Review of Gow

Gow (1931)
8/10
Contributes Interesting Footage Of Vanishing Cultures.
31 December 2005
Numerous ethnographically flavoured documentaries were released in the United States during the late 1920s and on into the early 1930s, forerunners of the "Mondo" exploitation films, emblems of the related dross that appeared three decades after, and of them all this is one of the best and most grounded in reality, including as it does authentic footage shot during Edward A. Salisbury's expeditions into the South Seas, although it also incorporates staged sequences in addition to creative use of stock footage to offset alleged "censorship" difficulties. Released by Real Pictures, the film is narrated by regular Salisbury companion William Peck whose laconic irony is often hilarious as we view the visually exciting adventures experienced by a crew of 18 along with 13 "scientists" aboard skipper Salisbury's 161 foot long sloop "Gypsy" sailing from San Pedro (Port of Los Angeles) as the vessel wends its way into the Pacific Ocean 3000 miles to the Marquesas Islands and beyond to other exotic locales. We watch as Marquesans fish with spears and collect mangoes and breadfruit, and then it is on to Samoa where, to please Salisbury and his men, Samoan women perform seated (Siva) dances that relate of local history that is not elsewise recorded. Another 450 miles takes the adventurers to Fiji, a British Crown Colony at the time of this production. Warriors there (Peck points out that there had not been a war on Fiji for 75 years, yet all of the Fijian men are warriors, although all that they do is dance) treat viewers to a splendidly synchronized Dance of the War Clubs. Upon leaving Fiji, the expedition sails for Melanesia, and the documentary becomes a bizarre mixture of fact, fantasy and the recondite. A significant stop is at the Andaman Islands in the eastern Bay of Bengal, present habitat of its original residents, diminutive Pygmies, the most primitive group of all the natives seen in the film, since they have no residences, simply sleeping in convenient trees, and have not discovered the use of fire, therefore being restricted to raw food. These former cannibals are filmed during a wedding ceremony and we also see women who have become widowed wearing the skulls of their late husbands suspended from their necks. Such authentic touches of thoroughly uncivilised peoples lead us to the film's final scenes, these depicting cannibals and headhunters. Following a visit with Papuans, erstwhile but recent cannibals residing along the coast of New Guinea, the voyagers move along to New Hebrides and the Western Solomon Islands where black Melanesians still practice their dispiriting customs. Here we finally meet the eponymous Gow, high chief of Solomon Island headhunters who recreate for the camera eye a tribally combined raid, under the leadership of Gow, attacking rivals who had kidnapped his daughter. This action comprises the film's climax, but is actually not as interesting as what preceded it during a work that provides agreeable entertainment throughout its brief length.
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