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10 canoës, 150 lances et 3 épouses

Original title: Ten Canoes
  • 2006
  • Unrated
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
5.3K
YOUR RATING
10 canoës, 150 lances et 3 épouses (2006)
Theatrical Trailer from Palm Pictures
Play trailer1:59
1 Video
6 Photos
AdventureComedyDrama

In Australia's Northern Territory, a man tells us a story of his people and his land. It's about an older man, Minygululu, who has three wives and realizes that his younger brother Dayindi m... Read allIn Australia's Northern Territory, a man tells us a story of his people and his land. It's about an older man, Minygululu, who has three wives and realizes that his younger brother Dayindi may try to steal away the youngest wife.In Australia's Northern Territory, a man tells us a story of his people and his land. It's about an older man, Minygululu, who has three wives and realizes that his younger brother Dayindi may try to steal away the youngest wife.

  • Directors
    • Rolf de Heer
    • Peter Djigirr
  • Writer
    • Rolf de Heer
  • Stars
    • Crusoe Kurddal
    • Jamie Gulpilil
    • Richard Birrinbirrin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    5.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Rolf de Heer
      • Peter Djigirr
    • Writer
      • Rolf de Heer
    • Stars
      • Crusoe Kurddal
      • Jamie Gulpilil
      • Richard Birrinbirrin
    • 42User reviews
    • 31Critic reviews
    • 82Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 17 wins & 9 nominations total

    Videos1

    Ten Canoes
    Trailer 1:59
    Ten Canoes

    Photos5

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    Top cast57

    Edit
    Crusoe Kurddal
    • Ridjimiraril
    Jamie Gulpilil
    • Dayindi
    • (as Jamie Dayindi Gulpilil Dalaithngu)
    • …
    Richard Birrinbirrin
    • Birrinbirrin
    Peter Minygululu
    • Minygululu
    Frances Djulibing
    • Nowalingu
    David Gulpilil
    David Gulpilil
    • The Storyteller
    • (as David Gulpilil Ridjimiraril Dalaithngu)
    Sonia Djarrabalminym
    • Banalandju
    Cassandra Malangarri Baker
    • Munandjarra
    Philip Gudthaykudthay
    • The Sorcerer
    Peter Djigirr
    • Canoeist…
    Michael Dawu
    • Canoeist…
    Bobby Bunungurr
    • Canoeist…
    Johnny Buniyira
    • Canoeist…
    Billy Black
    • Canoeist…
    Steven Wilinydjanu Maliburr
    • Canoeist…
    Carl Dhalurruma
    • Canoeist…
    Kathy Gonun
    • Birrinbirrin's Wife #1
    Jennifer Djenana
    • Birrinbirrin's Wife #2
    • Directors
      • Rolf de Heer
      • Peter Djigirr
    • Writer
      • Rolf de Heer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews42

    6.95.2K
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    Featured reviews

    9onamission

    A revelatory experience

    Wow. If your main prior experience of Aboriginal film is with black and white documentary footage from the 50s and 60s or with the many films examining the impact of white culture on black society and the often tragic results of their interplay, this will turn it on its head. The movies worships nature and the land in the same way Aboriginal culture views the land not as backdrop or something to be exploited, but as almost human itself. Without qualification or embellishment, the camera marvels at the beauty of the landscape, and we do too. The story is set many generations ago, but there is no sense of time; it could be yesterday, or 40,000 years ago. Time hasn't changed the way of life of the people we are introduced to nor the lessons the young must learn to reach maturity, as our hero Yeeralpiril discovers. David Gulpilil's narration is so masterful it suggests he has another twenty stories up his sleeve just as beguiling to tell you as this one. Film-making like this is a rare experience. Let there be more.
    9Philby-3

    A Beguiling Myth

    The English philosopher Thomas Hobbes, who lived to be 92 and spent much of his life in the aristocratic splendour of Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, famously opined that the life of primitive man was "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short". Jacques Rousseau, on the other hand, in direct contradiction of Christian theology, was convinced that man had been born good, and that primitive man was indeed the "noble savage".

    Rolf de Heer, a maker of small, quirky and interesting films ("Bad Boy Bubby", "The Old Man Who Read Love Stories", "The Tracker"), probably doesn't subscribe to either notion. In this exquisitely photographed tale from the mythical past he lets the aboriginals of the Arafura wetlands, Arnhem Land, tell their own story. Apart from David Gulpilil, who provides a gentle, teasing voice-over, and his son Jamie, all the parts are played by non-professional actors from the district. Apart from the voice-over, all the dialogue is in the local aboriginal language (don't worry, there are sub-titles).

    While on a goose egg hunting trip, Older Brother , who has noticed his younger brother's interest in one of his wives, tells Younger Brother a story from a much earlier time, of another younger brother who yearned after his older brother's wife. Without giving the story away, the moral is "be careful about what you wish for, you might get it", but much happens in between. It becomes evident that these "savages", as well as possessing a robust sense of humor, have a legal system that minimizes the damage done by crimes. It seems that neighboring tribes, whose language our tribe scarcely understands, will play by the same rules. Once honour is satisfied, the matter is at an end. The story gives us an insight as to how aboriginal society remained stable for so long prior to contact with Europeans.

