondon Commission itself and its film-making activities [see Lobato 2015: 303-306].

Film Content

As described above, the surviving intertitles indicate that Os Sertões was divided into six parts:

The first two parts follow an expedition that departs, seemingly in January 1914, from Tapirapuã, a small village on the headwaters of the Sepotuba River, north of Cáceres, close to the Bolivian border,  and travels in a northwesterly direction across the Serra dos Parecis to Utiariti on the upper reaches of the Papagaio River. This was the site of a Rondon Commission telegraph post, and also a village of the Paresí visited by Edgard Roquette-Pinto in 1912. (The autonym of the Paresí is Halíti, often corrupted to Aríti in early sources, as in the name of their village).

These two parts are mainly concerned with the logistics of the expedition itself and aspects of the natural environment, including the Salto Bello waterfall on the River Sacre.

Most of the third and the fourth parts are then dedicated to sequences about the Paresí at Utiariti. The first of these is mainly about Paresí women,  showing them coming back from their horticultural plots with laden baskets and preparing food. There are also various individual portraits of women and another of the chief of the village, wearing an army major’s uniform and accompanied by his wife.

There is also a sequence showing the distribution of presents to a group of young Paresí women, which is represented in one of the fragments in the Museo do Índio archive. A curiosity of this sequence is that the person in shot giving away the presents is Luiz Thomaz Reis himself, raising the question as to who is operating the camera at this point.

Luiz Thomaz Reis distributes gifts to the Paresí.

The second part concerning the Paresí (and fourth overall) shows boys diving and swimming in a river, and young men playing a game with a rubber ball, which they hit back and forth using only the head. Both these sequences are also amongst the fragments in the Museu do Índio. This part also shows the Paresí working for the Commission and ends with some shots of the impressive Utiariti waterfall. This is where the photograph, shown above, of Reis and  Rondon with a group of Paresí was taken.

The last two parts of Os Sertões are primarily concerned with the Nambikwara.  There are grounds for believing that these sequences were filmed during a different and probably later expedition to that on which the first four parts of the film were shot. (For a detailed explanation of these grounds, see the Reis filmography available here).

The first part concerning the Nambikwara (and fifth overall) shows various groups coming to visit the Rondon Commission telegraph posts on the Juína river and at Três Buritis, both lying to the northwest of Utiariti, with Rondon giving gifts to both groups. The Três Buritis group are referred to as the ‘Tagnanis’ and appear to be the same group that had been filmed by Edgard Roquette-Pinto in 1912. In Os Sertões, the Tagnani chief declares his intention to attack another Nambikwara group, the ‘Taimandês’.

Nambikwara and Paresí, traditional enemies, dance together in an act of reconciliation.

The final part is preceded by a warning to the audience that it will show the Nambikwara ‘completely naked, just as they live in the bush’. This was supposedly to warn women and children that it was time to leave the cinema, but no doubt when news of the warning spread, it would have done nothing to reduce general interest in the film.

This part begins with a group of Nambikwara arriving at Utiariti, where they are given a cordial welcome, despite being traditional enemies. One of the fragments that survives in the Museo do Índio shows the Nambikwara and Paresí in a dance of reconciliation [see above].

This part and the film as a whole then concludes with Rondon meeting yet another group of Nambikwara, described as ‘Nenés’, when he visits their village on the Juruena river, to the west of Utiariti. Here, he again distributes presents. His travelling companions are reluctant to remain because they are afraid that the Nambikwara will eat their horses, but the Nambikwara themselves entreat Rondon to stay, offering to build him a house.

Texts: Rodrigues 1982; Portugal Lasmar 2011; Lobato 2015.

Bougainville – îles salomon [Bougainville – Solomon Islands] (1935/early 1970s) – dir. Patrick O’Reilly*

Musicians accompany the male initiation ceremony – ‘Bougainville’ (1935) – dir. Patrick O’Reilly

70 mins, 35mm, b&w, silent with French intertitles in the original version. At the same time, a much shorter version, of only 20 minutes and with a different title, Popoko – île sauvage, was also produced. This featured two songs and some general atmospheric effects on a soundtrack.

In the early 1970s, a restored version of the main film was released, of only 37 minutes, and with a voice-over commentary by the director.

Source : Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS). The shorter voiced-over version can be viewed on-line in the CNRS videotheque here.

Background :  this film was shot between August 1934 and February 1935 in the course of a field-trip to the North Solomons island of Bougainville. The island was then part of Australian New Guinea, but became an Autonomous Region within the republic of Papua New Guinea (PNG) after the latter became independent in 1975. Following a referendum in 2019 demonstrating an overwhelming majority in favour of Bougainville having its own independence, as of March 2021 negotiations were continuing between local leaders and the PNG government about the implementation of this result.

