Toronto International Film Festival 2006

Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

Paradise Lost

The Journals of Knud Rasmussen remembers the last great Inuit shaman

Cold comfort: The shaman Avva (Pakak Innukshuk, right) tells his life story in the film The Journals of Knud Rasmussen. (Norman Cohn/Alliance Atlantis) Cold comfort: The shaman Avva (Pakak Innukshuk, right) tells his life story in the film The Journals of Knud Rasmussen. (Norman Cohn/Alliance Atlantis)

The creative partnership of Zacharias Kunuk and Norman Cohn dates back to the mid-1980s. That’s when Cohn, a video maker and native New Yorker, first travelled to Igloolik, Nunavut, to work with Kunuk, who worked at the Inuit Broadcasting Corp. In 1990, the pair incorporated their media collective, Isuma Productions (Inuktitut for “to think”), and proceeded to create documentary-like “re-lived dramas” Qaggiq, Nunaqpa, Saputi and the 13-part TV series Nunavut. But it was in 2000, with the release of their first feature film, Atanarjuat (The Fast Runner), that these friends and collaborators came to international attention. Based on an Inuit legend, the historical thriller was a critical sensation, netting director Kunuk the Camera d’Or at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival.

Their latest film, The Journals of Knud Rasmussen, opens the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 7. Set in 1922, it’s based on a real ethnographic study of Inuit people by Danish anthropologists. Avva (Pakak Innukshuk), the last great shaman, lives with his wife and children in a self-imposed exile from his home community of Igloolik, which has recently begun to follow Christian teachings. The arrival of a group of Danish anthropologists coincides with Avva’s return home, where he is forced to make a choice between his traditional beliefs and Christianity.

With hypnotic shots of Arctic vistas, poetic storytelling and a commingling of the spirit world and our own, The Journals of Knud Rasmussen captures a profound moment in Inuit history. While not a grand epic like Atanarjuat, it has a quiet power. CBC Arts Online spoke with the film’s co-directors about the historical events that inspired it.

Q: Tell me how The Journals of Knud Rasmussen came to be.

Norman Cohn: I think Zach and I always intended to make a film like this. As soon as we finished Fast Runner, we started researching this question of why people would take a sophisticated, 4,000-year-old intellectual and spiritual system that worked and had [them] at the top of the food chain and suddenly replace it with a completely foreign system, and end up 40 or 50 years later at the bottom of the food chain. Why would these people do this? I think it fascinated Zach as part of his personal history and it fascinated me as a human dilemma. And it turns out that one of the most famous anthropological accounts of people in the process of doing this was recorded in Zach’s backyard. Rasmussen led an expedition that produced an encyclopedia of 26 volumes of data about Inuit and Arctic North America. Two of those volumes focused on the Inuit of Igloolik, who are the great grandparents of Zach and our cast and crew.

Zacharias Kunuk: Atanarjuat was timeless. It could have been 500 years ago, could have been 1,000 years ago. [For this], we wanted to do something more recent. We’ve always talked about shamanism and Christianity and the Knud journals were just right there in our area.


Co-directors Zacharias Kunuk (left) and Norman Cohn (middle) on the set of The Journals of Knud Rasmussen. (Alliance Atlantis) Co-directors Zacharias Kunuk (left) and Norman Cohn (middle) on the set of The Journals of Knud Rasmussen. (Alliance Atlantis)

Q: What was the reaction to the film when you screened it in the Arctic? Did Christians take offence to your depiction of their religion?

ZK: I think the Christians were happy because they see, at the end, that they won. It probably made them stronger.


Q: But the conversion scene is heartbreaking. It’s not a scene of joy.

ZK: Yes, but I guess to the Christians, it’s joyful. [The characters] converted.

NC: It’s important to us as filmmakers that we are not presenting some awful view of missionaries coming in. That view has been portrayed in the past. We’re just trying to show what happened. At that point, the real missionaries are 1,000 miles away. In the movie, we show Inuit changing their belief system because they want to. Or because they feel that have to. And how they change and why they change is a story we’re telling for everybody to feel how they want to feel about it. I don’t think that we as filmmakers take a very clear position about it one way or another.


