| Index | 9 reviews in total |
11 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
A stunning piece of work!, 7 March 2006
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Author:
misterjody1 from United States
Having lived many years in Acadiana, I can tell you that this is a
beautiful depiction of the immense grace of the area during the
forties. The film is not great drama, but the mystery and immense
beauty of the bayou is authentic. Joseph Boudreaux, the boy in the
movie will melt your heart with his lovely presence and Cajun ways.
Thankfully, this film was placed in the archives of the National
Library of Congress in the nineties. The restoration is exquisite! I,
for one, am thankful that this monumental tribute to the true Cajun
people, as they once were, has been resurrected.
Much of what you will see in this film is, sadly, gone forever. There
will never be another tribute to Acadiana like Louisiana Story!
8 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
A beautiful black and white film, 25 September 2006
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Author:
bandw from Boulder, CO
If you appreciate black and white cinematography, then you will delight
in seeing the restored version of this movie on DVD. Cinematographer
Richard Leacock and director Flaherty have teamed up to be the Ansel
Adams of the film world. This is one of the most cinematic of films -
its power and magic lie in the poetry of the images. The score by
Virgil Thomson deserved its Pulitzer Prize for music in 1949; it
receives a first class performance here by the Philadelphia Orchestra
under Eugene Ormandy.
Some have commented on the weak story, but I rather enjoyed it - it
could be billed as "Huckleberry Finn meets Standard Oil." The story is
told through the eyes of a young Cajun who lives with his grandfather
and mother in a simple cabin in the Louisiana marshland. In the opening
shots we see the boy exploring the bayous in his canoe with his pet
raccoon. He has an elemental bond with his natural environment that
made me jealous. The boy's grandfather signs a lease allowing Humble
Oil to drill a wildcat well on the bayou near his cabin. We share the
boy's wonder at seeing the oil derrick being floated into position and
his excitement in being invited onto the rig to follow the drilling up
close.
From the viewpoint of a more environmentally conscious time some sixty
years later, the benevolent portrayal of the oil industry seems a bit
quaint, but that a young boy should be fascinated by the process seems
genuine, in any era. In fact I found the details on the drilling
captivating, particularly the way those scenes were filmed as a ballet
with the roustabouts moving to the rhythms of their work accompanied by
the clanking of pipes and chugging of engines.
I had a problem with how delighted the grandfather and mother were at
being able just to buy a few gifts from the profits of oil having been
struck on their land. While the company to whom they had leased their
land was making mucho bucks, it looks like the family got a few hundred
dollars. Given the fact that this movie was commissioned by Standard
Oil, I am sure that it was not the intent to make the company appear so
greedy, but maybe that's one thing that hasn't changed in sixty years.
Joseph Boudreaux as the young boy is endearing and Lionel Le Blanc is
believable as the crusty grandfather. All the actors appear to be
locals - this adds authenticity, but also presents a problem in that
they are not greatly skilled when it comes to delivering their lines.
But there is minimal dialog and what there is is hardly necessary as
the music and images carry you along.
The DVD has several interesting extras, one of them being a reading of
some letters from Richard Leacock (postmarked from Abbeville,
Louisiana) to his wife during the long filming. In one letter he says
that they ran across the twelve-year-old Boudreaux in a café in
Cameron, Louisiana. He had an Acadian accent, had trapped with his
father, could handle a Cajun pirogue, and had an infectious smile. They
figured he was perfect for the part but, since he was born out of
wedlock and under-aged, there were significant difficulties under
Louisiana law to be worked out before he could be signed on. Leacock's
letters are quite frank. In one he notes that there was buzz about the
visit from the director of all Standard Oil public relations and that
Flaherty did not like him, referring to him as "the old bastard."
This is a wonderful film in the literal sense of the word wonderful.
7 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Great visuals, 3 January 1999
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Author:
Huron from United States
Robert Flaherty was the great American documentary filmmaker from Nanook of the North to Louisiana Story. Funded by the oil industry, nonetheless, the great visuals from a director -cinematographer make this film a joy. Forget the story and "see" the film!
8 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Louisiana Story makes an excellent finale for Robert J. Flaherty, 18 March 2007
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Author:
tavm from Baton Rouge, La.
Under the heading "Louisiana" I checked this documentary called Louisiana Story by Robert J. Flaherty out of curiosity from my local East Baton Rouge Parish Library. Beautiful views of the state swamps as well as fascinating scenes of the oil rig that inhabits them dominates the film which depicts the adventures of a Cajun boy on a boat fishing and hunting alligators with his pet raccoon. His father occasionally comes along for the ride and they both have friendly relations with the workers of the oil well. There are some scenes of the mother as well. Great Pulitzer Prize-winning music scored by Virgil Thomson is beautifully performed by The Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra as conducted by Eugene Ormandy. Wonderful cinematography by Richard Leacock. Worth checking out as a depiction of late '40s Louisiana as well as the final film of Mr. Flaherty before his death in 1951. Update-4/29/07: The Cajun boy that starred in this film, J.C. Boudreaux, is now 73 and lives with his wife of 55 years, Regina, in a FEMA trailer in the town of Sweet Lake which is south of Lake Charles. They moved there after Hurricane Rita destroyed their home in Cameron. They had seven children who have provided them numerous grand-and great-grandchildren. Boudreaux still loves fishing. I found this out reading this morning's The (Baton Rouge) Advocate.