Both the direction of the film and the fieldwork on which it was based were carried out by Père Patrick O’Reilly, a Marist priest who had also studied at the Institut d’Ethnologie. Funding for the project was secured through Paul Rivet, Director of the Musée d’Ethnologie du Trocadéro, the predecessor of the Musée de l’Homme.

For the purposes of the film, O’Reilly took with him a Debrie Parvo with a 120m magazine and a lightweight Bell & Howell as a back-up. Initially, he was assisted by a professional operator, Pierre Berkenheim, but he appears to have shot the remainder of the footage himself.

Content : The film can be roughly subdivided into four main parts. The first part concerns life on the coast – fishing, some impressive look-out towers in the sea to observe the shoals of tuna, the making of nets and canoes, boys swimming. A tropical storm.

Towers built off the shore allow the men to spot shoals of tuna from afar.

The second part, the longest, moves to the volcanic interior of the island and shows everyday life in a typical village – girls playing musical bows, old people chewing betel, herding pigs, basket weaving, women looking after children, followed by a lengthy sequence on men making pottery smoking pipes, carving wooden statuettes and women making pots. A young woman leaves her home and a marriage feast ensues. There is an expedition to the gardens to collect yams. These are distributed and cooked in banana leaves.

The bride is washed with protective herbs before being carried to her new home.

The third part begins with a woman painting herself with white clay in memory of her late husband, which then segues into a funerary ritual, a cremation, curiously only apparently attended by women. The fourth part concerns a male initiation ceremony that takes place in the forest. This involves a ritual battle, and the appearance of some impressively large masked figures who represent the spirits who will eat the spirits of the boys so that they can become men.

A woman mourns her late husband.

In commenting later on the film, O’Reilly claimed that the film was made with the greatest respect for the subjects: no one was asked to add or take off items of clothing, no-one was asked to take off a medallion (the occasional crucifix is indeed visible), nor to add a flower to their hair (as the tropes of ‘South Seas’ films of the time required). For the ceremonies, particularly the initiation ceremony, the camera maintains a respectful distance.  O’Reilly explains that it was only possible to film the early part of the ceremony.

In general, the quality of the cinematography is excellent for the era. While the voice-over commentary – spoken in the by-then elderly voice of O’Reilly himself – certainly enriches the account, there is a certain tendency for it merely to describe what one can see on the screen anyway.

Texts : O’Reilly 1949, Rouch and Salzmann 1970, pp.264-265, 281-287, 300-302.

Forest People {Lesnye liudi} (1928) – Alexander Litvinov*

A prospective bride listens to the marriage negotiations between her family and that of the groom. 

46 mins., 35mm, b&w. Silent, Russian intertitles.

Production : Sovkino

Source : Russian State Archives, Krasnogorsk. Can also be viewed in reasonable quality as part of a television programme presented in Russian by film historian Alexander Deriabin here. An English translation of the intertitles is available here.

Background : This film concerns the Udege, a small hunting and gathering society whose traditional lands lie in the forest north of Vladivostock in Primorsky and Khabarovsk krais in the Russian Far East.

It is arguably the most accomplished of the many films of ethnographic character in the kulturfilm genre produced in the Soviet Union in the late 1920s and early 1930s.

It was directed by Alexander Litvinov (1898-1977), who had joined Sovkino in 1927. He became interested in the Udege  after reading an article in a Moscow journal and the following year, set out for the Russian Far East with the cameraman Pavel Mershin (1897-1942), and assistant Efim Feldman, to make two films about the Udege, this one, Forest People,  and another, Through the Ussuri Area, which is a film about the expedition itself.

Both films were based on the prior work of Vladimir K. Arsenyev (1872-1930), a former military officer, topographer and self-trained ethnographer, who lived in Vladivostock. Arsenev had written a series of highly appreciated quasi-fictional works about the Udege, from which the titles of both films were taken. One of the main characters of this work is Arsenyev’s guide, Dersu, who later became the principal subject of Akira Kurosawa’s film, Dersu Uzala (1975).

Based on Arsenyev’s long-standing prior relationship with the Udege, Litvinov and his crew were able to establish a close rapport with the subjects, which is reflected in their apparent ease in front of the camera, despite the intimate nature of much of the shooting.  In his memoirs, Litvinov describes how he planned each scene together with the subjects, thereby avoiding the breaking of any cultural taboos and using re-enactment where necessary.

When these Udege films were released, they became the subject of international acclaim and led to Litvinov being compared to Robert Flaherty, whose work was very popular in the USSR at that time.

