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Inuit Traditional Stories (8)

  • Atanarjuat the Fast Runner
    Atanarjuat the Fast Runner
    We're sorry, this content is not available in your location.
    Zacharias Kunuk 2000 2 h 41 min
    This adaptation of an ancient Inuit legend was filmed in Inuktitut and directed by Inuit filmmakers - making Atanarjuat the first feature film of its kind!

    Set in Igloolik, in Nunavut, this is "a powerful drama, not a documentary," reminds the director Kunuk. "It demystifies the exotic, otherwordly aboriginal stereotype by telling a universal story." The clothes, spears, kayaks, sunglasses and dwellings were all painstakingly researched. "We show how our ancestors dressed, how they handled their dog teams, how they argued and laughed.. confronted evil and fought back."

    Many enthusiastic viewers have compared this epic story to The Iliad. In the words of one movie critic, "If Homer had been given a video camera, this is what he would have done!"

    In Inuktitut, with English subtitles.
  • Lumaaq: An Eskimo Legend
    Lumaaq: An Eskimo Legend
    Co Hoedeman 1975 7 min
    Lumaaq tells the story of a legend widely believed by the Povungnituk Inuit. The artist's drawings are transferred to paper, cut out, and animated under the camera. The result is Inuit prints in action. Dialogue, music and artwork make this film a total cultural transplant.

  • The Man and the Giant: An Eskimo Legend
    The Man and the Giant: An Eskimo Legend
    Co Hoedeman 1975 7 min
    This short film, in which a hunter is pursued, bound up and carried to a cave, tells the legend of a river, and of how fog came to the land. The story is enacted by Inuit using katadjak or throatsinging. The audience is locked in an alien world of sights and sounds where human activity seems propulsed by primeval forces.

  • Nunavut Animation Lab Lumaajuuq (Inuktitut Version)
    Nunavut Animation Lab Lumaajuuq (Inuktitut Version)
    2010 7 min
    This animated short tells the story of Qalupalik, a part-human sea monster that lives deep in the Arctic Ocean and preys on children who do not listen to their parents or elders. That is the fate of Angutii, a young boy who refuses to help out in his family’s camp and who plays by the shoreline... until one day Qalupalik seizes him and drags him away. Angutii's father, a great hunter, must then embark on a lengthy kayak journey to try and bring his son home.
  • Nunavut Animation Lab: Lumaajuuq
    Nunavut Animation Lab: Lumaajuuq
    Alethea Arnaquq-Baril 2010 7 min
    This animated short by Alethea Arnaquq-Baril tells a tragic and twisted story about the dangers of revenge. A cruel mother mistreats her son, feeding him dog meat and forcing him to sleep in the cold. A loon, who tells the boy that his mother blinded him, helps the child regain his eyesight. Then the boy seeks revenge, releasing his mother's lifeline as she harpoons a whale and watching her drown. Based on a portion of the epic Inuit legend "The Blind Boy and the Loon."
  • The Owl Who Married a Goose: An Eskimo Legend
    The Owl Who Married a Goose: An Eskimo Legend
    Caroline Leaf 1974 7 min
    In this short animation based on an Inuit legend, a goose captures the fancy of an owl, a weakness for which he will pay dearly. The sound effects and voices are Inuktitut, but the animation leaves no doubt as to the unfolding action. A story with the wry humor characteristic of many Inuit tales.

  • The Owl and the Lemming: An Eskimo Legend
    The Owl and the Lemming: An Eskimo Legend
    Co Hoedeman 1971 5 min
    Using life-like seal fur puppets, this animated short by Co Hoedeman tells the traditional Inuit tale of the owl and the lemming.
  • Owl and the Raven: An Eskimo Legend
    Owl and the Raven: An Eskimo Legend
    Co Hoedeman 1973 6 min
    Using life-like seal fur puppets, this animated short by Co Hoedeman tells the traditional Inuit tale of the owl and the raven. Why did the raven’s feathers turn jet-black? And what did the owl have to do with it?