English Français Español Deutsch

Best blackjack games is here.

  Startseite » Katalog Anmelden |  Warenkorb  |  Kasse | 

Best online pokies at https://aucasinosonline.com/pokies/

Search DaaVeeDee:
box
 
DescriptionNarrow




erweiterte Suche
box
Kategorien
box


Arthouse
Klassische Filme
Kultfilme
Erotische Filme
Euro-Westerns
Kinder und Familie
Jüdische Themen
Dokumentarfilme
Minireihe
Andere Große Filme

USA, Kanada 
Lateinamerika, Mexiko 
Frankreich, Benelux-Länder 
Deutschland, Mitteleuropa 
Russland, Osteuropa 
Spanien, Portugal 
Italien, Griechenland 
Indien, Östliche Asien 
Afrika, Nahe Osten 
Australien, Neuseeland 
Großbritannien, Irland 
Skandinavien, Island 

Zeige alle Artikel

Blu-Ray

Neuheiten
Demnächst
box
Warenkorb Zeige mehr
box
0 Artikel
box
Anmelden
box
Ihr Email address
Ihr Kennwort
box
Informationen
box
Unsere AGBs
Verschiffen-Info
Privacy Policy
Rückkehr
Anfragen
Write a Review and Save!
Kontakt
box
Sharing Our Stories - 6-DVD Box Set (DVD) (*)
box_bg_l.gif.
$32.99 $26.97

Ursprünglicher Titel: How to Build an Igloo / The Living Stone / Eskimo Summer / The Annanacks / Stalking Seal on the Spring Ice: Part 1 / Stalking Seal on the Spring Ice: Part 2 / The Owl and the Lemming: An Eskimo Legend / The Owl and the Raven: An Eskimo Legend / The Owl Wh
Ton und Untertitel:
Englisch ( Dolby Digital 2.0 )
Englisch ( Mono )
Englisch ( Subtitles )
Französisch ( Subtitles )


Product Ursprung/Format:
France ( PAL/NTSC/Region 0 )

Laufzeit:
488 min

Längenverhältnis:
Fullscreen

Bonusmaterial:
Kasten-Satz
Wechselwirkendes Menü
Multi-DVD Satz
Plakate
Szene Zugang
Schwarz und Weiß
Broschüre


Film innen gefilmet und produziert:
Kanada ( USA, Kanada )


Vorbei Verwiesen:
Douglas Wilkinson
John Feeney
Laura Boulton
René Bonnière
Quentin Brown
Co Hoedeman
Caroline Leaf
Roger Hart
Bozenna Heczko
Mosha Michael
Alanis Obomsawin
Anne Budgell
Nigel Markham
Barry Greenwald
Elisapie Isaac
Peter Raymont
Patrick Reed
Tom Radford
Marquise Lepage
Gyu Oh
Jonathan Wright
Ame Papatsie
Alethea Arnaquq-Baril


Vorbei Geschrieben:
Douglas Wilkinson
John Feeney
Donald Snowden
Bill Davies
Thérèse Dumesnil
Jeela Alilkatuktuk
Alootook Ipellie
 
Alanis Obomsawin
Anne Budgell
Barbara Sears
Elisapie Isaac
Martha Flaherty
Marquise Lepage
Gyu Oh
Jonathan Wright
Ame Papatsie
Alethea Arnaquq-Baril


Schauspieler:
Gilbert Choquette
Gilles Pelletier
George Whalley ..... Narrator
George Annanack ..... Self - Eskimo
Stanley Annanack ..... Self - Eskimo
Lloyd Bochner ..... Self - Commentator
Julie Wildman ..... Narrator
Bill Davies ..... Narrator
Alootook Ipellie ..... Narrator
Toojatogak Itoacheak ..... Narrator
Elatak Nakashook ..... Narrator
Mina Mathews
Akinisie Novalinga
Alanis Obomsawin ..... Self - Narrator
Waldo Scharwey ..... Narrator
Fran Williams ..... Narrator
William Arvin ..... Narrator
Elijah Erkloo ..... Self
Joseph Idlout ..... Self
Elisapee Ootoova ..... Self
Peter Paniloo ..... Self
Douglas Wilkinson ..... Self
Elisapie Isaac ..... Self
Sam Tutanuak ..... Narrator
Rachelle White Wind Arbez ..... Narrator