Content : Forest People employs a sophisticated though entirely realist film language to offer a series of scenes of everyday life amongst a group of Udege, both around their village and engaged in various subsistence tasks in the forest.

An Udege woman travels by canoe through the forest to recover the game hunted by her husband.

The domestic scenes include a sequence showing a woman retiring to a remote house to give birth and another of a marriage negotiation, as well as various interior shots within the houses of family life, of children playing, of babies being cradled etc.

The forest scenes include very well executed sequences of the felling of a tree and the making of a canoe, fishing from similar canoes, and various hunting sequences, including a remarkable sequence in which a bear is hunted and killed by a single man armed with a spear. This is followed by a relatively long sequence in which, after it has been smoked, the bear’s meat is shared out among the men of the community.

There is also a substantial sequence concerned with shamanism. Prior to the shamanic performance itself, young hunters dance to ensure the favourable disposition of the spirits. The shaman himself – identified by name as Doke Insi of the Amulenko clan – then leads the dancing before ingesting a spirit and entering into trance.

The shaman Doke Insi ingests a spirit before going into trance.

The last ten minutes of the film has a propagandistic purpose. After a sequence showing young people learning agricultural skills, a committee of elders agrees to send a messenger, one Suntsai, to Vladivostok to request supplies from the government. Suntsai meets up there with Arsenev who helps write out a formal request, which is duly granted.

But before Suntsai returns home, Arsenyev takes him to the cinema to see the other film that Litvinov made during this expedition, Through the Ussuri Area. Suntsai is delighted to see his own image and, according to Litvinov’s memoirs, declared in broken Russian, “Everything filmed truly”.

Suntsai (left) and Arsenyev at the cinema. “Everything filmed truly!”.

The film concludes with a return to Udege territory and two men are shown hunting deer from a canoe. An intertitle suggests that although the Udege will learn to herd cattle, and will get a school and a hospital, they will still hunt wild animals.

Pavel Mershin and the Debrie Parvo
Litvinov with the Debrie Sept.

The final credit sequence features another form of reflexivity as images of both Litvinov, the director, operating a Debrie Sept camera, and Pavel Mershin, the cameraman, operating the larger Debrie Parvo, are inserted amidst the title cards.

Text : Sarkisova 2017: 84-90.

Costumes primitivos dos indígenas de Moçambique [Primitive Customs of the Indigenous People of Mozambique] (1929) – dir. João Fernandes Tomaz*

Dancers at Tete, masked as Europeans. ‘Costumes primitivos de los indígenas de Moçambique’ (1929) – dir. João Fernandes Tomaz

15 mins., b&w, silent (Portuguese intertitles)

Production : Agência Geral das Colonias.

Source : Cinemateca Digital Portuguesa, viewable on-line here

One of several films made in Mozambique by the Brigada Cine-Portuguesa led by João Fernandes Tomaz. This team was one of three such teams dispatched to the Portuguese colonies in Africa in 1929 by the Agência Geral das Colonias, a department of the Ministry of the Colonies, in order to produce films to be shown at various colonial exhibitions that were due to take place in Europe, including in Seville in 1929, Antwerp in 1930 and also in Paris in 1931.

These films mostly concerned the Portuguese and their modernising colonial activities, but this film, unusually, is exclusively concerned with local customary life.

Content : This film mostly consists of a series of set-up shots of craft activities within a village, filmed in a competent but mostly unimaginative way. However, towards the end of the film there are some sequences of dancing, supposedly of war-like character, accompanied by drums and marimba players, first at Angonia and then at Inhambane. This is cinematographically more interesting, and also seems more authentic, not only in the vigour with which the dancers are dancing, but also in that quite a number of the participants are wearing a mixture of European and traditional African dress.

There then follows a very awkward set-up shot of a chief, seated on the grounds, with his many wives, who, as the camera pans across them, all look very ill-at-ease.

The film ends with what is perhaps the most interesting sequence of all, which is identified by an inter title as having been shot at Tete. This shows a group of masked dancers dressed as Europeans (see frame grab above)

Text : De Rosa 2018

Land of the Nakhcho {Strana Nakhcho} (1929) – dir. Nikolai Lebedev

‘Land of the Nakhcho’ (1929) – dir. Nikolai Lebedev

39 mins., 35mm, b&w, silent (Russian intertitles)

Production : Sovkino

Source : Krasnogorsk Film Archive. Also viewable on YouTube here, albeit in a very poor copy, apparently lacking many of the original intertitles and the maps, and with superimposed extra-diegetic music.

