Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

The Emerald Forest

 
Movies:

The Emerald Forest

  • Director: John Boorman
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Adventure Drama, Jungle Film
  • Themes: Obsessive Quests, Fathers and Sons, Missing Persons
  • Main Cast: Powers Boothe, Meg Foster, Charley Boorman, Dira Pass, Rui Polonah
  • Release Year: 1985
  • Country: US/UK
  • Run Time: 113 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

The Emerald Forest is based on a true story, as related by Los Angeles Times correspondent Leonard Greenwood. Powers Boothe stars as Bill Markham, a US engineer working on a dam project in the Amazonian jungles. Bill's young son, Tomme (played by director John Boorman's son Charley Boorman) is kidnapped in the rain forest by a tribe called "The Invisible People" because of their skills at camouflage - a group that has reportedly never experienced contact with Caucasians. The authorities give up the boy for lost, but Bill perseveres in searching for his son, for over 10 years. While fleeing for his life from The Fierce People - enemies of The Invisible People - he's rescued at the last minute by Tomme, now an adoptee of The Invisible People's chief. To Bill's frustration, Tomme initially refuses to join his biological dad and return to civilization, but when The Fierce People swing in and abduct all of the women in the Invisible People tribe, Tomme seeks his dad's help in rescuing them. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Powers Boothe - Bill Markham
  • Meg Foster - Jean Markham
  • Charley Boorman - Tomme
  • Dira Pass - Kachiri
  • Rui Polonah - Wanadi, the Chief
Claudio Moreno - Jacareh, Chief of the Fierce Tribe; Tetchie Agbayani - Caya; Paulo Vinicius - Mapi; Eduardo Conde - Uwe Werner; Estee Chandler - Heather Markham; Babriel Archanjo - Trader's Henchman; Mario Borges - Costa; Ariel Coelho - Padre Leduc; Silvana de Faria - Peoui; Atilia Iorio - Trader; Gracindo Junior - Carlos; Peter Marinker - Perreira; Yara Vaneau - Young Heather; María Elena Velasco - Uluru; Isabel Bicudo - Kachiri's Cousin; Joao Mauricio Carvalho - Monkey; Aloisio Flores - Samanpo; Arthur Muhlenberg - Rico; Patricia Prisco - Kachiri's Cousin; William Rodriquez - Young Tommy; Chico Terto - Paulo

Credit

Marcos Flacksman - Art Director, Terry Pritchard - Art Director, Jose Possi - Choreography, Prof. Charles F. Bennett - Consultant/advisor, Maureen Bisilliat - Consultant/advisor, Dr. Eduardo Vivairos de Castro - Consultant/advisor, Dr. Ernest Marres Da Serra Friere - Consultant/advisor, Carlindo Milhomen - Consultant/advisor, Michael Dryhurst - Co-producer, Christel Boorman - Costume Designer, Clovis Bueno - Costume Designer, John Boorman - Director, Ian Crafford - Editor, Edgar Gross - Executive Producer, Brian Gascoigne - Composer (Music Score), Junior Homrich - Composer (Music Score), Anna Dryhurst - Makeup, Paul Engelen - Makeup, Peter Frampton - Makeup, Luis Michelotti - Makeup, Beth Presares - Makeup, Simon Holland - Production Designer, Philippe Rousselot - Cinematographer, John Boorman - Producer, Ian Whittaker - Set Designer, Raph Salis - Special Effects, Marc Boyle - Stunts, John Boorman - Screenwriter, Rospo Pallenberg - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Castaway; Gorillas in the Mist; Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes; The Mosquito Coast; Tarzan, the Ape Man; Lord of the Flies; La Mort En Ce Jardin; The Beach; La Vallée; Last of the Dogmen; End of the Spear; In the Place of the Dead
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: The Emerald Forest
Top
The Emerald Forest
Directed by John Boorman
Produced by John Boorman
Michael Dryhurst
Edgar Gross
Written by Rospo Pallenberg
Starring Charley Boorman
Powers Boothe
Dira Paes
Meg Foster
Music by Brian Gascoigne
Junior Homrich
Cinematography Philippe Rousselot
Release date(s) 1985
Running time 110 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English, Portuguese

The Emerald Forest is a 1985 English language British film set in the Brazilian Rainforest. It was directed by John Boorman and written by Rospo Pallenberg. It is based on a true story. The film was screened out of competition at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival.[1]

Contents

Plot Summary

Bill Markham is an engineer who has moved to Brazil with his family to complete the construction of a large hydro-electric dam. The construction requires large areas of forest to be cleared, even more to be flooded. Its completion will bring more people to the areas who will clear the jungle for agriculture and living space.