    It is hard to comment on the acting, other than to say the characters seem completely authentic. The tribe's sorcerer, for instance, likes to choose a bone to wear in his nose to suit his mood or the occasion, just as your local GP might like to select a bow tie before opening his surgery. But I have to mention Crusoe Kusddal as Ridjimiraril, the older brother in the myth. His language means little to us, but his expression everything.

    The scenes on the goose-hunt, which book-end the main story, are in black and white, a tribute to earlier photographers in Arnhem Land, but most of the film is in colour, which does full justice to the landscape. This is no Garden of Eden – the necessity to build tree platforms while camping in the swamp is evidence of that (though we see no actual crocodiles). Yet the aborigines manage to live within the environment without despoiling it or each other. Theirs is a patriarchal society but women are protected by the rules as well as by their menfolk. The movie is a fascinating glimpse into the culture, told in a disarmingly humorous fashion, by the people themselves. One should not be too misty-eyed about this – the cast probably watch "The Simpsons" via satellite at home – but they have given us both a droll tale and some food for thought.
    7mukava991

    National Geographic documentary with dramatic overtones

    "Ten Canoes" resembles a National Geographic documentary with dramatic overtones and is sometimes hard to follow due to the thick accent of the narrator but it's nevertheless absorbing due in part to its very oddness, being a story about aboriginal Australians (though written, directed and shot by a Caucasian team headed by director Rolf de Heer). Structurally it is a story within a story about a how a tribe in the pre-colonial period handled the sudden disappearance of one of its female members. The story allows de Heer to illustrate how members of this primitive community were not so very different from ourselves in their essential human characteristics. The mere placement of a group of naked, primitive people as central characters in a fictional motion picture drama is, to Western eyes, enough to command the attention. The more or less constant narration tends to hinder dramatic development so that we never connect deeply with any of the characters yet we empathize with their predicaments. Generally speaking, it paints a sympathetic picture of a people whom fate has brutalized and who now are only beginning to recover and get back a sense of who they are and what they come from, in part through films like this one.
    10paulmartin-2

    Terrific

    This is a truly unique cinema experience - story-telling at its finest. The film documents Aboriginal culture, history and humor in a way that I have never seen on-screen before.

    The voice-over narration of David Gulpilil is excellent. The cinematography is awesome. The film oozes with authenticity and was filmed on location in very remote areas of the Northern Territory of Australia.

    It's tragic that this culture should be so remote and foreign to Australians (what to speak of others elsewhere in the world).

    This film is full of the dignity of this honorable race of people who have so much to be proud of.
    10mricha73

    Ten Canoes is outstanding cinema

    On a recent visit to Melbourne, I came across a poster for the movie Ten Canoes. It described a film about Australian Aborigines and claimed to portray them authentically. The film sets a new standard for cross-cultural understanding. Ever since Whale Rider I have been entranced by movies about aboriginal culture. This film extends the genre onto a higher plane.

    The narrator tells a story about men hunting for goose eggs in canoes while one tells a story from the ancient times. Both stories are woven exquisitely together to form a dream-like telling. The cinematography captures the actual remote locations the tribe inhabits. The characters are portrayed as authentically as can be, probably because they are. (At least, it seemed that way to a white guy from Boston.) I don't know if any are actual actors.

    If you have interest in any aboriginal culture or anything Australian, you should see this movie. If you love great story telling, you must see it.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The title "Ten Canoes" was inspired by a photograph shown to Director Rolf de Heer by Aboriginal actor David Gulpilil. The picture was of group of ten native men in their bark canoes on the Arafura swamp. The photo was taken by anthropologist Dr Donald Thomson who worked in central and north-eastern Arnhem Land seventy years earlier during the mid-1930s.
    • Quotes

      The group: [all walking in a line]

      Canoeist: Everyone stop!

      [all stop and turn]

      The Storyteller: That one is Djigirr. Djigirr talk too much, but maybe he heard something.

      Canoeist: I refuse to walk at the end. Someone ahead keeps farting.

      The group: [laughter] Not me. Not me.

      Canoeist: It's you again. You're always so silent. Silent but deadly. Admit it.

      Canoeist: Alright, it's me.

      Canoeist: You're rotten inside.

      Canoeist: I'm rotten inside.

      Canoeist: You get to the end of line.

    • Alternate versions
      There are currently three versions of the film:
      • (1) the Yolngu languages dialogue version with English subtitles and narration storytelling spoken in English by David Gulpilil;
      • (2) the Yolngu languages dialogue version with English subtitles and narration storytelling spoken in Mandalpingu by David Gulpilil;
      • (3) the Yolngu language only version without any subtitles
    • Connections
      Edited into Terror Nullius (2018)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 20, 2006 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Australia
    • Official site
      • Vertigo Productions
    • Languages
      • Aboriginal
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ten Canoes
    • Filming locations
      • Arafura Swamp, Northern Territory, Australia
    • Production companies
      • Adelaide Film Festival
      • Fandango Australia
      • Fandango
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • A$2,200,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $283,654
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $14,076
      • Jun 3, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,360,455
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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