Inuk (2010) Poster

(2010)

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8/10
Very well visualized guided tour through Northern Greenland, around an interesting story of Inuk's coming-of-age and his survival guide for the hostile icy environment
JvH4818 October 2013
I saw this film at the Ghent (Belgium) film festival 2013, where it was part of the section Global Cinema. Though coming-of-age stories are not my favorite (probably too old to feel with the main characters), the synopsis on the festival website promised several other interesting aspects. This film comes from a country that we seldom see, with a climate not very inviting for tourists. Intriguingly announced as a "road movie on ice", it offers a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to virtually visit this part of the world.

The story starts with a dangerous journey on weak ice, undertaken nevertheless by Inuk's parents on their way to a hospital for urgent treatment. We see Inuk's father testing the ice before crossing dangerous areas, but gets drowned anyway in spite of his carefulness. We hear later on in the movie that the mother reached the hospital nevertheless, driven by sheer determination.

That positive side of the mother is not that prominent in subsequent scenes about 16 years later. She apparently cannot provide for a suitable income and a carefree home, and also entertains alcohol riddled parties at home. Inuk runs away from home after a heavy confrontation with one of the drunken friends of his mother. After some roving around he is picked up by the police. His mother is denied further care for her son, and Inuk is transferred to an orphanage in Northern Greenland because of his roots lying there.

In the course of an outdoors excursion, possibly to also educate the orphans on surviving in the hostile landscape around them, a journey over the icy landscape is undertaken under the guard of some experienced hunters. Very impressive are the stunning icescapes (you'll never get a chance to see this again), the dog sleds, their methods of coping with a hostile climate, and their immemorial traditions and working methods supporting survival on the long run. It all results very well in a takeaway experience, a welcome opportunity to watch all this from close by.

A few times there are pointers to the phenomenon of melting ice caps and its expected impact on hunters like we see in this part of Greenland. In other words, this film is not only a coming-of-age story for Inuk, but we touch a considerable change to Northern Greenland and its infrastructure too. It is not intended as global warming commentary, however, just a few side remarks to draw our attention to the obvious worries of the locals.

I'm not sure about the ending: was it a happy end, or something else?? The last 5 minutes fit the prologue where we saw Inuk's father drowning, and as such apparently intended to close the circle. But the accompanying story that was told to Inuk, seems a bit far fetched and too coincidental. Anyway, I cannot really care because it wraps up the film perfectly. The story itself is not that important, serving merely as a charming carrier for this compelling movie.

All in all, a well written script that is executed perfectly in spite of all the amateur actors involved, and all of that impressively visualized. This film ranked 14th for the audience award, with a good score of 4.38 out of 5. And last-but-not least there is an impressive soundtrack, well chosen at the right moments, but not outstaying its welcome at times when there was no need for it.
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8/10
Wonderful Directing.
brian-morgan-680-2734032 November 2011
I saw this movie at the Savannah Film Festival in Georgia. The director was there to talk briefly about this film. He mentioned that the hardest part of this film was using non actors who were actually from the locations used in the film. This being said the fact that this movie uses real people as their actors is astonishing to me. I enjoyed the story of this young boy having to follow in his fathers shoes. It's a fun movie with a simple story line and a fun adventure that takes you to an element that isn't seen very often in movies in the north part of Green Land. Cinematography was decent a few things that bugged me such as the night scenes weren't lit very well (if at all) and some out of focus shots here and there. But for being an independent feature I can forgive those things.
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8/10
Greenland's icy landscape is both chilling and mesmerizing
ReelGA18 September 2012
Considering Greenland's first feature film production was 2009's "Nummioq," I was likely not alone when I confessed to never having seen a Greenlandic movie before. (I must admit that I had to look up whether the correct demonym was 'Greenlandish' or 'Greenlandic.') That changed recently after watching "Inuk." Director Mike Magidson created an energetic look at both a boy and a culture in modern Greenland as they each undergo dynamic changes.

I was reminded a little of Danny Boyle's Oscar champ "Slumdog Millionaire," thanks to the frantic soundtrack and the youthful energy provided by a young cast of non-professional actors. While the story is neither as complex nor as contrived as Boyle's film, it maintains a simplistic charm which allows you to grow a bit closer to the both of the film's leads, Gaba Peterson (Inuk) and Ole Jørgen Hammeken (Ikuma).