Markham takes his family to the edge of the forest for a picnic to show them the jungle. It is then that an Indian from one of the indigenous tribes known as the Invisible People notices his son, Tommy, aged seven, has bright green eyes the colour of the forest. The tribesman decides that it is unfair to leave the child with these strange people, who, in his opinion, are destroying the world. He abducts the child. Markham pursues them, but his son is gone.

The story jumps ahead some ten years. The dam is nearing completion. Tommy, or Tommé as he is now called, has become part of the tribe that he lives with, adopting their language, culture and way of life. His father finds him but discovers that he is not the son he once had.

Tommé's tribe is later threatened by another, as well as by the near completion of the dam. Markham decides to help his son so that the way of life he has adopted is not destroyed.

Cast

  • Powers Boothe - Bill Markham
  • Meg Foster - Jean Markham
  • Yara Vaneau - Young Heather
  • William Rodriguez - Young Tommy
  • Estee Chandler - Heather Markham
  • Charley Boorman - Tomme
  • Dira Paes - Kachiri
  • Eduardo Conde - Werner
  • Ariel Coelho - Padre Leduc
  • Peter Marinker - Perreira
  • Mario Borges - Costa
  • Átila Iório - Trader
  • Gabriel Archanjo - Trader's Henchman
  • Gracindo Júnior - Carlos
  • Arthur Muhlenberg - Rico

Style

The film is clearly motivated by the destruction of the rainforest, but apart from the impact on the environment and the local wildlife, it examines the fact that a way of living which was natural to human beings for many thousands of years is also being destroyed. Scenes exploring the culture and spiritual beliefs of the tribespeople give the viewer an idea of how South American people lived in the times before widespread colonisation.

Criticism

Rotten Tomatoes gave it an 87% rating, out of 13 reviews. The Emerald Forest was designated a Critic's Pick by the reviewers of the New York Times It was nominated for 3 BAFTA Awards, for Cinematography, Make Up, and Score.

The film was promoted as "based on a true story". Critic Harlan Ellison in his book Harlan Ellison's Watching wrote that attempts by the SCAN library reference/research company to get background information on the real story revealed that Rospo Pallenberg's original screenplay was based on several stories,[2] including an article in the Los Angeles Times about a Peruvian laborer whose child had been abducted by a local Indian tribe and located sixteen years later almost fully assimilated.[3] Pallenberg's agent told SCAN that while Boorman claimed to have read the original Times article, he hadn't, but was simply working from Pallenberg's screenplay. According to SCAN, Boorman told NPR's All Things Considered that the son was still living with the tribe in 1985 and identified the tribe as "the Mayoruna", yet detailed anthropological studies of that tribe do not mention an adopted outsider.[2]

However, a contemporaneous January 1985 review in Variety magazine states up front that the movie is "[b]ased on an uncredited true story about a Peruvian whose son disappeared in the jungles of Brazil."[4] This fact demonstrates that the source of the film script was known at the time of release. The Los Angeles Times article also mentioned that the Peruvian child had at the time decided to stay with the tribe.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Festival de Cannes: The Emerald Forest". festival-cannes.com. http://www.festival-cannes.com/en/archives/ficheFilm/id/928/year/1985.html. Retrieved 2009-07-08. 
  2. ^ a b Ellison, Harlan, Harlan Ellison's Watching (Underwood, 1989), pp. 407-409.
  3. ^ Leonard Greenwood, "Long Hunt For Son Ends In Success, But --" In the Los Angeles Times, October 8, 1972, section F, p. 10. Reprinted at http://www.richardandmimi.com/truestory.html, website accessed July 19, 2007.
  4. ^ The Emerald Forest by Variety Staff (accessed Nov 13, 2009)

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Emerald Forest" Read more