Life in the Village {Het Leven in de Dessa} (1928) – dir. Willy Mullens

A young woman shows a basket of freshly pounded rice before taking it into the courtyard behind to be cooked

43:36 mins., b&w (tinted), silent (Dutch intertitles)

Production: Haghe-Films.

Source : EYE Dutch East Indies collection, viewable here

Background –  By the time that he came to make this film, the film-maker Willy Mullens (1880-1952) was already well-established as a leading maker of industrial, corporate and advertising films in the Netherlands. He was also celebrated for his films about the monarchy, which established his reputation as a ‘film-maker for the fatherland’.

Haghe-Films was Mullens’ own production company, but for this film he received additional funding from the Ministry of the Colonies and the Ministry of Education.

In general, the quality of the cinematography is competent but often very stilted, much of it consisting of rather rocky pans across subjects who are clearly performing their everyday lives for the camera. The camera is mostly at a considerable distance from the subjects and there seems to have been very little rapport between them and the film-maker. Some subjects seem positively terrified, making one wonder whether they were being filmed under duress. Curiously, almost all the close-up images are of women.

The film is regularly punctuated with subtitles, which are set on backgrounds that alternate between a map of the Dutch East Indies, or drawings of elegant Javanese women dancers.

Further information about Mullens is available on the Eye website here.

Content –  The village that is the subject of the film is not actually named, so one is presumably meant to consider it to be typical of Javanese villages generally at the time. The film is in two roughly equal parts. The first part mainly shows traditional subsistence practices, particularly the cultivation and processing of rice. However, there are also some more intimate scenes, e.g. of women chewing betel nut paste and of children buying iced drinks and sweets from itinerant vendors.

The second part focuses on the relationship of villagers with the Dutch colonial state, emphasising the general benefits of this relationship to local people (as one would expect, given the sponsors of the film).

It begins with the ‘Regent’ (one of the local nobility preserved by the Dutch in their East Indian colony) going on tour in his large motor car and arriving at the village. Here he holds a meeting with a group of headmen from around the local region, who arrive on horseback and are all dressed in some sort of simple uniform. They are very deferential to the Regent.

Fine Javanese cattle are displayed and the introduction of improved breeding methods is commented upon. There then follows a feast, with dancers wearing large horned masks, resembling cattle. They dance in a lively and apparently comical way supported by a gamelan orchestra. But, sadly, it is all filmed from a great distance.

This is then followed by a lengthy sequence about the election of a local headman, seemingly supervised by the Regent. Villagers are given a stick and encouraged to put it in one of series of tubes hidden behind a screen. The film emphasises that a real choice is available and that women, or at least widows, are also allowed to vote.

There are then sequences about the production of pottery for the local market, the distribution of money through a farmer’s credit bank, and also the activities of a large pawnshop, which apparently does a roaring trade. This seems to be understood by the film-maker as a positive matter, but to a neutral viewer it would appear to testify to the fact the villagers have become ensnared in a market economy and are now finding it difficult to make ends meet. Some people are pawning what appear to be family heirlooms.

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Amorira : Hatred and Love {Amorira : Haat en liefde} (1933) – Father Simon Buis

137 mins., b&w (tinted), silent

Source : EYE Dutch East Indies collection, viewable here

Ethnodrama. Production year 1930.

EYE catalogue entry:

Christian mission propaganda film about ‘a slice of heathen life, with the bamboo bush people of Borado-Likowali’ on the island of Flores.

Keli is forced to marry Wesa but has a lover in another village. This causes war to break out between the two villages and Wesa is killed. Wesa’s father Meo now wants Keli to marry his other son. Keli refuses and the hostilities continue. Just when the authorities have locked up a number of troublemakers, Father Jacobs arrives. The missionary tries to win the confidence of the locals but becomes embroiled in the conflict. An assault by Meo’s men leaves him dangerously wounded. The villagers stop fighting and Meo asks the dying missionary’s forgiveness. Peace is restored.

Text : Appels 1997

Stub – requires work

 

Dry Rice Cultivation among the Karo-Batak {De rijstbouw op droge velden bij de Karo-Bataks} (1923) – L. P. de Bussy

13:23 mins., b&w, silent – Dutch intertitles

Production : Koloniaal Institut

Source : EYE Dutch East Indies collection,  viewable here

Informational film about Batak dry-rice cultivation. Well-made, follows process in a neutral way. One of a number of films made about the Karo-Batak by L.P. de Bussy: this was probably his longest film. Shot in 1917, but according to EYE website first screened in public in 1923.

