Drifters

1929

Action / Documentary

Plot summary


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341.73 MB
968*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
12 hr 0 min
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661.95 MB
1440*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
12 hr 0 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by springfieldrental7 / 10

Documentary on Fishing Showing Man's Relationship With Machines

He was the writer who termed the genre "documentary" after reviewing Robert J. Flaherty's 1926 film "Moana." Scottish-born John Grierson wrote in the New York Sun newspaper his critique of the movie on native Samoans at work and play, stating Flaherty's movie is more of a purveyor of truth than any fictional films on exotic subjects. He explained in his New York Sun review that "'Moana,' being a visual account of events in the daily life of a Polynesian youth and his family, has documentary value."

It was natural Grierson, so versed in early film documentaries, would produce one of his own. In his 1929 "Drifters," he captured on film a two-day journey of a fishing trawler leaving an English seaport to the North Sea to catch herring. Movie historian Roger Manvell noticed, "The film grasped an ordinary phenomenon of current life and analyzed it, not with the object of making it appear extraordinary, but with the idea of integrating the dramatic elements of its very ordinariness."

One reviewer called Grierson's piece a 'Productionist" film, which seeks to show workers in relation to the machines they operate. In this case, the fishermen are the laborers employed with sophisticated nets and other gear as they catch as many herring as humanly possible. Just as in 'City Symphonies' films, Grierson's documentary shows workers alongside huge mechanisms similar to those found in factories and transports such as trains and ships. "Drifters,' however, also contains elements of the natural world, from seagulls to the vulnerable herring, reflecting human's relationship with the environment.

The uniqueness in "Drifters" was Basil Emmott's camerawork. He went where no cameraman had gone before, setting up shop in a small dingy to capture the trawler at work, filming while a rollicking storm churned up high waves. Grierson, who was involved in bringing Sergei Eisenstein's 1925 "Battleship Potemkin" to the United States, adopted the montage from the Soviet filmmakers and inserted a number of sequences using quick edits. Critic Paul Rotha noticed, "'Drifters' is the only film produced in this country (England) that reveals any real evidence of construction, montage of material, or senses of cinema."

Grierson played "Drifters" at a private London club along with "Battleship Potemkin" (it was illegal to project the Soviet film in United Kingdom's public movie theaters) in November 1929, and was later shown throughout Britain. He received a job with England's Empire Marketing Board, a branch of the government promoting trade through films and exhibits. He personally directed only one other film, preferring to produce other filmmakers' works.

Reviewed by Tryavna8 / 10

A contrasting opinion...

The previous reviewers obviously did not care for "Drifters." Far be it from me to prescribe what they should or shouldn't like, but I wonder if they were viewing a heavily edited and/or sped-up VHS print. (One of them referred to a 45-minute cut.) In fact, "Drifters" should run just over an hour, and while an extra 15 minutes might not sound appealing, those extra minutes are essential to the rhythm of this film. For "Drifters" attempts to create a gently rolling rhythm, much like the sea itself. I personally find the images hypnotic. This is an art film, after all -- not a "documentary" in the traditional sense. Yes, the film is "about" herring fishermen, their work, and their life at sea. But the film is really an experiment, and it only makes sense in conjunction with other "documentaries" of the 1920s: "Nanook of the North," "Grass," and "Man with a Movie Camera." Perhaps a better classification than "documentary" would be "non-fiction narrative film." At any rate, "Drifters" is historically significant because it was the first and only feature film personally directed by John Grierson. Grierson was, of course, the man the who coined the term "documentary" in a review of Robert Flaherty's second film "Moana," and he went on to head the GPO film unit, where he nourished better filmmakers than himself, including Humphrey Jennings, Harry Watt, and Alberto Cavalcanti. Thus "Drifters" should possess inherent interest for fans or students of British documentary cinema; it's the only time Grierson had the opportunity to put his own personal stamp on a feature film.

Stylistically, "Drifters" was heavily influenced both by Flaherty's more poetical approach (with soft focus and lots of man-against-nature imagery) and Soviet montage (with quick-cut editing and lots of juxtaposition). The result is interesting, but not entirely satisfying. Following Flaherty's example, Grierson chooses to focus on one fishing crew. Unlike Flaherty, however, he never names or attempts to individuate the crew members, despite featuring two very strong and natural personalities (a bearded captain who lies awake at night and a cabin boy who's learning how to cook for the crew). Flaherty definitely would have personalized these people even more. On the other hand, Grierson manages to illustrate how these fishermen are related to the other elements of the fishing industry -- something that Dziga Vertov would have approved of. And Grierson shares Vertov's fascination with the relationship between men and their tools. (There's a lovely scene of a stoker lighting a cigarette with some burning coals he's just shoveled into the engine.)

On the whole, I recommend this movie to those who are interested in the history of documentary film-making, especially in Britain. But I also suggest that, if you're new to early documentaries, you watch some others first: Flaherty's "Nanook of the North" and "Man of Aran," Cooper & Schoedsack's "Grass," Vertov's "Man with a Movie Camera," and especially Jennings' "Fires Were Started" (a.k.a. "I Was a Fireman") and "A Diary for Timothy." These films rank among not just the most influential early documentaries but also the most beautiful films ever made. (By the way, Panamint, a small Scottish home video company, has released a complete print of "Drifters" on DVD. It looks quite good for a relatively minor 1929 production. Just be aware that it's a PAL release and only available in the UK.)

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