Book Cover
Streaming video

Title In the Land of the Head Hunters
Published Kino Lorber, 1914
[San Francisco, California, USA] : Kanopy Streaming, 2021

Copies

Description 1 online resource (streaming video file) (67 minutes): .flv file, sound
Summary In 1911, photographer Edward S. Curtis traveled to British Columbia and visited the Kwakwaka'wakw, an Indigenous tribe belonging to the Pacific Northwest Coast. Hard up for cash and loaded with a year's worth of footage, Curtis decided the best way to capture the life and ceremonies of the Kwakwaka'wakw was to make a feature-length motion picture - one of the first of its kind. Over the course of three years, Curtis and his assistant, a Kwakwaka'wakw interpreter named George Hunt, crafted an elusive fusion of documentary and dramatic recreation in collaboration with the tribe's significant figures. Selected for the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress, this early piece of cinema may have released in 1914, but remains a fascinating document with artistry and attention rarely seen today
Notes Title from title frames
Film
In Process Record
Performer Mrs. George Walkus, Sarah Constance Smith Hunt, Stanley Hunt
Event Originally produced by Kino Lorber in 1914
Notes In English
Subject Motion pictures.
Drama.
plays (performing arts compositions)
Drama.
Motion pictures.
Genre/Form Feature films.
Feature films.
Form Streaming video
Author S. Curtis, Edward, film director
George Walkus, Mrs., actor
Constance Smith Hunt, Sarah, actor
Hunt, Stanley, actor
Kino Lorber (Firm),
Kanopy (Firm)