EYE catalogue entry:

“A documentary that shows the various stages of rice growing in the dry fields among the Karo-Batak.

The film opens with an “introduction”, in which a picture is given of “the landscape, the village, and the people”. This is followed by the stages of rice growing: cultivating, ploughing, sowing, and harvesting. These stages are shown very neutrally, without any background information. The harvest festival, with which the film ends, gives picturesque images of victory carts being pulled to the village and women in festive attire taking part in a dance competition”

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Native Life in the Phillipines, Reel 1 (1913) – Charles Martin and Dean C. Worcester

7:54 mins., b&w (tinted), silent

Source : Penn Museum, viewable on-line here

Initial dances are series of performances for the camera, seemingly in some public location (at a  museum perhaps?). Subsistence activities (pounding grain, smelting metal)  in village seem less contrived. Nice shot of teenage girls attending to one another’s hair. Also of young couple washing in a stream. Followed by sequences of mock combat, musical performance, women working in the fields and carrying produce home on their heads, locusts, men sitting by a large jar (?), harvesting of grain by hand.

Information from Penn Museum:

Photographed by Charles Martin and produced by Dean C. Worcester. It may be that the footage here has been re-assembled and cut by unknown parties over the years.

Location: Cordillera (region);

Groups: Bontoc, Igorot, Ifugao, Kalinga.

 

Offering Feast on Bali {Offerfeest op Bali} (1912-13) – J.C. Lamster

A device reminiscent of studio photography  – the sign of a novice filmmaker? – ‘Offerfeest op Bali’ (1912) – dir. J.C. Lamster

6:22 mins., b&w (tinted yellow) silent, intertitles in Dutch.

Production : Koloniaal Institut, Amsterdam

Source : this film is viewable via the EYE website here. It can also been seen via a private YouTube playlist, with added music and commentary, here.

This film was shot by J.C. Lamster, a soldier in the Dutch colonial army and the first person to shoot moving images in the Dutch East Indies.  Although he had trained briefly with Pathé Frères in Paris, he would still have been a relative beginner. In the circumstances then, it is a creditable effort and  the film holds a certain historical significance, though from an ethnographic point of view, it is difficult to construe.

The film begins by showing a highly decorated archway and a long line of women carrying neatly stacked piles of fruit on their heads. These will seemingly constitute part of the offering. One shot frames a young girl in a circle, a device reminiscent of studio photography (see above) and perhaps a sign that Lamster is still a relative newcomer to film-making.

This is then followed by a sequence showing a pig being prepared as an offering. This cuts effectively from a mid-shot of the pig having its belly sewn up to a wider shot of it being stuck onto a pole. However, neither the reason for these offerings, nor the deity to which they will be offered, is made clear.

There is then a sequence of a cute group of children taking tea in a courtyard, but the link with the remainder of the film remains obscure.

This is followed in turn by a sequence showing a line of people carrying banners, and eventually the pig hanging from its pole, apparently entering a temple (though this doorway is quite different to the archway shown at the beginning of the film). They are then shown coming out again, but the camera never enters the temple itself to observe the making of the offerings.

After a brief shot of a gamelan orchestra, the final minute of the film, somewhat underexposed, shows two “temple girls”, elaborately addressed, with headdresses and waving fans, performing a dance in front of a seated group of onlookers, both male and female. But again, the connection with the making of the offerings remains unexplained.

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Fête des eaux sur le Mékong [Water Festival on the Mekong River] (1910) – Anon

Dragon-boat racing in Phnom Penh – ‘Water Festival on the Mekong river’ (1910) – Anon

10 mins., b&w, silent

Production : Pathé, catalogue no. 3779

Source : CNC at the Bnf

This film was not reviewed for The Silent Time Machine, but it has recently been restored by the CNC and would appear to be of ethnographic interest

According to the CNC catalogue, the film consists of a series of views of large dragon-boat races on the Mekong river.

The catalogue does not specify a location but in À travers la Cochinchine et le Cambodge (1925), what is apparently the same event is shown taking place in Phnom Penh, capital of Cambodia.

Village annamite (1932) – dir. G.-E. Monod-Herzen

 

‘Village annamite’ (1932) – dir. G.-E. Monod-Herzen

20 mins., b&w, sound – Vietnamese, Cambodian and Laotian music

Production : Établissements Jacques Haïk – Pathé

Source : CNC at the Bnf

This film was not reviewed for The Silent Time Machine but it has been recently restored by the CNC and from the content description, it would appear to be potentially of ethnographic interest

[The following text is based on the CNC catalogue entry]

“In Annam (a French colony at the time the film was made, today central Vietnam), fishermen live in houses on stilts on the edge of the rivers or canals. They combine fishing with herding buffalos, horticulture and raising silk worms.

