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10 canoës, 150 lances et 3 épouses

Original title: Ten Canoes
  • 2006
  • Unrated
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
5.2K
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
    5.2K
    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

    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.
    7jobling

    A novelty for locals, a rare bird for everyone else.

    Rolf de Heer's film premiered as part of the Adelaide Festival with sound problems dogging the otherwise pristine print. The film looks great, and the narration with David Gulpilil is too important to miss, obviously, as I found it very difficult to keep up with the extremely complex set up/story. When hearing a new language such as this it is important to hear things clearly - sadly the capacity of the Adelaide Festival to screen the film was lacking on this front.

    That said, the film is filled with compelling visuals not unlike one of the earlier films of de Heer, and it has some very quaint (albeit base) amusement wrapped into the story.

    Set a 1000 years ago before white fellas came to Australia, this is a dual story, one told in the immediate black and white/sepia world of reality, and one told in the rich color of the Aboriginal dream time... both stories are pretty much the same, and the roles are played by the same actors in each, so there are points where it's easy to get a little confused by who is doing what and when - but over all this is what you'd call a worthy film - it has the look of an old documentary at times, and that's not a bad look.

    I enjoyed it despite the technological problems of this screening.
    9ptb-8

    a stone age comedy for a new century

    I encourage you to also read the other comments on this site for TEN CANOES as each also will add to the clear understanding of this astonishing Australian film by master film maker Rolf DeHeer. He is a Dutch immigrant to Australia whose unique look at this country has now produced a superb library of films each different, that contribute to a fascinating movie spectrum of impressions of Australian life. TEN CANOES is an Aboriginal parable set possibly ten thousand years ago. It has hilarious casual dialog and familiar situations depicting tribal family and community life that humanizes this people in a heightened way so accessible to audiences of 2007. At this time in a new century we are now blessed with a sequence of Australian aboriginal themed films I encourage you to find and view in their production order: JEDDA directed by Charles Chauvel in 1956, WALKABOUT d: Nicolas Roeg in 1970, STORM BOY in 1976, THE LAST WAVE d: Peter Weir in 1977, RABBIT PROOF FENCE d; Phil Noyce in 2003, THE TRACKER d Roldf De Heer, and now TEN CANOES. Incredibly and as a bonus celebrated Aboriginal actor David Gulpilil features in all of them except Jedda... and as a bonus in theme, his son Jamie is the lead actor in TEN CANOES with David narrating. TEN CANOES will take you to a reality and a community unlike anything ever depicted in any film ever. As alike those above, it is presented and magnificently filmed in cinemascope differently to any Australian (or 'primitive') feature I have ever had the fascinating engrossing pleasure of seeing. Just to study the timeless faces alone is a peep into history and often delivered with very funny and genuinely suspenseful and heartwarming results. De Heer is now a film maker par excellence now finally getting major recognition in this country with a broad range of different and arresting films unlike any other film maker I can name. just for starters, check out the comments for BAD BOY BUBBY, ALEXANDRA'S PROJECT, THE QUIET ROOM, alone for a jaw dropping range of themes. Even if you see TEN CANOES and find the journey into the Australian stone age initially difficult, you will be astonished at the visuals presented and in awe of the fact this was ever captured on film with such humor and accessible humanities.
    tedg

    Yolngu Goose-eggs

    Sometimes all you need is magic. At least it seems so, when you see the real thing. If you happened to see Baz Luhmann's "Australia" and was confused, see this instead. It is the genuine article, about the magic, told with magic. It is circular, nested and webbed. It floats, and if you let it you will nearly be lost.

    The cinematography here — all the cinematic values — are only slightly apparent and when they declare themselves, it is in the service of the story: switching from subdued color to bright to signal the shift of what story you are in. Otherwise, the camera is either in conventional documentary mode or in space following spirits across landscapes as they voyage from waterhole python ouroboros and back.

    What we have here is good old oral storytelling supplemented by image, and highly structured. Essentially everything is told by an offscreen aboriginal narrator, whose convoluted beginning establishes all sorts of narrative pockets that are revisited later. The story is a tree, we are told and in its telling we visit many branches. There is a sort of beginning, but it is nearly too complicated to describe. There is an ending, but no. After a chuckle the narrator tells us he has no idea how it ends.

    Ostensibly, the story is told by the off-screen narrator, of a hunting party of aboriginal men, who make ten bark canoes and go hunting and gathering in the swamp. Over that period in the story, a wise man tells a story to his impatient much younger brother. That "inner" story shifts to color. It is supposed to be in a time in between creation and the full solidifying of men on earth. So the characters in the inner story are played by the folks in the outer one, and the main threads are folded together: a matter of the young man's desire for the older brother's youngest wife.

    But that is the merest of threads. We are told that the story is a tree. We literally see that tree shorn of bark and made into simple canoes. We literally see our hunters — in both stories — camping in trees. The story seems to ramble. There is sorcery, mystery, charmed turds. There is revenge, jokes, anthropology. Its all of a context. A point of all this is that there cannot be a point in the western sense. There isn't a linear narrative here with a message. There is a walkabout through a storyspace.

    The very first event we see tells us this in a remarkable way. Our ten men are walking single file and the last man halts the party. He refuses to be last, he says, because someone is farting. The line is consequently reshuffled. It is a gentle device, one that sets the magic for what "follows," a non-linear shuffle.

    The joke at the end has the same form. The last one (the youngest wife) is not how the thing ends.

    The entire production, we are told, uses aboriginal talent exclusively.

    You want to know the narrative power of carefully folded (meaning here: intuitively structured) narrative? See this.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
    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.

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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
      1 hour 30 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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