A Human-Centered Nature Documentary?

Encounters at the End of the World is most assuredly a documentary, featuring interviews of real workers and scientists at a research center in Antarctica. From a certain lens, this film can be perceived as a nature documentary not because of the penguins and harsh, frozen landscape, but because of the humans at the center being observed so removed from their homes and the rest of society at large.

The first shot of the two above is a long shot reminiscent of those used when observing animals from afar in documentaries such as Planet Earth or Our Planet. Stefan Pashov, climbing down from the large piece of machinery, can be compared to a monkey in a tree or a lion in the middle of the African Savannah. The film wants the viewer to notice him as a subject, and this is what he does now; operating machinery is his new habitat in this almost case-study-like film.

In the second shot, William Jirsa is found and interviewed in a setting that does not initially become recognized as located in Antarctica. The gardens that surround him give the feel of a much more typically “natural” environment. The production crew also makes a point of keeping his awkward gestures, such as him scratching his nose, in the final cut of the documentary. This shot also reveals just how isolated the team is from the rest of society, as norms throughout the film seem to be different at the facility compared to the ones many of us practice at home. The awkwardness and social tension is incredibly thick both in this shot and in other areas of the film, which is part of what is being studied about them, as a typical nature film would showcase to you all of the interesting or odd social characteristics and behaviors of the animals under observation.

New Passports and Bad Test Scores

In this gif scene, Grandfather Hüseyin is sitting at the kitchen table, staring in vain at his newly acquired German passport. It is evident from the previous scene in bed with his wife, that he is not excited to have gotten the passport. She tries starting a conversation about it, where he quickly flicks the lights off. On the gif itself, I felt like he was giving the same emotional response every student has felt before. His eyes rolled back in his head as he stared at the paper object that meant so much, yet so little. You could see in his eyes, the pain that had gone into getting that almost meaningless piece of paper. He had been working in Germany for so long but hadn’t been a true citizen until receiving a random piece of paper. The problem still being that it could never change the fact that he is still not accepted. No matter how hard he tries, he will always share a different cultural background and therefore be inherently different. No matter how hard he tries, or what he “gets”, he will never truly be German or Turkish anymore.           

Cultural Differences

Almanya does an excellent job of conveying cultural differences through different scenes in the movie. The fact that Muhamed is terrified of Jesus is very funny since a crucifix is not supposed to illicit fear. He is scared because he learned from his friend that Germans (Catholics) eat the body of Christ every week, which is true, except for one important detail which is that the body of Christ is actually not flesh. This dream sequence says a lot about the perception of what Germany will be like versus the reality which we see throughout the movie. Muhamed has endless cokes in his own bedroom with luxurious linens. Living in Germany proved to be not so opulent for Muhamed and his family.

via GIPHY