Greenland's icy landscape is both chilling and mesmerizing. I cannot begin to imagine how difficult filming must have been for any crew members that were not from the area. Nonetheless, the film is shot and edited exceptionally; a fact that enough people agreed on to award it Best Narrative Feature, Best Director and Best Editing at the 2011 Savannah Film Festival. I was fortunate enough to see both Magidson and Hammeken say a few words about the film after it screened.

4 out of 5 stars.
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10/10
Amazingly moving.
clemens-jack13 April 2011
I saw this film almost by accident at the Ashland Independent Film Festival, and I was simply blown away. Aside from the fact that it is set against the stunning landscapes of Greenland, a land that few of us know, the story and characters are all deeper than any I've seen in a long time. I was even more blown away when I learned that the two leading actors, Gaba Petersen and Ole Jorgen Hammeken, are both non-professionals. Their performances are worth that of any big star I've seen over the years. The story is a crafty blend of social and cultural struggle with everything an authentic adventure film has to offer. However it doesn't throw in all of the "look at my brilliant screen writing" plot turns that usually just make me yawn. No, this film is filled with heart and soul. I will definitely be recommending it to everyone I know. A must see!
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10/10
This is an inspiring film about a teenager and an older mentor whose personal challenges are mirrored in the obstacles of the freezing cold of Greenland.
bevquestad4912 October 2013
This is a film about loss and the road to recovery in a frozen land where the harsh environment serves as a keen metaphor to life's challenges. It is also about the power of human relationships – and how, like the icy hand of the frozen north, they can be more deadly than the cruelest cold.

Anderson: It also is a universal story of troubled people in dysfunctional broken families. It is a story of deep pain along with a hope for healing.

At the same time "Inuk" also gives us dazzling scenery with beautiful snow landscapes, awesome dog sled scenes and views of the far north cities of Greenland. I loved that.

Questad: The film starts out with sparse, poetic language that makes its story sound like a legend. "Outsiders are always surprised by the number of words we use for ice. But for us Inuit, ice is more than a word, it's our soul!"

We loved this movie.
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8/10
"For us, ice is more than a word -- it's our soul"
evening17 December 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Fatherless and depressed, sixteenish Inuk seems adrift in Greenland's capital, Nuuk -- his widowed mom cannot keep him fed and her boozed-up pals are violent.

Although Inuk's mother claims that she can take care of her only child, the state sends him up north to a school for troubled kids who are about to learn the ways of their forebears.

The viewer of this quietly fascinating film is transported to a place that could not be more foreign, one of coursing mush-dog packs hauling sleds, jagged, treeless mountain peaks, and blindingly white expanses indistinguishable if not for the rare piles of stones known as inuksuk.

"Inuk" is a road movie (minus an actual road) as well as a buddy and coming-of-age film operating on both a personal and ecological level. We observe the evolving relationship between our young protagonist (Gaba Petersen) and the stolid seal hunter Ikuma (Ole Jorgen Hammeken), while noticing how warming temperatures are threatening an ancient livelihood.

"For thousands of years, we survived on the ice. But today, those footsteps are fading away," we're told, as we see rivulets where they probably shouldn't be, and are told of shrinking icebergs. Horrifyingly, the melting ice has swallowed up some of the savviest hunters, never to be seen again.

This film affords a rare opportunity to learn a little about life in Nuuk, a place of boxy, multicolored houses where young folks might play videogames or scarf up ketchup and fries. That's in contrast to expansive northernmost terrains where the only shelter from a searing wind may come from a mush sled turned on its side, or the sole nourishment from raw seal sliced from a freshly shot carcass. Alcohol seems as lethal a threat as inching-up Fahrenheit.

I mightn't have discovered this film if not for its mention in "Melting Away," an article on the effects of warming on Greenland, from the November 2015 issue of National Geographic.

The story includes a photograph of a woman who makes boots and overalls from skins of the polar bear, shaggy garb of the type worn by cast in the film.

While a viewer of "Inuk" might assume that the fearsome creatures are common in Greenland, polar bears are mentioned in hushed tones and with awe in this film, suggesting they're a somewhat rare conquest of the hunt.

I feel privileged to have gotten to know something of Greenland in this production, and will look for other films from this stunningly pristine locale.
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