My diverse experience covers factual, drama recon, shooting sequences for large technical setups - see River Monster's clip, factual,observational documentary, helicopter aerial’s, drones, gimbals, interviews, green screen, Steadicam, and live events. I’m capable of shooting without a director and recording my own sound. I've worked over many years on BAFTA Award-winning programmes with Bear Grylls and Attenborough, giving me specialist experience in filming multi-camera technical setups in normal as well as extreme environments, including jungles, glaciers, deserts, and mountains, able to operate a camera on any terrain. I'm a DOP with a wide breadth of experience in factual, documentary, and drama recon. I've worked over many years on BAFTA Award-winning programmes with Bear Grylls and Attenborough, giving me specialist experience in filming multi-camera technical setups in normal as well as extreme environments, including jungles, glaciers, deserts, and. It makes Dickey's odyssey seem absolutely adolescent.I'm a DOP with a wide breadth of experience in factual, documentary, and drama recon. That's why I was reminded of "The Worst Journey in the World," I suppose. It's possible to consider civilized men in a confrontation with the wilderness without throwing in rapes, cowboy-and-Indian stunts and pure exploitative sensationalism. The adventures that occur in the film belong in Freudian dreams, and many of the exploits (particularly Voight's scaling of a cliff) are so incredible that we are back in a James Bond universe. For all of his 6 feet 4 inches and prowess with a bow and arrow, what James Dickey has given us here is a fantasy about violence, not a realistic consideration of it.
#PRIMAL SURVIVOR CAMERAMAN MOVIE#
What the movie totally fails at, however, is its attempt to make some kind of significant statement about its action. The appeal to latent sadism is so crudely made that the audience is embarrassed.Īs sometimes happens, however, the performances have a validity that transcends the film Jon Voight, Burt Reynolds and, indeed, all the members of the cast are finely tuned and very good. The scenes of violence and rape also work, it must be admitted, although in a disgusting way. Director John Boorman and his cameraman, Vilmos Zsigmond, get some tremendously good (and unfaked) footage of the foursome shooting some fairly hairy rapids. The movie is admittedly effective on the level of simple adventure. He is clearly under the impression that he is telling us something about the nature of man, and particularly civilized man's ability to survive primitive challenges ("Survival," the macho Burt Reynolds character tells us, "is the name of the game")īut I don't think it works that way. Before their trip is over, one of them is dead, one has been raped by a demented hillbilly and the other two have each killed a hillbilly with a bow and arrow.ĭickey, who wrote the original novel and the screenplay, lards this plot with a lot of significance - universal, local, whatever happens to be on the market. The other three, to various degrees, are unsuited to make the journey. One of the four is big on the old machismo. James Dickey's "Deliverance" also is the story of a "worst journey." Four city slickers from Atlanta decide to take a canoe trip down a river that will soon be flooded out to make a lake. If there is a worst journey in the world, Cherry-Gerrard was there and took it and knew what it was like. He did somehow survive and lived to a healthy age - but as a melancholy, withdrawn, brooding old man whose spirit had been permanently altered by the test he put it to.
What Cherry-Gerrard discovered on his journey, however, is that it was quite possibly not worth it. Their ordeal had a scientific rationale the emperor penguin is one of the most backward of birds, and its eggs might hold clues to the evolution of our species. Now why would I mention all this in a review of a movie named "Deliverance"? Maybe because there is a lesson to be learned here somewhere.Ĭherry-Gerrard and his friends suffered unspeakable physical and mental punishment during their journey.