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Quest for Fire (film)

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox film

| name = Quest For Fire

| image = Quest for fire.jpg

| caption = Theatrical release poster by Carl Ramsey

| director = Jean-Jacques Annaud

| producer =

| screenplay = Grard Brach

| based_on =

| starring =

| music = Philippe Sarde

| cinematography = Claude Agostini

| editing = Yves Langlois

| studio =

| distributor =

| released =

| runtime = 100 minutes

| country =

| language = Invented language

| budget = $12 millionAubrey Solomon, 'Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History', Scarecrow Press, 1989 p259

| gross = 40.6 million
($55.2 million)

}}

'Quest for Fire' is a 1981 prehistoric fantasy adventure film directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud, written by Grard Brach and starring Everett McGill, Ron Perlman, Nameer El-Kadi and Rae Dawn Chong. The Canadian-French co-production is a film adaptation of the 1911 Belgian novel 'The Quest for Fire' by J.-H. Rosny. The story is set in Paleolithic Europe (80,000 years ago), with its plot surrounding the struggle for control of fire by early humans.

The film was critically acclaimed. It won the Academy Award and BAFTA Award for Best Makeup, and the Csar Awards for Best Film and Best Director. At the 5th Genie Awards, the film was nominated in seven categories and won in five (Best Actress, Best Costume Design, Best Editing, Best Sound Editing, Best Overall Sound).

Plot



The 'Ulam' are a tribe of cavemen who possess fire in the form of a carefully guarded small flame which they use to start larger fires. Driven out of their home after a bloody battle with the ape-like 'Wagabu', the 'Ulam' are horrified when their fire is accidentally extinguished while taking refuge in a marsh. Because the tribe does not know how to create fire themselves, the tribal elder decides to send three men, Naoh, Amoukar, and Gaw, on a quest to find fire.

The trio encounter several dangers on their trek, including an encounter with the 'Kzamm', a tribe of more primitive-looking cannibals. The 'Kzamm' have fire, and Naoh, Amoukar and Gaw determine to steal it. Gaw and Amoukar lure most of the 'Kzamm' away from their encampment. Naoh kills the remaining warriors, but not before being bitten on the genitals by one, which causes him agony. The three 'Ulam' take the 'Kzamm' fire and prepare to head home.

A young woman, Ika, had been a captive of the 'Kzamm'. She follows the trio. She makes a primitive poultice to help Naoh recover from his injury. Later, Amoukar attempts to mount Ika. She hides near Naoh, who then mounts her himself in front of the other two males.

Ika soon recognizes that she is near her home and tries to persuade the 'Ulam' to go with her. When they refuse, they go their separate ways. Naoh turns around, followed by the reluctant Gaw and Amoukar, and the band is reunited. After Naoh leaves the others to scout a village, he is trapped in quicksand, nearly sinking to his death, but he is discovered and captured by the Ivaka, Ika's tribe. At first, Naoh is subjected to several forms of humiliation by the Ivaka. He is forced to mate with the high-status women of the tribe, who are large and big-breasted. The petite Ika is excluded by her tribe, and when she attempts to lie near him later that night, she is chased away. The Ivaka show Naoh their advanced knowledge of fire-making with a hand drill.

Gaw and Amoukar find Naoh among the Ivaka. They try to rescue him, but Naoh seems unwilling to leave. At night, Ika helps them knock Naoh unconscious and escape the camp. The next day, Naoh washes off the Ivaka body paint. He tries to mount Ika again, but she teaches him the more intimate missionary position. Not long before they reach the marsh where they started the journey, the three are beset by peer rivals from within the Ulam, who wish to steal the fire and bring it back themselves, but Naoh and his group defeat them using the Ivakan atlatls, which are superior to Ulam weapons.

Finally rejoining the Ulam, the group present the fire to the delight of all. But during the ensuing celebration, the fire is again accidentally extinguished. Naoh tries to create a new fire as he'd seen in the Ivaka camp, but after several failed attempts, Ika takes over. Once the spark is lit, the tribe is overjoyed.

Months later, Naoh and Ika prepare to have a child.

