Die weiße Dämmerung (1974)

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Die weiße Dämmerung: Directed by Philip Kaufman. With Warren Oates, Timothy Bottoms, Louis Gossett Jr., Joanasie Salamonie. In 1896, three survivors of a whaling ship-wreck in the Canadian Arctic are saved and adopted by an Eskimo tribe but frictions arise when the three start misbehaving.

“Itu0026#39;s 1896 in the Artic. Four whalers are stranded when their small hunting boat runs into ice and their ship fails to find them. Billy (Warren Oates), Daggett (Timothy Bottoms), and Portagee (Louis Gossett Jr.) leave behind their dead comrade and get rescued by passing Inuits. The Inuits see them as Dog-Children.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe Inuit culture seems authentic. There is a realism in the people and their way of life. The main drawback is the three survivors. They are not appealing characters. One of them needs to be heroic but the opening already lays bare that aspiration. Daggett and Portagee readily abandons a weaken Billy to die in the open. At least, Daggett should go back and try to comfort Billy. Itu0026#39;s the same for their ship which searched for only a day or so for their missing crew. It portrays a western culture of personal greed and its corrupting influences. It doesnu0026#39;t mean that the Inuit culture is an utopian one. It is still very much a human world with its own villain. I simply didnu0026#39;t like the characters which detracts from my enjoyment of this film. I wish I like Daggett more.”

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