Man of Aran

This article is about the documentary. For the British Sea Power album, see Man of Aran (album).
Man of Aran
Directed by Robert J. Flaherty
Produced by Michael Balcon
Written by Robert J. Flaherty
Starring Colman 'Tiger' King
Maggie Dirrane
Michael Dillane
Music by John D. H. Greenwood
Cinematography Robert J. Flaherty
Edited by John Goldman
Production
company
Distributed by Gaumont British Distributors
Release dates
  • 18 October 1934 (1934-10-18) (US)
Running time
76 minutes
Country Ireland; Irish Free State
Language Irish, English

Man of Aran is a 1934 Irish fictional documentary (ethnofiction) film directed by Robert J. Flaherty about life on the Aran Islands off the western coast of Ireland. It portrays characters living in premodern conditions, documenting their daily routines such as fishing off high cliffs, farming potatoes where there is little soil, and hunting for huge basking sharks to get liver oil for lamps. Some situations are fabricated, such as one scene in which the shark fishermen are almost lost at sea in a sudden gale. Additionally, the family members shown are not actually related, having been chosen from among the islanders for their photogenic qualities.

George Stoney's 1978 documentary How the Myth was Made, which is included in the special features of the DVD, relates that the Aran Islanders had not hunted sharks in this way for over fifty years at the time the film was made. Man of Aran is Flaherty's re-creation of culture on the edges of modern society, even though much of the primitive life depicted had been left behind by the 1930s. It is impressive, however, for its drama, for its spectacular cinematography of landscape and seascape, and for its concise editing.

Plot

The film opens with a boy crab fishing. We then observe three fishermen landing a flimsy holed curragh in the force of the wind and the huge waves. Next we see some of the hardships of mundane Aran life: making a field on the barren rocks using seaweed and soil scraped out of rock crevices, fixing holes in the boat with a mixture of cloth and tar, rendering the liver of the giant basking shark. The film follows as the men of Aran harpoon the huge beasts from their bád iomartha (a wooden carvel hulled craft), the film ends with another storm sequence where the distressed family on shore watch the prolonged struggle of the boat to land safely against the elements.

Cast

Historical significance

The reputation of Man of Aran rests as much on controversies over truth and accuracy than its aesthetic achievement.[1] Some contend that Man of Aran is more valuable as a documentary of Robert Flaherty’s vision of life than it is of life itself.[2] Others see it as a betrayal of documentary’s mission, “to tell it like it is”.[3] And yet, according to Richard Barsam, Flaherty is one of the great innovators of the documentary form…creating a nonfiction genre all of his own.[4]

According to anthropologist John Messenger there are over one hundred factual errors in the film.[5] Among the most notable is the shark hunting sequence, which dominates the latter half of the story. Kimball says this practice had disappeared so long ago that the islanders didn't know how to make or use the harpoons and had to be taught the skills of the hunt.[6] Messenger who visited Islands between 1958 and 1968 goes further, claiming that the Islanders had never engaged in shark hunting then, or at any time in the past. Flaherty brought fisherman from Scotland to teach the locals how it is done. “Flaherty…created new customs, such as shark fishing, and seriously distorted numerous indigenous ones in order to make the Man of Aran fit his preconceptions and titillate the camera.”[7] Flaherty himself admits the shark fishing sequence was needed for the box-office.[8]

Other falsehoods include creating the Aran family who were unrelated cast members handpicked by Flaherty to play the roles of mother, father, and son.[9] In another sequence Flaherty shows the mother buffeted by a storm as she carries seaweed along the Inishmore cliffs. What appears to be a traditional activity carried out by Aran women is a fabrication. The seaweed is collected for fertilization and is gathered from the low lying shores twice a month and only when the tides are absolutely calm.[10] And Kimball points out that religion which is deeply rooted in the Islanders lives, even among the locally recruited actors, is entirely absent.[11] Flaherty also exposed the Islanders to great risk asking them to perform the most astonishing feats in stormy seas despite the fact none of the Islanders could swim.[12] As Flaherty says, “looking back I should have been shot for what I asked these superb people to do for the film…for the enormous risks…and all for the sake of a keg of porter and five pound a piece.”[13]