Cast



* Everett McGill as Naoh

* Ron Perlman as Amoukar

* Nameer El-Kadi as Gaw

* Rae Dawn Chong as Ika

* Gary Schwartz as Rouka

* Naseer El-Kadi as Nam

* Franck-Olivier Bonnet as Aghu

* Jean-Michel Kindt as Lakar

* Kurt Schiegl as Faum

* Brian Gill as Modoc

* Terry Fitt as Hourk

* Bibi Caspari as Gammla

* Peter Elliott as Mikr

* Michelle Leduc as Matr

* Robert Lavoie as Tsor

* Matt Birman as Morah

* Joy Boushel as Sura

* Christian Benard as Umbre

* Tarlok Sing Seva as Tavawa

* Lolamal Kapisisi as Firemaker

* George Buza and Antonio Barichievich as 'Kzamm' tribesmen

Production



Writing and characterization

Special language forms were created by novelist Anthony Burgess, while patterns of movement and gesture were developed by anthropologist Desmond Morris. The more advanced language of the Ivaka was largely that of the Cree/Inuit native people of northern Canada, which caused some amusement among those in this group who saw the film, since the words have little to do with the plot. Annaud also comments that his film was popular in Greenland where Inuit is also spoken. The Ulam are portrayed as stereotypical, Neanderthal-style cavemen, in an intermediate stage of development compared to the ape-like 'Wagabu', on one hand, and the culturally more advanced 'Ivaka' on the other. The Ulam and Ivaka are depicted as light pigmented, the Kzamm as red-haired. The Ivaka are depicted as using body ornamentation (jewelry, body paint, masks, headgear), fully developed language and simple technology such as gourds as vessels and the atlatl.

Filming

The movie was filmed on location in the Scottish Highlands and Tsavo National Park and Lake Magadi in Kenya. The opening sequence was filmed at Cathedral Grove on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada for the forest scenes, whereas the cave home was filmed at Greig's Caves on the Bruce Peninsula along the Niagara Escarpment near Lion's Head, Ontario. Some scenes involving mammoths were filmed in Iceland.

Michael D. Moore was the associate producer in charge of action and animal scenes. Circus elephants were trained for six months to behave like mammoths. When it came time to film them in Iceland, strict laws about transporting four-legged animals into the country delayed their arrival. Then a volcano erupted nearby the ranch where they would have been staying that would have killed the animals had they been there.

Reception



Critical response

'Quest for Fire' holds a score of 88% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 24 reviews for an average rating of 7.4/10, the critical consensus stating "Its characters can't do much more than grunt, but that doesn't keep 'Quest for Fire' from offering a deeply resonant -- and surprisingly funny -- look at the beginning of the human race."

Roger Ebert gave the film three-and-a-half stars out of four, writing that he saw it as a "borderline comedy" in the opening scenes, but "then these characters and their quest began to grow on me, and by the time the movie was over I cared very much about how their lives would turn out." Gene Siskel of the 'Chicago Tribune' awarded three stars out of four, stating that "you may be tempted, as I was, to shout wisecracks at the screen. But then the basic appeal of the story begins to work, and every so often we find ourselves asking ourselves, 'I wonder if that's the way it did happen?' And when that happens, 'Quest for Fire' has you hooked."Siskel, Gene (March 5, 1982). "'Quest' fires imagination in eternal search for our origin". 'Chicago Tribune'. Section 3, p. 1. Janet Maslin of 'The New York Times' wrote that the film was "more than just a hugely entertaining science lesson, although it certainly is that. It's also a touching, funny and suspenseful drama about prehumans." Sheila Benson of the 'Los Angeles Times' wrote that she did not know how historically accurate the movie was, "But this is film making, not carbon dating, and it seems that every piece of magic and the skill of every craft has been used to free our imagination, to let it soar with the film to see what life 'may' have been like 80,000 years ago."Benson, Sheila (February 11, 1982). "Evolution of the Seeker in an Uncertain World". 'Los Angeles Times'. Part VI, p. 1. Pauline Kael of 'The New Yorker' wrote, "It's almost impossible to guess what the tone of this ape-man love story (based on a French novel, by J. H. Rosny, Sr.) is intended to be. Are we meant to laugh at the gaminess? At the men's werewolf foreheads? (Thick hair sprouts about an inch above their eyebrows.) The director, Jean-Jacques Annaud, seems to be willing for us to laugh but not sure about how to tell us when."

Scientific response

The film was not intended to be a scientifically accurate documentary of a specific point in pre-history. This is reinforced by the response of the scientific community. In an essay for the journal 'American Anthropologist', Brown University linguistics professor Philip Lieberman described as "absurd" the mixture of different levels of advancement among different tribes living in close proximity. Lieberman pointed out that it "would be most unlikely 80,000 years ago" for humans to still be exhibiting apelike characteristics, at the same time noting that the Ivaka tribe was depicted as having "a village culture that would have been likely 10,000 years ago."

Accolades



The film was nominated for six Csar Awards in 1981, including Best Original Screenplay or Adaptation for Grard Brach, Best Music Written for a Movie for Philippe Sarde, Best Cinematography for Claude Agostini, and Best Sets for Brian Morris, winning those for Best Film and Best Director. In 1983 it won the Academy Award for Best Makeup. Also in 1983, it won in five categories in the Genie Awards.

See also



* 'The Clan of the Cave Bear'

* 'Dance of the Tiger'

* 'The Inheritors' (Golding novel)

* List of historical period drama films and series

* 'Shaman' (novel)

* Survival film, about the film genre, with a list of related films

References




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