The White Dawn
The White Dawn is a 1974 drama film directed by Philip Kaufman and starring Warren Oates, Timothy Bottoms, and Louis Gossett Jr. It portrays the conflict between aboriginal peoples' traditional way of life and Europeans' eagerness to take advantage of them. The film employs authentic Inuit language dialogue. It is based on the 1971 novel The White Dawn: An Eskimo Saga by James Archibald Houston, who co-wrote the screenplay.
Premise
When three whalers become stranded in Northern Canada's Arctic in 1896, they are rescued by Inuit. In the beginning, the Inuit accept the strangers' European ways, but as this increasingly influences and affects their customs, things slowly fall apart and cultural tension grows until the climax. The film was made by a "skeleton crew" and was filmed "entirely on location" on Baffin Island. The three lead actors were the only ones with any film experience and the other performers were Inuit who were speaking their own language, which was subtitled in the film.Cast
- Warren Oates as Billy
- Timothy Bottoms as Daggett
- Louis Gossett Jr. as Portagee
- Joanasie Salomonie as Kangiak
- Ann Meekitjuk Hanson as Neevee
- Simonie Kopapik as Sarkak
- Namonai Ashoona as Nowya
- Tchomalai as Ratchepa
- Higa Ipeelie as Evaloo
- Oolipika Joamie as Mia
- Meetook Mallee as Ikuma
- Neelak as Panee
- Seemee Nookiguak as Avinga