Background : this film was shot in the mountains of Chechnya in 1928 and was the most ethnographic of a number of travelogues directed by Nikolai Lebedev in the late 1920s. As he himself was an outsider, with no previous knowledge of the region, he took on as a consultant Khalid Orshaev, a local playwright and government official, and creator of the Latin-based Chechen alphabet. It is perhaps on account of his influence that original working title of the film was changed from ‘Chechnya’ to ‘Land of the Nakhcho’, the latter being the name that the Chechens use of themselves.

Lebedev was also fortunate to have with him the  highly skilled cameraman, Ivan Beliakov, an associate of Dziga Vertov and one of the original ‘Kinoks’.

Content :  In overall structure, Land of the Nakhcho  conforms in many ways to the conventional Soviet travelogue format of the period: it begins with shots of the natural environment in the Caucasus, continues with sequences dedicated to traditional Chechen subsistence and craft activities, followed by some general scenes of village life, a market and various examples of religious practice, before the dramatic appearance of a line of tractors, about three quarters of the way into the film, heralds the arrival of the Soviet presence and modernity.

The film then concludes with sequences of modern farming practices, oil wells, road-building, hospitals, literacy programmes and gymnastics, before culminating in  a sequence showing the collective resolution of a traditional blood feud with the previously unimaginable active participation of the women.

However, there are number of features of this film that raise it above the norm for this genre of film. One is an opening sequence in which a Chechen declares directly to the camera that he will serve as a guide for the film which will therefore show the region as it really is, from an insider’s perspective.

Yet although the film begins by denouncing popular stereotypes about the Caucasus, as it proceeds, the generally positive view that it offers of the Chechens’ traditional way of life begins to crumble until about half-way into the film, after a long sequence of scenes showing women hard at work on a broad variety of tasks, a group of men are shown doing nothing. This is followed shortly thereafter by an intertitle declaring ‘Aged forty, a Chechen woman is an old wreck’, a close-up portrait of a woman, who looks to be in her seventies, and a shot from afar of a woman struggling up a hill with a heavy burden.

Another distinctive feature of the film is the quality of the cinematography performed by Beliakov. This is particularly evident  in the sequence showing the zikr, an all-male ecstatic Quadiriya Sufi dance that is performed in a circle to the sound of circular hand drums, clapping and chanting. The combination of exemplary shooting and inspired editing make this the  high point of the film from a purely cinematographic point of view.

From ethnographic point of view, however, perhaps the most interesting sequence is the one showing the resolution of the traditional blood feud in which the film culminates. Here too, it seems likely that the consultant Khalid Orshaev would have had an influence since his own first theatrical work as a playwright, The Law of the Fathers, had been precisely about the vendettas associated with such blood feuds, which were still on-going in the Caucasus region at the time of filming.

Text : Sarkisova 2017, pp. 147-154

Scenes and Crafts in Uganda (1950-51) – dir. Diana Powell-Cotton

31 mins. , b&w , silent. Shot on 16mm at 16fps.

Source : Powell-Cotton Museum

Background and Content : In making this film, Diana Powell-Cotton may have been assisted by her younger brother Christopher, then a colonial administrator in Uganda.

It offers a series of sequences of everyday life and crafts in Uganda. \

On the same trip, Diana Powell-Cotton also made a film about the Kumam of Teso District.

Texts : UNESCO catalogue, p.258, Nicklin 1981.

Kumam, The (1950-51) – dir. Diana Powell-Cotton

available in a short version variously estimated between 33 and 50 minutes, and a long version, between 62 and 80 mins, b&w, silent. Shot in 16mm at 16 fps .

Source : Powell-Cotton Museum

Background and Content :  This film by Diana Powell-Cotton provides a general ethnography of the Kumam, a people who live in the Teso district of Uganda.

On the same expedition, Diana Powell-Cotton also made a more general film about everyday life and craft activities in Uganda.

Texts : UNESCO catalogue, p.257; Nicklin 1981.

Angolan films – Chokwe, Ganguela, Dombondola, Ovambo-Kuanyama (1936-37) – Diana Powell-Cotton and Antoinette Powell-Cotton

total duration variously estimated as between 240 and 405 mins., b&w, silent. 16mm, shot at 16fps

Sources : Powell-Cotton Museum, British Film Institute

Background and Content :  these films were shot during an expedition to the then Portuguese colony of Angola by Diana Powell-Cotton and her younger sister, Antoinette, known as ‘Tony’. They were shooting 16mm film at 16 fps. The films are usually jointly attributed to them both, though in the British Film Institute listing, they are all erroneously attributed to their father, P.H.G. Cotton-Powell.

