Shipwrecked Among Cannibals

Shipwrecked Among Cannibals is a 1920 American silent travel documentary film directed by William F. Alder, and released by Universal Studios in July 1920.[2][3]

Shipwrecked Among Cannibals
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Directed byWilliam F. Adler
CinematographyEdward Laemmle and William F. Alder
Distributed byUniversal Film Manufacturing Company
Release date
  • July 4, 1920 (1920-07-04)
Running time
6 reels
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)
Box office$1,000,000[1]

Production background

The film featured episodes from Siam, Java, and New Guinea plus an apparently fictitious encounter with cannibals on a small island in the South Pacific. Filming among the tribes in Dutch New Guinea was done by William F. Alder and Edward Laemmle, who was the nephew of Carl Laemmle, founder of Universal Studios.[4]

Reception

Under the pretense of being an educational ethnographic film, film producers have often justified exploitative elements such as half-clad natives in South Seas island documentaries. At least one educational publication, which appeared to take the film as fully authentic, suggested that this film could with review be used in schools.[5] Although Shipwrecked Among Cannibals generally received good reviews, it did not do well at the box office.[4]

Preservation status

With no listing in any film archives,[6] Shipwrecked Among Cannibals is a lost film.

gollark: That would ruin the climate first, ecosystem second, and only if you did horrendous amounts of it.
gollark: Given the Death Star, I'd say crazy power source.
gollark: Either they use vector control plus some crazy power source, or just somehow have cheap vector control.
gollark: Just tape a laser pointer to it, they only use a few watts or something.
gollark: Hmm, does duct tape actually function in space?

See also

References

  1. Box office at IMDB accessed January 27 2017
  2. Shipwrecked Among Cannibals on IMDb.
  3. Progressive Silent Film List: Shipwrecked Among Cannibals at silentera.com
  4. Imperato, Pascal James; Imperato, Eleanor M. (1992), They Married Adventure: The Wandering Lives of Martin and Osa Johnson, Rutgers University Press, pp. 86–87, ISBN 0-8135-2695-7
  5. "Films Viewed and Reviewed". Visual Education. Chicago: Society for Visual Education. 1 (5): 43–44. Sep–Oct 1920. Retrieved 2013-12-20.
  6. Library of Congress American Silent Feature Film Survival Database: Shipwrecked Among Cannibals
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