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The Hunters

United States

1962

72 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
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DIR Robert Gardner, John Marshall

DP John Marshall

ED John Marshall

Synopsis

This film follows the hunting of a giraffe by four members of the Ju/’hoansi (a !Kung Bushmen tribe) over a 13-day period in the Kalahari desert. The film consists of footage shot in 1952-53 on a Smithsonian-Harvard Peabody expedition. —IMDb

Director

Original

Robert Gardner

Robert Gardner (born November 5, 1925 in Brookline, Massachusetts) was the Director of the Film Study Center at Harvard University from 1957 to 1997. He is known for his work in the field of visual anthropology. —Wikipedia 

Original

John Marshall

John Marshall, filmmaker and activist, is best known for his lifetime involvement with the Ju/‘hoansi (!Kung Bushmen) of Nyae Nyae in Namibia’s Kalahari Desert. John first picked up a camera in 1949, at the age of 17, during the first of several expeditions to the Kalahari organized by his father, Laurence Marshall, the founding president of the Raytheon Corporation. The whole Marshall family – including John’s mother, Lorna, and sister, Elizabeth Marshall Thomas – became engaged in a multi-disciplinary study of the Ju/’hoansi. John applied himself whole-heartedly to the task of filming. Between 1950-1958, he shot over 300,000 feet of 16mm film (157 hours). His first film, The Hunters (1957), was an almost instant classic of ethnographic film.

Much more than John’s abilities with a camera had developed during those years. He formed a close bond with many of his Ju/‘hoan subjects, particularly with ≠oma “Stumpy” Tsamko. ≠oma had welcomed the Marshall family to his band’s waterhole… read more

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