In the UNESCO catalogue of ethnographic films shot in sub-Saharan Africa, each of their films is given a separate entry, but here it is more convenient to present them all together. Duration times vary in accordance with the source

(1) Chokwe Potter (aka Vatchokwe Potter) 18-24 mins. Shows firing and varnishing of pots.

(2) Ganguela consists of two parts, each 12-19 mins: one shows a man making bark cloth, the other a woman preparing honey and making beer

(3) Dombondola. Contrary to the suggestion in the UNESCO catalogue, this title does not refer to an ethnic group, but rather to a village close to the Angola-Namibia border, within the territory of the Ovambo-Kuanyama. This film is also generally divided into two parts, with a total duration estimated as being between 30 and 55 minutes. The first part concerns daily life in a Dombondola household, while the second shows a woman making a small pot for brewing beer.

(4) Ovambo-Kuanyama footage. This is the most substantial part of the material, and is reported to include the following films:

  • A Day in the Life of the Kuanyama  (aka Kuanyama Fishing), 33 – 50 mins.
  • Kuanyama Medicine Woman Initiation. 25-37 mins.
  • Kuanyama Potter’s Methods (aka Pot-making, Lower Cunene River). 13 mins.
  • Kuanyama Skinning and Dressing Skins. 28 mins.
  • Kuanyama Mining and Smelting of Iron. 40-60 mins.
  • Kuanyama Marriage Ceremonies : Efendula (aka Eve of the Efundula), 37-64 minutes. The UNESCO catalogue also mentions another 28-minute film under the title, Ceremony: preparation of costumes.

Texts : UNESCO catalogue, pp.47-49, Nicklin 1981, Castro 2016, pp.102, 104.

 

Italian Somaliland (1933-34) – dir. P.H.G. Powell-Cotton and Diana Powell-Cotton

variously reported as being between 96 and 140 mins in total, b&w, silent. 16mm shot at 16fps

Sources : Powell-Cotton Museum, British Film Institute

Background and Content : Italian Somaliland is the collective title given in the UNESCO catalogue of ethnographic films in sub-Saharan Africa to a series of short films shot by P.H.G. Powell-Cotton and his daughter, Diana in the course of an expedition in 1933-34 to what was then the Italian colony of Somaliland. Diana stayed on for eight months after her father left, so while some of the films are credited to them jointly, others are sometimes exclusively credited to her. However, at other times, all the films are attributed exclusively to the father – for example in the British Film Institute listing.

The films are given various different titles in the different sources, but the topics that they cover would appear to include the following:

(1) footage attributed jointly to P.H.G. Powell-Cotton and Diana (variously calculated between 29 and 45 minutes):
– Bread-making by both Arabs and Somalis at Gobuen
– Somali-Darod pillow-making at Afmadu
– Bowstring-making

(2) footage attributed jointly to P.H.G. Powell-Cotton and Diana (variously calculated between 33 and 60 mins):
– Miau woman making a winnowing basket
– Somali woman weaving a mat
– Beard-trimming
– Koranic school

(3) Somali footage sometimes attributed solely to Diana (15 mins):
– butter-making
– drawing blood from cattle
– watering of cattle and camels

(4) Pottery footage sometimes attributed solely to Diana (each film approx. 10 mins):
– Eile male potter
– Bimal female potter

Texts : UNESCO catalogue, p. 291;  Nicklin 1981

Some Tribes of the Southern Sudan (1933) – dir. P.H.G. Powell-Cotton

variously described as being 29 or 40 mins, b&w, 16mm, silent. Shot at 16fps.

Source : Powell-Cotton Museum, British Film Institute

Background and Content : This film was made by P.H.G. Powell-Cotton,  a hunter and explorer who made a series of self-funded expeditions to Africa, almost annually between 1920 and 1939. He had no formal training as either ethnographer or film-maker, but on a number of these expeditions, he took a Bell & Howell Filmo 70 and shot some ethnographic footage.

In 1933-34, he visited the Southern Sudan and shot the material for this film. According to the UNESCO catalogue of ethnographic films about sub-Saharan Africa, it includes the following sequences:

  • Lango – enacted war-dance, manufacture of spear shafts, washing of beads, making of a spoon, rope. A potter at work.
  • Bari – construction of a house, hair-styles
  • Didinga – men making roof thatch
  • Latouka – warriors in costume, pounding of millet, ploughing, blacksmith, woman potter
  • Azande – drums and dances, hair-styles, potter
  • Dinka – women pounding millet, ploughing, beating grain, making roof thatching, man setting a trap, man making a pipe, woman potter
  • Jur – woman potter at work

Texts : UNESCO catalogue, p.302; Nicklin 1981

© 2018 Paul Henley