5 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Great documentary film to see, not the story., 10 January 1999
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Author:
Huron from United States
Robert Flaherty had a great eye for the interesting shots. Never more so than this oil company funded film about a young boy seeing the oil rig come to his Louisiana bayou. Although there is not much of a story the shots of the oil rig, life in the bayou, and the moods that Flaherty captures make it a film well worth seeing. If you see "Man of Aran" or "Nannok of the North" remember it was the same great documentary filmmaker. I've seen it twice and probably will see it again someday.
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Drilling in the Louisiana bayou., 11 June 2009
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Author:
Michael O'Keefe from Muskogee OK
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This just seems like something special. Grainy Black & White
documentary-style presentation financed by The Standard Oil Company. A
fictionalized story of a young boy(Joseph Boudreaux)and his pet raccoon
playing in the alligator invested Louisiana bayous. Its a happy,
peaceful life sustained by fishing and trapping. The young boy's
father(Lionel Le Blanc)sells the rights to an oil company to drill for
oil just behind their cabin home. The drillers make friends with the
Cajuns, while off- camera the rig strikes a pocket of gas. Mission
accomplished and the drillers leave the bayou environment as clean as
they found it and the Cajun family is richer for it.
Of course, the story is purely fiction and does not deal with the state
of Louisiana as a whole... one has to wonder if the project is not oil
company propaganda. Beautiful cinematography shot by Richard Leacock.
LOUISIANA STORY is directed, written, and produced by Robert J.
Flaherty. Running time is 78 minutes and worthy of your time.
4 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
78 minutes is all it takes..., 7 December 2007
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Author:
Marty from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Robert J. Flaherty was known for his documentaries, but this - which
seems to be his most revered - is fictional.
This movie was shot on location in Petit Anse Bayou, Louisiana - mostly
in the swamps nearby. The three lead parts were played by locals.
Steven Soderbergh did the same thing for his film BUBBLE (2005), which
showcased mostly non-actors from the Wood County, West Virginia area -
where it was shot.
This is film has its problems. The plot of the story, while easy enough
to understand, is too thin - there isn't any conflict. Dialogue is
scarce. Flaherty is very learned in the art of the documentary; the art
of the drama is not the same.
This aside, I think this film is exquisitely shot. It's really very
beautiful to look at. He and Leacock created the most beautiful
alligator-ridden swamp in movie history.
6 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
flaherty's best looking film, 27 December 2003
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Author:
chris miller (chris@aptpupil.org) from davis, california
another film from robert flaherty (nanook of the north and man of aran). the other two films i've seen from him are documentaries, whereas this one is pretty much a straight film (though it won an academy for best documentary). an argument could be made for man of aran as a documentary, but i don't think that this one qualifies. i think that flaherty works better within the documentary confines. perhaps this is because he needn't worry about developing a story or script - that comes naturally given the genre - and so he can focus more on the editing process and capturing the humanity of the characters. it's also possible that his venture into feature films came after he reached his peak. nanook of the north and man of aran had the similar theme of man's struggle to survive within nature. while they followed rather simple people using simple tools (harpoons and fish hooks mostly) this film introduces industry as man's tool in conquering nature. i must admit that this turned me off of the film a bit; it just didn't seem as pure. it's a beautiful film - the black and white photography really looks good (it was restored by the ucla film archive) and the shots are well composed. the story is told through the eyes of a young boy who wanders around the louisiana swamps on his canoe. he comes to admire the crew of the oil rig that has come to his part of the swamp to drill for oil as part of a deal his father has made with a business partner. the oil people's presence is given much more of a positive portrayal than i would have expected from flaherty. as i perused some of the dvd extras i discovered why this is...it turns out that standard oil commissioned the production and requested a film that showed the beauty of humanity and positive impact oil can have while being entertaining all the while. it's flaherty's best looking film and, again, the score is a highlight, but i think it's kind of a shame this had to be his final picture. B.
1 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
A movie made only interesting by its visuals., 6 March 2010
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Author:
Boba_Fett1138 from Groningen, The Netherlands
Let's face it, there really isn't much to this movie. It's a movie
directed by Robert J. Flaherty, who was best known for his
documentaries and his most famous and first movie "Nanook of the
North", which wasn't even a real documentary. This movie also ain't no
documentary and its something that is somewhat between a full length
movie and a fake-documentary, like "Nanook of the North".
In all honesty because of its style and approach, the whole movie and
its story was far from an interesting one. It's not really a movie in
which a lot is happening and there is no drama to the story in terms of
having something awful or shocking happen in it. It just tells the
story of a little Cajun boy who enjoys living in the swampy Louisiana
area, when suddenly an oil company shows up and starts building an oil
derrick. You think that after this point his whole life will change and
he'll do anything to prevent the oil company from drilling and
destroying the territory he loves to play and hunt in. This movie
however got actually produced by an oil company, so there is no such
happening in this movie at all. Instead he makes friends with the oil
people and just go on about his life as if nothing has drastically
changed. This is why "Louisiana Story" just isn't that interesting or
strong as movie, story-wise.
It's however still a very well directed one. Every shot got set up
nicely and Robert J. Flaherty obviously had an eye for the environments
and for creating some beautiful set up shots. The movie is also
supported by a really nice musical score by Virgil Thomson. The editing
at times is however really off and at times ruins some of the movie its
pacing.
Not really a that interesting movie to watch but still perfectly
watchable because of how fine it's all made.
7/10
http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
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