Deschutes Public Library

Gow the headhunter

Label
Gow the headhunter
Language
eng
Characteristic
videorecording
Main title
Gow the headhunter
Oclc number
897770634
resource.otherEventInformation
Originally produced by Flicker Alley in 1932
Runtime
60
Summary
Gow is not only a true curiosity but also in many ways a key influence of later Cooper and Schoedsack productions including King Kong. The footage in Gow was produced by Edward A. Salisbury, a wealthy British adventurer, who in 1920 set sail in an 80-ton yacht equipped with a motion picture laboratory to, in his words, catch and hold for history a photo record of the fast, disappearing races of the South Seas Islands. Cooper and Schoedsack were among the cameramen on this two-year expedition that documented genuine head-hunters and cannibals along its route. The material was originally released as four separate films in the silent era and was consolidated as the film Gow, the headhunter for an illustrated lecture by expedition member William Peck. Peck recorded his own cringe-inducing commentary in 1931. Gow was reissued as an exploitation film into the 1950s under the title Cannibal Island, but it was made with a serious purpose. True to Salisbury's intent, it indeed documents vanished cultures Gow is mastered for this edition in high definition from the original 35mm fine grain master positive
Technique
live action
resource.commentator
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