Q: With Atanarjuat, Zacharias was the director, but with this film, you are co-directors. What changed in your working relationship with this film?

ZK: Nothing. We started back in 1989 working together and nothing has changed in 20 years.

NC: Just the credits. And you can guess why. When we got to the point [with Atanarjuat] where we could make a $2 million feature film and have it seen by the outside world, it was important that someone stand up and be the face of the people behind it. And that certainly wasn’t going to be me.


Q: Given the success of Atanarjuat, were you nervous about expectations for your second feature film?

ZK: No. Nothing has changed. We didn’t change our style, or how we worked. We didn’t think about it that way.

NC: We’re too old to be nervous. Zach is almost 50 and I’m almost 60. If we ever were going to be nervous about expectations, that would have happened a long time ago.


Q: One of the most affecting scenes in the film is when Avva’s wife, Orulu (Neeve Irngaut Uttak), tells the Danes her life story. She starts to cry, because she realizes that despite a lot of hardship, she’s had a very happy life. Let me pose the question to you: In your lives, what do you look back on as a time or source of happiness?

ZK: For me, when I was growing up and starting to go out with hunters. Learning about how they called their dogs and what they did. And then — bang! — I had to go to school.

NC: Certainly not my early childhood. I’m on the opposite side of the spectrum. For me, [my best time is] right now, where I have the closest thing to a happy life. Because I have survived as an artist with my integrity. I have a totally fulfilling creative relationship to my partners and my work and somehow managed to find myself at this age … surrounded by people I love.


The Journals of Knud Rasmussen screens at TIFF Sept. 7 and 8.

Rachel Giese writes about the arts for CBC.ca.

CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window.



More from this Author

Rachel Giese

Mad refuge
André Alexis's new novel Asylum finds sex and scandal in 1980s Ottawa
Eternal youth
Novelist Meg Rosoff explores her inner child
Talking back
Persepolis takes a brat's-eye view of Iran
Jumping off the page
2007: The year in books
Whoa, baby
Ellen Page and Diablo Cody deliver big laughs in Juno
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

World »

Houston autopsy results withheld by police video
Whitney Houston was found in a hotel bathtub but it'll take weeks to determine precisely how she died, a Los Angeles coroner's official says.
Greece passes new austerity deal amid rioting video
Greek lawmakers have approved harsh new austerity measures demanded by bailout creditors to save the debt-crippled nation from bankruptcy, after riots in Athens and other cities left stores looted and burned and more than 120 people hurt.
new Arab League wants UN peacekeepers in Syria
The Arab League has called for the UN Security Council to create a joint peacekeeping force for Syria and urged Arab states to sever all diplomatic contact with President Bashar Assad's regime.
more »

Canada »

Quebec town 'heartbroken' after killing of woman, sisters video
A small Quebec town is in mourning Sunday after a Quebec man was charged with killing his nieces and his mother, who were found dead in their family home.
Doors blocked in fatal Manitoba trailer blaze
Four men who died in a residential trailer fire in Selkirk, Man., may not have been able to escape because both of the home's exits were blocked, says a local fire official.
NDP leadership hopefuls face off in Quebec City video
Federal NDP leadership candidates argued over Canada's global standing, climate change and language during a French-only debate in Quebec City on Sunday.
more »

Politics »

NDP leadership hopefuls face off in Quebec City video
Federal NDP leadership candidates argued over Canada's global standing, climate change and language during a French-only debate in Quebec City on Sunday.
Tibet PM sees human-rights 'tragedy' unfolding
In an exclusive interview Saturday on CBC Radio's The House, the prime minister of the Tibetan government-in-exile, Lobsang Sangay, sounded the alarm on the "tragedy" unfolding in Tibet and called on Canada to take action.
Attawapiskat receives first modular home
The first of 22 modular homes promised by the federal government to Attawapiskat has arrived to the remote northern Ontario First Nations community, the Aboriginal Affairs minister's office has confirmed.
more »