The full extent of Man of Aran’s deceptions was revealed at the 1978 Ethnographic Film Conference in Canberra, Australia.[14] The conference had gathered, in part, to praise direct cinema which in contrast to the classic tradition promised a new level of realistic interpretation.[15] This new form swept away staging, and reconstruction to present a more accurate picture of the world.[16] The debate was touched off by a screening of Flaherty’s Man of Aran followed by George Stoney’s just completed documentary exploration of Robert Flaherty’s Man of Aran, How the Myth was Made – the resulting exchange was “tumultuous”.[17] As James Roy MacBean says “while appreciative of Flaherty’s poetic imagery [George Stoney] had popped the lid off all the distortions and omissions in Flaherty’s highly romanticized depiction of life on the Aran Islands.”[18] At the time Stoney’s revelatory documentary had left many at the conference incensed at what they now saw as Flaherty’s blatant falsification of the life he had been purported to be documenting.[19]

According to Barsam, “Flaherty’s subjective view of reality – his making it all up - has a romantic basis, idealizing the simple, natural even non-existent life.”[20] He argues, even though Flaherty habitually transforms reality his essential achievement is that of the realist filmmaker.[21] Flaherty as Romantic is shared by Aufderheide, “Flaherty had a powerful romantic belief in the purity of native cultures and he believed that his own culture was spiritually impoverished by comparison.”[22] But taken to the extreme this approach makes no attempt to capture reality but create a romanticized picture of it. “The tragedy is that, being a poet, with a poet's eye, Flaherty’s lie is greater, for he can make romance seem real.”[23]

Aufderheide says, “documentary movies are about real life: they are not real life they are not even windows onto real life. They are portraits of real life, using real life as their raw material…You might then say: [a documentary] is a movie that does its best to represent real life and that doesn’t manipulate it... and yet, there is no way to make a film without manipulating the information.[24] As Flaherty acknowledges, “one often has to distort a thing to catch its true spirit.”[25] How much a documentarian can manipulate and still credibly claim their film to be a truthful portrayal of real life “is a never-ending discussion with many answers.”[26]

Despite these controversies Flaherty remains a pioneer of the documentary whose films are situated in a class of their own within the documentary genre.[27] Kimball argues that Man of Aran was never intended to be an ethnographic documentary film. As he explains, “in a cosmic anthropological sense it could be counted as an artistic rendition of the struggle of man against nature.”[28] Flaherty had immersed himself in the culture to tell the essence of the truth about the Islanders, “[and] for this reason ethnographic accuracy is an unimportant consideration when the larger goal is some fundamental aspect of mankind.”[29] In Stoney’s film How the Myth was Made, John Goldman, the editor on Man of Aran, is emphatic, “it was not a documentary, it was not intended to be a documentary … it was a piece of poetry.”[30] McNab calls it, “…not so much a conventional documentary as a poetic meditation.”[31] Arthur Calder-Marshall explains, “Flaherty wasn’t interested in actuality, he was interested in his own idea of life.” [32] If the film was intended to be a poetic statement instead of a factual documentary, one has no right to treat is as an ethnographic film now.[33] Barsam asks, is it unreasonable for the artist to distill life over a period of time and deliver only the essence of it? Seen as the story of mankind over a thousand years, the story of Aran is this story of man against the sea .... It is a simple story, but it is an essential story, for nothing emerges from time except bravery.[34] Calder-Marshall suggests the controversies over Man of Aran could have been avoided if [Flaherty] had had a publicity advisor, someone as verbally agile as Grierson, he would have made it publicly plain that Man of Aran was not a ‘document’ but an ‘eclogue’ - a pastoral and marine poem.[35]

Brian Winston cautions against unconditionally praising Flaherty’s poetic talent. He argues we have to fully acknowledge his manipulations and distortions, because that is at the heart of understanding both his genius and his contribution to the documentary form.[36] What Flaherty grasped was not only our desire for drama but that it should arise from the life being observed and not imposed from without.[37] By using drama and reconstruction Flaherty created a unique form of documentary, which thrives between “a life as lived and life as narrativised.”[38]

Production conditions

Stung by criticism that British films were flaccid imitations of Hollywood, Michael Balcon of Gaumont British hired the acclaimed writer/director Robert Flaherty and his wife Frances Nanook of the North [1922], Moana [1926], Elephant Boy [1937], The Land [1941] and Luisiana [1948] to prove British film industry’s cultural excellence as well as commercial success. In 1931 Robert Flaherty set up a studio and laboratory facilities on Inishmore, the largest of the three islands.[39] Flaherty had promised Balcon he could shoot the entire film for 10,000 pounds.[40] Over the next two years he shot over 200,000 feet of film for a 74-minute documentary oftentimes filming the same event time after time.[41] As Flaherty says, "our films are made with film and time, I need lots of both." [42] Balcon eventually called a halt to filming as the costs approached 40,000 pounds.[43]