Most also harvest rice, the principal crop. While men work the soil, women and children plant the rice. Subsequently, they pull it up, hull it and then store the grains in jars or grind them into flour.

Life is structured by prayers and offerings in the pagoda, by marriages and by funerals. The large number of  tombs in the region attest to the importance of the ancestors”.

It has not been possible to discover any biographical details about the director Monod-Herzen. However, the producer of the film was Jacques Haïk, who was of Tunisian-Jewish origins. Haïk was one of the leading producer-distributors of the interwar years in France, but his businesses were obliterated as a result of the combined effects of the financial crash of 1931 and the rise of the Nazis.

The music on the soundtrack was recorded by the Pathé company using the Cinevox-Haik process and in consultation with the Institut de Phonétique of the University of Paris.

Vie des bonzes dans les pagodes, La [The Life of Monks in the Pagodas] (1929) – Anon

“The imprint of a gentle philosophy” – ‘La vie des bonzes dans les pagodes’ (1929) – Anon

6:40 mins., b&w, silent – intertitles in French

Production : Pathé

Source : Gaumont-Pathé Archives, catalogue no. PR 1929 22 2

A simple descriptive film showing a few scenes from the life of a group of monks at an unspecified pagoda in Cambodia.

After some preliminary shots of pagodas, the monks are shown bathing in the water of a holy pool, eating a frugal meal of rice and praying. In one of the longest sequences, cutting from wide to close, a young monk is shown using a steel scalpel to incise holy texts on a small rectangular sheet of tin. This is then tied together with others to make a sort of book.

The film ends with a series of portraits of individual monks, suggesting in an intertitle that the peace and tranquility of their life has left on the faces of the older monks, ‘the imprint of a gentle philosophy’.

Indochine (1920s) – Anon

Woodcarving – a typical scene from the Pathé magazine series, ‘Indochine’ that appeared regularly through the 1920s.

6:38 mins., b&w, silent

Production :  Pathé Frères

Source : Gaumont-Pathé Archives, file no. CM1673

Throughout the 1920s, Pathé produced a series of short films of around 6 minutes, which, under the general title, Indochine, offered a series of scenes of life around the French colonies in Southeast Asia. Although Europeans might occasionally appear in these films, they were mostly about the life of the local people. The technical and aesthetic standards of these magazine films were generally high.

In this film, offered here as an example, the principal theme is of local arts and crafts: a traditional form of fishing with nets, embroidery, wood carving and finally, a brick factory.

Journée d’un coolie-pousse [A Rickshaw Driver’s Day] (1925) – Brut and Lejards

Saigon 1924/5 – ‘A Rickshaw Driver’s Day’ – Brut and Lejards

6:37, b&w, silent

Production : Pathé Frères

Source : Gaumont-Pathé Archives, CM853

This film purports to show a day-in-the-life of a rickshaw driver in Saigon in the mid-1920s. Travelling shots of the rickshaw driver pulling a European client, presumably taken from a car, are intercut with shots of him eating a bowl of soup at a roadside stall, buying a crushed ice drink in a shop, resting in his rickshaw in the shade of a wall, and interacting with the client. A bizarre close-up shows that he carries the coin paid for his fare in his ear.

An interesting sequence at the end of the film shows the first rickshaw driver handing over the rickshaw to a second young man. The latter then hands over a few coins, suggesting that he is renting the rickshaw from the first driver. After a shot of a group of women washing the rickshaw driver’s clothes, we see him apparently waking up next day, and the final shot is of him again pushing a European client.

In the version in the Gaumont-Pathé Archives, this film does not carry any titles, but it clearly comes from the same body of footage that was shot by Brut and Lejards for À travers la Cochinchine et le Cambodge, released in 1925. Not only are there a certain number of shots in common, but this film too has subtle cross-fades.

Also common to both is the sophistication of the film-language : the narrative keeps cutting back and forth from a shot of the driver pushing the rickshaw to him engaged in other activities, and these are clearly intended to be sequential events in the rickshaw driver’s day. However, this ‘day’ has clearly been constructed in the edit suite, not least because the client in the rickshaw is always the same European man.

© 2018 Paul Henley