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Les dents du diable

Original title: The Savage Innocents
  • 1960
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Les dents du diable (1960)
AdventureCrimeDrama

An Inuit who has had little contact with white men goes to a trading post where he accidentally kills a missionary and finds himself being pursued by the police.An Inuit who has had little contact with white men goes to a trading post where he accidentally kills a missionary and finds himself being pursued by the police.An Inuit who has had little contact with white men goes to a trading post where he accidentally kills a missionary and finds himself being pursued by the police.

  • Director
    • Nicholas Ray
  • Writers
    • Hans Ruesch
    • Franco Solinas
    • Baccio Bandini
  • Stars
    • Anthony Quinn
    • Yôko Tani
    • Peter O'Toole
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nicholas Ray
    • Writers
      • Hans Ruesch
      • Franco Solinas
      • Baccio Bandini
    • Stars
      • Anthony Quinn
      • Yôko Tani
      • Peter O'Toole
    • 34User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos24

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    Top cast18

    Edit
    Anthony Quinn
    Anthony Quinn
    • Inuk
    Yôko Tani
    Yôko Tani
    • Asiak
    Peter O'Toole
    Peter O'Toole
    • First Trooper
    Carlo Giustini
    Carlo Giustini
    • Second Trooper
    Anna May Wong
    • Hiko
    Kaida Horiuchi
    • Imina
    Marco Guglielmi
    • Missionary
    Lee Montague
    Lee Montague
    • Ittimargnek
    Marie Yang
    • Powtee
    Andy Ho
    • Anarvik
    • (as Andi Ho)
    Anthony Chinn
    Anthony Chinn
    • Kiddok
    • (as Anthony Chin)
    Yvonne Shima
    • Lulik
    Francis De Wolff
    Francis De Wolff
    • Trading Post Proprietor
    Michael Chow
    Michael Chow
    • Undik
    Ed Devereaux
    Ed Devereaux
    • Pilot
    Nicholas Stuart
    Nicholas Stuart
    • Commentarist
    Robert Rietty
    Robert Rietty
    • Missionary
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    Nikki Van der Zyl
    Nikki Van der Zyl
    • Asiak
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Nicholas Ray
    • Writers
      • Hans Ruesch
      • Franco Solinas
      • Baccio Bandini
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews34

    6.82.1K
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    Featured reviews

    7weskelley

    Cultural Study

    This movie presents an intriguing picture of two widely dissimilar cultures coming together. The Eskimos are simple and innocent, but ideally suited and armed with the knowledge to survive one of the harshest places that people inhabit. One my favorite moments occurs when the officer says he can subdue the main character by himself, to which the main character replies, "You are that strong?", showing the absence of boastfulness in the Eskimo culture, which stems from the cooperative nature necessary to survival. The stark and uncluttered settings give space to concentrate on the dialog. Definitely worth watching
    fllpmp

    A Stunning movie

    This is an extremely powerful and stunning movie portraying Innuit Eskimos and the way their living habits clash with our sensitive Western "civilisation". It is extremely annoying not to be able to find it in either VHS or DVD format. Hopefully this will be put right soon. A must for Anthony Quinn fans!
    chaos-rampant

    Encounters at the End of the World

    Inuk is a lonely Inuit hunter making ends meet in the barren, unforgiving wastes of the arctic regions by hunting seals and bears. So begins the glacial odyssey of one man against two worlds, his own and that of white man. In many ways a "northern", the frostbitten equivalent of the western (a genre director Nicholas Ray was familiar with), THE SAVAGE INNOCENTS shares many of the same themes and ideas with that most quintessentially American of genres - survival in a savage landscape, the frontier of civilization, the cultural clash between different civilizations. Yet no sight of spurs, stetson hats or six-shooters to be found in the movie. What other proof do we need that such ideas are universal?

    Filmed in the arctic regions of Canada and Greenland, and presenting us with a faithful and loving documentation of Inuit traditions and life, Ray on one hand captures the sheer monumental beauty of the harsh arctic wastelands with a kind of Kubrickian grandeur, while on the other reserving for his characters the utmost sympathy and affection. The stark realism of the uninviting climate contrasted with the good-natured predisposition and unpretentious simplicity of the people living in it. Realism meeting halfways with humanism in a movie that is as humorous and touching as it is cerebral, part survival grit and part mythological folklore.

    And then white man comes into Inuk's world. With his rifles, his loud rock'n'roll music, his missionaries preaching their god, his weird customs and laws. That doesn't mean that what precedes Inuk's encounter with the white men of a trading post and the preacher living there is an idyllic utopia - Inuk is ready to club another man to death for taking the woman he planned to make his wife. Still it would be easy to sneer sarcastically from the comfort of our modern homes at the primitive customs of Inuit. "In the age of the atom bomb", says the voice-over narrator, "these people still hunt with bow and arrow". Indeed they do; they also leave their elders alone to die in the snow when they become too old to contribute to the household anymore and they leave their firstborn babies to die unless they are male, so they can take care of them when they in turn grow old. But such is the nature of their lives and the environment they live in.