On 25 April 1934, Man of Aran premiered at the New Gallery in London. The screening had been preceded by a major publicity drive. A stuffed basking shark was put on display in the window of Gaumont British in Wardour Street, and Irish Guards played Irish folk music in the theater foyer on the first night. The islanders were brought over from Aran and paraded before the press and public in their simple homespun island garb. Man of Aran won top prize for the best foreign film at the Venice Festival, (the Mussolini Cup).[44] During the first six months of its release the film grossed about 50,000 pounds – many films had grossed more - but according to Michael Balcon it brought Gaumont British the prestige he wanted.[45]

Aesthetic context

Like most 1930s documentaries, Man of Aran was shot as a silent film.[46] The intermittent voices, the sound effects and music are only accompaniments to the visuals and not considered integral to the production.[47] Paul Rotha in Documentary Film says, “Man of Aran avoided all important issues raised by sound.”

Flaherty continued to experiment with cinematography especially the long focal lens that he first used in Nanook. He used a variety of lens sizes, even a seventeen-inch long lens, which was twice the size of the camera.[48] He used a spring driven camera that “was simpler in operation than any I have seen and not much heavier to carry than a portable typewriter.”[49]

Man of Aran’s cameraman Richard Leacock,<--Richard Leacock was 13 years old when this film was made; he started his collaboration with Flaherty at a much later date--1948--on the film Louisiana Story--> says that Flaherty taught him to concentrate on finding images. “You look, you search. You think of the image not merely as a way of showing something but also as a way of withholding information, of creating tension in the viewer. Of not revealing too much. Of seeing things with different perspectives by using different focal-length lenses.”[50] Flaherty says he owes almost everything to these long lenses and with them captured some of the most memorable sea footage ever recorded.[51] Corliss says Man of Aran was very different from his earlier work, “…the chiaroscuro compositions, charcoal rock, black-clad figures against a gray sky, are light-years removed from the natural grandeur of Nanook of the North or the easy elegance of Moana.[52] Corliss suggests there are enough similarities between Flaherty and John Ford, Chaplin, Borzage, even Disney that place him firmly in a tradition of the romantic visionary American.[53] Winston sees the influence of Flaherty in Leni Riefenstahl films, arguing that her aesthetics of manipulation owed much to his pioneering work.[54] McLoon goes further, suggesting “the cult of beauty, and fetishism of courage” in Man of Aran are the tropes of Fascism. He goes on to exonerate Flaherty of any Nazi connection saying “it is a measure of the apolitical nature of Flaherty’s vision that he was unaware of this problem inherent in his nineteenth-century primitive sensibility.”[55]

Historical context

When it opened in Dublin on 6 May 1934, Man of Aran was a major political and cultural event to the nascent Irish Free State and was attended by the charismatic Éamon de Valera.[56] The Irish government saw it as confirmation of their social and economic policies and so enthusiastically received the film. Man of Aran suited Fianna Fáil, as it encouraged an image of Ireland that was fiercely traditional, definitively rural, and resilient in the face of hardship.[57]

The film's depiction of man's courage and repudiation of the intellect also appealed to the Nazis, who raved over it during the Berlin Festival in 1935.[58] As written by Luke Gibbons, this portrayal of the harsh life on the west coast of Ireland was often taken to heart by those who viewed it.[59]

Some critics believed Man of Aran socially irrelevant. Instead of returning with a film about Island poverty and an indictment of the absentee landlord, Flaherty brought back a film about dewy-eyed urchins.[60] Grierson says, that Flaherty’s NeoRousseauism, the glorification of a simpler and more primitive way of life, meant he could not develop a form adequate to the more immediate material in the modern world.[61] “I like my braveries to emerge otherwise than from the sea, and stand otherwise against the sky. I imagine they shine as bravely in pursuit of Irish landlords as in the pursuit of sharks.”[62] Flaherty preferred imaginary conflicts to actual ones.[63] Paul Rotha faulted Man of Aran for its avoidance of economic and social reality.[64] At the time of Man of Aran’s release, socialist critic Ralph Bond “…we are more concerned with what Flaherty has left out than with what he has put in…Flaherty would have us believe that there is no class struggle on Aran despite ample evidence to the contrary.” [65] Showing man versus nature misses man verses man, and the problems of absentee landlordism, tariffs, and poverty.[66] Flaherty certainly ignored the effects of such worldwide events as the depression of the 1930s suggesting to the audience that the Aran Islands were isolated economically as they were geographically.[67]

The UK rock band British Sea Power was asked to record a new soundtrack for the film's 2009 DVD release, performing the score at a series of live events in the UK including one accompanying the film itself at the British Film Institute.[68]

The film won the Mussolini Cup for best foreign film at the 2nd Venice International Film Festival.

