Retro: Chantal Akerman

TABU – A STORY OF THE SOUTH SEAS

Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau
USA 1931
85 min
V'11

If D.W. Griffith created the language of film, he left it up to his successors to add their own personal esthetics. On the short list of the cinema's all time greatest artists belongs the name F.W. Murnau. <![CDATA[<i>]]>Tabu<![CDATA[</i>]]> was Murnau's last film before he died at age 42 in a car crash. Born in Germany, the filmmaker had immigrated to America a few years earlier to work in Hollywood, where he made his masterpiece <![CDATA[<i>]]>Sunrise<![CDATA[</i>]]>. For <![CDATA[<i>]]>Tabu<![CDATA[</i>]]>, he teamed with the famous American documentary filmmaker Robert Flaherty (<![CDATA[<i>]]>Nanook of the North<![CDATA[</i>]]>) and set off for Bora Bora to tell this beautiful story of forbidden romance using non-trained natives for actors. Expert diver Matahi falls madly in love with lovely Reri, just before Reri becomes their tribe's \"chosen one,\" making her off limits (\"tabu\") to all men. Matahi and Reri decide to run off together, but encounter all kinds of hardship -- forcing Matahi to dive in shark infested waters to find valuable pearls. Murnau captures an incredibly vivid sense of nature with <![CDATA[<i>]]>Tabu<![CDATA[</i>]]>, and viewers should almost feel the warm sun, hear the waves and smell the moist jungle. Former critic and current filmmaker Eric Rohmer once called Murnau the cinema's greatest filmmaker and <![CDATA[<i>]]>Tabu<![CDATA[</i>]]> his greatest film. You can't get a higher recommendation than that.

Credits
Paramount Publix Corporation
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