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Sunday, Aug 16, 1987
Tabu
In 1929 both Robert Flaherty, America's leading documentarist, and the great studio director F. W. Murnau were ready to quit Hollywood, where they had been ill-used. Murnau invited Flaherty to collaborate on a film to be shot in Tahiti. Jeffrey Scheftel writes for UCLA Film Archives, "The story was...simple: about the love of a sun-bronzed Tahitian fisherman for a young woman whose body has been consecrated to the gods, rendering her tabu as far as mortal men are concerned. Even in this idyllic setting, the filmmakers had their differences. Murnau felt that the codification of taboos by the childlike inhabitants of this land was what he wanted to capture. Flaherty thought that the story should depict the impact of civilization on a primitive society, and that these people who had never seen a camera before were having a story 'imposed' on them. In the end, Flaherty sold his interest in the film to Murnau.... Murnau finished the film, and it was his particular knack for the rhythms of editing, and the lyricism and simplicity of tone he achieved, that made Tabu the masterpiece it is."
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