Health »

Chronic fatigue may be reversed with exercise
Taking it easy is not the best treatment for chronic fatigue syndrome, rather exercise and behaviour therapy are, a large study finds.
AT&T buys T-Mobile USA for $39B US
AT&T Inc. said Sunday it will buy T-Mobile USA from Deutsche Telekom AG in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $39 billion US, becoming the largest cellphone company in the U.S.
Milky Way home to 50 billion planets: NASA
Scientists have compiled the first cosmic census of planets in our galaxy: at least 50 billion planets are estimated to call the Milky Way home.
more »

Arts & Entertainment»

Adele wins best album, best record Grammys
Adele capped off a "life-changing" year by winning six Grammys Sunday night, including record of the year and album of the year for 21
Britain's BAFTAs honours The Artist
Silent movie The Artist dominated the British Academy Film awards, the U.K. equivalent of the Oscars, winning seven awards, including best picture.
Houston autopsy results withheld by police video
Whitney Houston was found in a hotel bathtub but it'll take weeks to determine precisely how she died, a Los Angeles coroner's official says.
more »

Technology & Science »

NASA to scale back Mars exploration
Scientists say NASA is about to propose major cuts in its exploration of other planets, especially Mars, with the space agency's former science chief calling the plan irrational.
Ancient Antarctic lake may harbour microbial life
If scientists find microbes in a frigid lake 3.2 kilometres beneath the thick ice of Antarctica, it will illustrate once again that somehow life finds a way to survive in the strangest and harshest places, and it will offer hope that life exists beyond Earth.
B.C. killer whale habitat protection ruled a legal duty
The federal minister of fisheries has no discretion when it comes to protecting the critical habitat of B.C.'s southern resident killer whales, the Federal Court of Appeal has ruled.
more »

Money »

Greece passes new austerity deal amid rioting video
Greek lawmakers have approved harsh new austerity measures demanded by bailout creditors to save the debt-crippled nation from bankruptcy, after riots in Athens and other cities left stores looted and burned and more than 120 people hurt.
Air Canada reaches tentative deal with dispatchers
Air Canada has reached a tentative collective agreement with the Canadian Airline Dispatchers Association, representing the airline's 74 flight dispatchers.
Old Age Security untouched until 2020, Flaherty says video
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty says Canadians should expect no changes to Old Age Security benefits before 2020 or 2025, and details about reform would be outlined over more than one budget.
more »

Consumer Life »

Honda recalls Fit subcompacts
Honda Canada says it will recall 14,640 of its 2009 and 2010 Fit subcompact cars to replace lost motion springs.
U.S. travel fee proposal criticized by Harper
Prime Minister Stephen Harper says he doesn't think much of a new border tax that's being proposed by the United States, calling it a cash grab designed to help a budget crisis.
Bell class action suit approved by Que. court
A Quebec Superior Court judge has authorized a class action lawsuit to go ahead against Bell Mobility.
more »

Sports »

Scores: NHL NBA

Virtue, Moir outduel Davis, White to win Four Continents video
For the first time in nearly two years, Canada's Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir beat the American team of Meryl Davis and Charlie White in ice dancing. The reigning Olympic champions won gold at the Four Continents Championships on Sunday in Colorado after outduelling Davis and White in the free skate.
Red Wings tie NHL record with 20th straight home win video
The Detroit Red Wings equalled an NHL record with their 20th straight win at home, beating the Philadelphia Flyers 4-3 Sunday night on the strength of Johan Franzen's tiebreaking goal early in the third period.
blog PEI hockey players are proud and inspire each other
Gerard Gallant had Errol Thompson. Brad Richards had Gallant. Mark Flood and Adam McQuaid had Richards. Somewhere down the line there will be other hockey players from Prince Edward Island who will be inspired by McQuaid or Flood, writes Tim Wharnsby.
more »

Diversions »

[an error occurred while processing this directive]
more »