Flaherty's legacy is subject of the 2010 British Universities Film & Video Council award-winning and FOCAL International award-nominated documentary "A Boatload of Wild Irishmen", written by Professor Brian Winston of University of Lincoln, UK, and directed by Mac Dara Ó Curraidhín. In the staged climactic sequence of Man of Aran, Flaherty said he'd been accused of "trying to drown a boatload of wild Irishmen".

The Cripple of Inishmaan by Martin McDonagh is a play set on the Aran Islands at the time of the filming of Man of Aran.

See also

References

  1. McLoone, Martin; The Cinema of Britain and Ireland, ed McFarlane, Wallflower Press 2005
  2. O'Brien, Harvey; The Real Ireland: The Evolution of Ireland in Documentary Film. MUP
  3. MacBean, James Roy: Two Laws from Australia, One White One Black, Film Quarterly Spring 1983, Vol 36, No.3
  4. Barsam, R: The Vision of Robert Flaherty, The Artist as Myth and Filmmaker; Indiana Press 1988
  5. Barsam
  6. Kimball, S.T: American Anthropologist, Vol 79, No3
  7. Messenger, John C: Visual Anthropology 2001, Vo 14, 343, 368
  8. Hockings Paul, American Anthropologist, Vol 109, No.1
  9. Winston B, How the Myth was Deconstructed, Wide Angle, Volume 21, Number 2, March 1999, pp. 71-86
  10. Messenger
  11. Kimball
  12. Calder-Marshall, The innocent eye; The life of Robert Flaherty. Pelican 1963
  13. Calder- Marshall
  14. MacBean, James Roy: Two Laws from Australia, One White One Black, Film Quarterly Spring 1983, Vol 36, No.3
  15. MacBean
  16. Winston
  17. MacBean
  18. MacBean
  19. MacBean
  20. Barsam
  21. Barsam
  22. Aufderheide, P: Documentary Film, A Very Short Introduction, OUP 2007
  23. Montagu, Ivor, cited in Aufderheide
  24. Auderheide
  25. Barsam
  26. Auderheide
  27. Malcolm, Derek; Nanook of the North, The Guardian, April 2000.
  28. Kimball
  29. Kimball
  30. Stoney, George, How the Myth was Made; A Study of Robert Flaherty's Man of Aran (1978)
  31. McNab, G, Sight and Sound, Dec 2006
  32. Calder-Marshall
  33. Hockings
  34. Barsam
  35. Calder-Marshall
  36. Winston
  37. Winston
  38. Winston
  39. Calder-Marshall
  40. Croft, Thomas Andrew, Balcon's Folly, the manufacture and assessment of Man of Aran
  41. Calder-Marshall
  42. Leacock, Richard; On Working With Robert and Frances Flaherty April 26, 1990
  43. O’Brien
  44. McLoone
  45. Calder-Marshall
  46. Russell Patrick, Sight and Sound 21.5 (May 2011)
  47. Barsam
  48. Barsam
  49. Barsam, Richard, Nonfiction Film: A Critical History, IUP 1992
  50. Leacock, Richard; On Working With Robert and Frances Flaherty April 26, 1990
  51. Barsam
  52. Corliss, R; The Man in the Iron Myth, Film comment, Nov-Dec 1973
  53. Corliss
  54. Winston
  55. McLoon
  56. Blake, Martin: A Critical Study of the Implications of the Problem of Reality in the Documentary Film: University of Southern California, Dissertations Publishing, 1972.
  57. O'Brien
  58. McLoon
  59. Gibbons, Luke. "Romanticism, Realism and Irish Cinema". Cinema and Ireland.
  60. Corliss
  61. Tagg, John; The Disciplinary Frame: Photographic Truths and the Capture of Meaning UMP 2009
  62. Corliss
  63. Barsam, Richard; Nonfiction Film
  64. Barsam
  65. Bond, "Man of Aran Reviewed," Cinema Quarterly, II, No. 4 Summer, 1934
  66. Bond
  67. Barsam
  68. British Sea Power Soundtrack. 'Man of Aran' nears release, ClashMusic.com, 23 January 2009. Accessed online 8 April 2009.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.