Synopsis:
No German review yet:
How to Build an Igloo: This classic short film shows how to make an igloo using only snow and a knife. Two Inuit men in Canada's Far North choose the site, cut and place snow blocks and create an entrance-a shelter completed in one-and-a-half hours. The commentary explains that the interior warmth and the wind outside cement the snow blocks firmly together. As the short winter day darkens, the two builders move their caribou sleeping robes and extra skins indoors, confident of spending a snug night in the midst of the Arctic cold! The Living Stone: The inspiration behind Inuit sculpture. The Inuit approach to the work is to release the image the artist sees imprisoned in the rough stone. Focuses on a legend about the carving of the image of a sea spirit to bring food to a hungry camp. Eskimo Summer: Canadian Inuit life in the early 1940's. The Annanacks: An Inuit community forms a successful co-operative with a sawmill, fish-freezing plant, and small boat building industry. Stalking Seal on the Spring Ice: Part 1: The family is on the shore of Pelly Bay in May-June. A seal basks beside its hole under a warming sun. The hunter stalks the seal, kills it and drags it to the family camp on shore. Man and wife skin the seal, cutting the hide into rings that girdle the body. Stripped of blubber, the rings are then cut spirally into long thongs. The boy plays on the shingle imitating the circling gulls, while the man stretches his thongs between rocks and scrapes away the fur. The woman dresses the seal, wasting nothing, braiding the intestines. Stalking Seal on the Spring Ice: Part 2: Filmed over a period of three years, from summer 1963 to the late winter of 1965, and released in 1967, the Netsilik series is about the traditional lifestyle of Netsilingmiut living in the area around Kuugaruk. The Owl and the Lemming: An Eskimo Legend: The owl and the lemming in this animated film are short-legged, plumply stuffed puppets made of seal-skin by Inuit artists. The accompanying song and voices are in Inuktitut, although the legend is narrated in English. It preserves on film an example of Inuit folklore that may in time disappear. The Owl and the Raven: An Eskimo Legend: This short re-tells the old Inuit myth about how the Raven came to have its black feather colour as a result of a disagreement with the Owl. The Owl Who Married a Goose: An Eskimo Legend: Using the wonderfully artistic sand animation technique, Canadian-American filmmaker and animator, Caroline Leaf, pivots her bittersweet love story of a sentimental owl and a wild young goose around an original Inuit legend. Against all odds, the couple manage to thrive in the vast and desolate Arctic landscapes, watching their offspring grow; however, when the mother-goose and her grown-up chicks start hearing the urgent and thrilling call of the wild, nature will, inevitably, take its course. Is this relationship meant to last forever? Labrador North: This short documentary looks at the government relocation of the Labrador Inuit and the effects on their culture and social structures. Pictures Out of My Life: The drawings and recollections of Inuit artist Pitseolak, from the book of the same title written by Dorothy Eber. Now in her seventies, Pitseolak is one of the most famous of the graphic artists of the Cape Dorset (Baffin Island) artists' colony and co-operative. Her coloured pencil and felt-pen drawings vividly illustrate her memories of past life in the Arctic, and of the birds, animals and spirits that figured so large in the daily life of the Inuit. Lumaaq: An Eskimo Legend: In this Inuit tale, a snow-blind man is rejected by his mother. One night, the loon spirits come to him and restore his sight. With that boon, he prepares for revenge on his un-loving mother. Natsik Hunting: 25-year-old Mosha Michael made an assured directorial debut with this seven-minute short, a relaxed narration-free depiction of an Inuk seal hunt. Released in 1975, Natsik Hunting is believed to be Canada's first Inuk-directed film. Canada Vignettes: Vignettes from Labrador North: The lives of the Inuit community of Northern Labrador are profiled. Canada Vignettes: