Video Movies : ****Excellent ***Good **Fair *Poor
- Share via
**** “Nanook of the North.” “Louisiana Story.”Home Vision. $29.95 each.
In these two great documentaries--the first and last films Robert Flaherty shot--he records without condescension the lives of people usually dismissed as colorful primitives: Eskimos in the 1922 “Nanook” and Cajuns in the 1948 “Louisiana Story.” Both films are ethnographic classics by a director whose love of his subjects ennobled them. (Each uses a corporate sponsor: a fur company is discreet in “Nanook,” but Standard Oil over-intrudes on “Louisiana Story.”) Both films breathe with the poetry of life. There’s a sad postscript: Industry did not preserve the wilderness, and Nanook died of starvation even as Flaherty’s film made him world famous. (“Louisiana Story’s” original Virgil Thomson score is conducted by Eugene Ormandy; the tape of “Nanook” has a new, sometimes intrusive score by Stanley Silverman, performed by Peter Serkin and Tashi.)
More to Read
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.