Movie of the Week: "Nobody Wants the Night"
I remember when I was
a kid, we used to see explorers as heroes who traveled to distant places,
exciting the imagination of ordinary people.Although these gentlemen have been
really special, they hardly would have been successful without the support of
ordinary people, who then were deliberately ignored and forgotten. A film that
helps us to think about it is "Nobody Wants the Night," directed by
Catalan filmmaker Isabel Coixet.
In the film we follow
the story of Josephine Peary, lived by magnificent French actress Juliette
Binoche. Josephine was wife of the famous explorer Robert Peary, who made
several expeditions to the Arctic, always in search of the geographic North
Pole.
Josephine was as
adventurous as her husband, and also dominated by her husband's obsession to
reach the Pole.She has even accompanied her husband despite being pregnant,
giving birth in full Arctic, and her daughter received the nickname "snow
baby".
In the early 20th
century she went in search of her husband, who had ventured on another
expedition. Contrary to the opinion of all the friends who lived in the area,
she insisted on moving forward, even when winter was very close.
With great difficulty
and loss of life and supplies, she arrived in an outpost where she decided to
await the arrival of Peary - again against the advice of the local guide. The
only person who stayed in place was Allaka (Rinko Kikuchi), a young Inuit.For
the uninitiated, even if always been treated as "Eskimos", the
northern inhabitants of Canada prefer to be called Inuit.
Intrigued with that
girl, Josephine discovered that Allaka had something in common with her, it was
the explorer himself! At begining, the coexistence was difficult, but with the
arrival of winter, they were obliged to help each other. More than that, they
have to feed and protect another person, because the girl was pregnant.
Life became
impossible because the winter was very hard, with sun hiding for six months, and
bringing terrible consequences.
The dramatization of
the events had some poetic license, but brings out how the natives everywhere
were regarded and treated by white explorers. Arrogant, disrespectful, and
judging themselves masters of all, they had the sole purpose of their mission,
even if to achieve it, I took the sacrifice of local people.
At a time when men
dominated all the activities, it was common for women to be considered an
accessory. The practice of arranging native companions were common, though - as
actually happened - they and their children were deliberately forgotten, with
the return of explorers to civilization.
Interestingly, the
right arm of Peary was a black man, named Matthew Henson, who appears briefly
in the current movie.Henson, whose life also inspired the movie "Glory
& Honor," despite having a vital role in Peary expeditions, spent
decades being magisterially ignored.Henson also had an Inuit companion, as
Peary, and as his master, he left everything behind to go home. In 1986, the
Harvard Foundation researchers sought descendants of Peary and Henson and found
the children of two, Kali and Anauakaq respectively.
One might think that
this was the behavior of the past, but when we see the devastation that the
"civilized man" causes in nature and people living in invaded
environments, we see that the predatory behavior continues.
In such an
intolerance environment that we live in, it's always interesting to stop and
think whether what we do is right, or if we are so brutalized that we do not
realize what is our true role in this world of God.
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