June in Povungnituk - Quebec Arctic: A family in Nunavik, Quebec enjoy a summer day of fishing and berry picking. Two senior citizens are seen throat singing. The Last Days of Okak: This short documentary tells the story the once-thriving town of Okak, an Inuit settlement on the northern Labrador coast. Moravian missionaries evangelized the coast and encouraged the growth of Inuit settlements, but it was also a Moravian ship that brought the deadly Spanish influenza during the world epidemic of 1919. The Inuit of the area were decimated, and Okak was abandoned. Through diaries, old photos and interviews with survivors, this film relates the story of the epidemic and examines the relations between natives and missionaries. Between Two Worlds: The star of books and films, Joseph Idlout was the most famous Inuk of his time. As the leader of the Inuit hunters pictured for many years on the back of the Canadian two-dollar bill, Idlout's fortunes were crystallized in that idealized image. Idlout was a successful provider and leader during a time when the Inuit still lived on the land. Proud of his origins and fiercely independent, he became an invaluable guide and resource in the Canadian Arctic for the benefit of the government, Hudson's Bay Company, church, military, and the media. As told through eyewitness testimony from Inuit elders and archival footage, the story of Idlout's life embodies the tragedies and contradictions of Canada's intervention in the Arctic, and the radical changes it brought to Inuit society in only twenty years. If the Weather Permits: Director Elisapie Issac's documentary is a sort-of letter to her deceased grandfather addressing the question of Inuit culture in the modern world. I, Nuligak : an Inuvialuit history of first contact: It is easy to overlook Herschel Island - a tiny speck of land just off the Yukon coast - where the Inuvialuit hunter Nuligak once followed the great journeys of caribou, polar bears, and whales. The island lays silently on the margins of geography, entrapped in the footnotes of history, a forgotten place frozen in time. It was on Herschel Island that a young Inuvialuit boy, Nuligak (later named Bob Cockney by the missionaries) came of age-fascinated by Herschel, but equally repelled by the excess of so-called civilization. Through Nuligak's touching yet tragic life-story expressed through his writings and echoed by his grandchildren's poignant return to the Island-we are offered a unique view into an often troubling past and a potentially hopeful future. Martha of the North: In the mid-1950s, lured by false promises of a better life, Inuit families were displaced by the Canadian government and left to their own devices in the Far North. In this icy desert realm, Martha Flaherty and her family lived through one of Canadian history's most sombre and little-known episodes. I Am But a Little Woman: Inspired by an Inuit poem first assigned to paper in 1927, this animated short evokes the beauty and power of nature, as well as the bond between mother and daughter. As her daughter looks on, an Inuit woman creates a wall hanging filled with images of the spectacular Arctic landscape and traditional Inuit objects and iconography. Soon the boundaries between art and reality begin to dissolve. The Bear Facts: In this animated short, a self-important colonial explorer emerges from a sailing ship and plants a flag on the Arctic ice, as a bemused Inuit hunter looks on. Then the explorer plants another, and another, and another, while the hunter, clearly not impressed that his land has been 'discovered,' quietly goes about his business. In this charming and humorous re-imagining of first contact between Inuit and European, Jonathan Wright brings us the story of a savvy hunter and the ill-equipped explorer he outwits. Qalupalik: 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. Lumaajuuq: This animated short is 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.'
Diesen Artikel haben wir am Montag, 25. März 2024 in unseren Katalog aufgenommen.
box_bg_r.gif.

Copyright © 2005-2013 DaaVeeDee LLC
Powered by Oscommerce Supercharged by CRE Loaded Team
Using Version CRE Loaded PCI CE v6.4