Snow Walker, The (2003)
Adventure | Drama
Tagline: Their Fight For Survival Formed An Unbreakable Bond.
When the plane carrying Charlie Halliday, a maverick bush pilot and a sick, young, Inuit woman, Kanaalaq, crashes hundreds of miles from civilization, they are at the mercy of nature's worst. While search parties try to find the downed plane Charlie
decides to trek overland promising the woman that he will return with help. Despite her weakened condition, she follows Charlie and nurses him back to health when insects, cold and starvation threaten to kill him shortly after he leaves. Kanaalaq teaches
him the skills he will need to survive and he comes to respect her wisdom and love her valiant spirit as they each set out into the wilderness. Each will find a startling and solitary destiny in the beautiful and stark tundra. An adventure story that will
move and inspire you as it touches your heart.
User Comment: machine_gun_molly from Canada, 24 June 2004 • Every once and a while a movie comes along that is meant to be, in my humble opinion, seen. The Snow Walker is that movie.
The storyline is simple: a bush pilot is asked to bring a young sick Inuit girl to a Yellowknife hospital but the plane crashes in the Canadian tundra. As simple as that. What develops between the two characters is a bond that only two people trying to
survive in that situation could experience.
Charles Martin Smith's direction is perfect. He gives both Barry Pepper and Annabella Piugattuk free rein in their performances that gives us the impression of improvisation. Their friendship enfolds slowly, as any friendship would, if you where with a
stranger battling the tundra, which in this movie, is almost like a third character. As flat and as barren as the tundra may appear, it is shot in such a way that has your eye searching for detail as if you were looking at a painting.
The Snow Walker is an example of straightforward storytelling that proves the fact that less is sometimes more. There are no car chases, no gunfights and yet I found myself completely engrossed. I came upon this movie by chance when I read the review in a
local newspaper that gave it 4 stars and yet I never saw a single trailer or advertisement for it.
What a shame that this great movie will not be seen by a larger audience.
Summary: See this movie!
User Comment: jgstorey from Hay River NT, 22 August 2004 • My wife and I are educators who spent 9 years in Nunavut and presently work in the NWT. In fact I was the Principal in Igloolik for four years and Anabelle was one of my
students. I am very proud of her for the truth she brings to this role in creating a wonderful character . Unlike every other film about the North except Atanarjuat this movie struck my wife and I as "true" It had an accurate depiction of Inuit culture,
white arrogance and colliding cultures.
We think Pepper's character was white-washed a bit..... selling cola to Bathurst? Well we know that a lot of bush pilots made their fortune on the Whiskey trade but I guess this would have made the pilot a harder sell for redemption. As for another
commentator suggesting he made every survival mistake in the book...he seems about as bright as most new-comers to the Arctic, myself included. If we stay and survive we get smarter in a hurry though.
What we liked is that the characters went beyond stereotypes, Pepper's character went through an amazing learning arc and was treated with respect. This is not a cartoon buffoon though he starts that way. The gentleness and power of Inuit culture is on
display but Annabelle is not a cartoon either. Her humanity and sense of humour come through wonderfully.
The struggle for survival is a bit optimistic but hey... We were still able to suspend our disbelief. The land came alive in a way that made us both homesick for Nunavut. Fantastic.....
Pijuyuk, Annabelle.
Summary: They got it right.
User Comment: Colby Fulton from Canada, 8 September 2004 • The Snow Walker, following the Farley Mowat book 'Walk Well My Brother' introduces the characters Charlie Halliday, a self-absorbed pilot (played by Barry Pepper) and
Kanaalaq, a quiet, resourceful Inuit girl (played by Annabella Piugattuk). The film is directed by Charles Martin Smith, the man who played the main character in Farley Mowat's 'Never Cry Wolf' which must have inspired him to translate this Mowat book
into another film. The movie is exceptionally well made, especially considering its low 10 million CDN budget. The camera is well controlled, and the beautiful scenery is captured as well as in any film. Barry Pepper is, as always, a natural talent. He
takes the arrogant Charlie on a journey not only of Canada's Northwest Territories, but of character development. Annabella Piugattuk is wonderful as the succinct Inuit girl. Despite language barriers, the two characters manage to communicate well enough,
and their relationship blossoms in a fascinating way. You'll find this film exciting, and it is much more entertaining than you'd expect. My only wish was that the film's conclusion was extended; I wanted to see more. I look forward to both Charles Martin
Smith and Barry Pepper's next efforts. 9/10
Summary: Powerful & Gripping.
[CSW] -3.6- The story that the movie conveyed is very compelling, the characters are convincing, and the cinematography is stunning, as well as an excellent script. This story is told with great sensitivity without ever getting overly sentimental. You
can't help but admire the heroine, the Eskimo woman that never retreats from the challenges facing her. She faces her destiny with courage, dignity, and most of all love. And the impact of her continuing choices ends up having a tremendous impact on the
pilot. This very touching movie is well worth watching.
Trivia: The actress Annabella Piugattuk like the character she portrays (Kanaalaq) in The Snow Walker is an Inuit throat singer and can fish, hunt seal and walrus, and make clothing out of caribou hides and her first language is
Inuktitut. Raised in Igloolik, a village of 1600 in Nunavut (once the eastern half of the Northwest Territories), Canada. Since starring in The Snow Walker, has moved to Vancouver, British Columbia. She was approached by a casting agent about auditioning
for The Snow Walker while at a dance with some friends in Igloolik.
No D-Box.
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