    Anthony Quinn's performance as Inuk is fantastic, equal measure good-natured forwardness and unreserved honesty. A man as likely to offer you his wife as he is to bash your brains in for refusing her. Peter O'Toole (two years before LAWRENCE OF ARABIA) in the role of the officer sent to arrest Inuk for the murder of the preacher doesn't match Quinn but he's a nice addition to the cast. The most dramatically poignant moments in the film come from their interactions as Inuk struggles to comprehend the crime he is accused of. "But my Fathers' laws have not been broken" he says when he is informed he broke the law and will have to be taken back for trial. "When you come to a strange land, bring your wives, not your laws" is what Inuk's wife tells the officer.

    A great, great movie I can't recommend enough to fans of tales of survival in stark environments, different cultures and their folklore. NANOOK OF THE NORTH and DERSU UZALA are advised to look out for it.
    7macinyart

    More documentary than fiction

    I saw this movie many years ago. My recollection of it is that is a documentary comment on the interface of two widely different cultures. I also just finished reading Kabloona a book written by a white Frenchman in the later 1930s about the Eskimo Culture. The points made in the book confirm those points made in the movie. The Eskimo apparently is a guileless innocent whose life consists primarily of staying alive and fed. The innocence of these people was highlighted in the scene where Anthony Quinn came back to his igloo and found that his wife had given birth. He asked her the baby's name and when she told him, he responded in amazement, "How did you know?" As far as the scene where a man's hands were stuffed into a recently killed dog is concerned, the speed with which freezing occurs at 50 below zero is not to be believed. That scene demonstrates the fact that the Eskimo regards his dogs as livestock and useful. Shocking, but apparently realistic.
    blynelly

    Terrible inaccurate demeaning movie

    One of the stupidest most inaccurate movies I have ever seen! From a real live "raw meat eater". We didn't kill female babies, females are just as important as a male babies. And the part about sharing wives is such BS, culture had some wife swapping and to the Inuit people sex was something that happens not a taboo, people have sex that's how babies are made even we savages knew that.

    It's a MYTH that the elderly were left on ice flows or in a snow drift. In the Atomic age even us savages knew what a gun was and golly gee we even saw those metal birds a flyin over head. Ugh.

    Someone wrote "far northern natives that lived almost exclusively on the arctic ice". How stupid. Do you suppose we all lived in kayaks and Umiaks during the spring thaw and summer months? We hunted on the ice sometimes when we weren't hunting caribou deer and moose we are MEAT EATERS. No hunter would kill a dog to warm someones' hands', he would have never let the trooper get that bad to start with. A live dog would have warmed a person as well as pull you to a place you could get help. Or we would have eaten the animal should the need arise. Hunt a polar bear alone, ridiculous!

    And giving the dead seal a drink of fresh water. Unbelievable! Yes we would surely have given thanks to the animal spirits. Sea mammals don't drink fresh water, they get all the liquid they need from the foods they eat. Look it up. The clothes were authentic for sure but from different cultures of Inuit.

    All in all the reviews praising this movie for "culturally authentic" are from people who have no idea what they are talking about and believe all the things that they see in movies. It's a movie not a documentary. Par for the times they didn't hire real Inuit or even American Indians to play the parts Anthony Quinn and Japanese Chinese played as Inuit's is funny. Too that nobody would bother to hire on a real Inuit as a consultant was standard for the times.

    Entertaining maybe, insulting to THE MEN absolutely.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      It was seeing this film, as an upcoming singer/songwriter, that inspired the young Bob Dylan to write the song "The Mighty Quinn (Quinn the Eskimo)."
    • Goofs
      After giving the bear the baited food, Inuk initially chases it empty handed, then appears with a spear.
    • Quotes

      First Trooper: Inuk. listen. No judge in the world will understand you offering another man your wife.

      Inuk: But it is our custom, we must be polite. White men don't borrow other men's wives?

      First Trooper: Never mind that. You don't lend your wife as if she were a sled.

      Inuk: Oh ho ho, someone would rather lend his wife than his sled. You lend your sled, it comes back cracked. You lend your knife, it comes back dull. You lend your dogs, they come back tired and crawling. But if you love your wife, no matter how often you lend her, she always comes back like new.

      Inuk: [embraces Asiak]

      Inuk: Man, man, you don't understand?

      Inuk: I understand. But the other men live by the book, and there you are a murderer

      Inuk: But we must make them understand, otherwise Papik, Asiak and me cannot go into other men's igloos, that is OUR law.

      Inuk: We change the book, huh?

      [to Asiak as he prepares to go out]

      Inuk: You bring the food

      [Exits]

      First Trooper: [to Asiak] They'll never understand.

      Asiak: [as she exits the doorway of igloo] When you come to a strange land, you should bring your wives, and not your laws.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Nick's Movie (1980)
    • Soundtracks
      Sexy Rock
      Written by Angelo Francesco Lavagnino and Mario Panzeri

      Performed by Colin Hicks

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 7, 1960 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Top of the World
    • Filming locations
      • Canada
    • Production companies
      • Société Nouvelle Pathé Cinéma
      • Appia Films Ltd.
      • Gray-Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 50m(110 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.20 : 1

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