- Source: Sky Above and Mud Beneath
Sky Above and Mud Beneath (French: Le Ciel et la boue, lit. 'the sky and the mud'), also released as The Sky Above –The Mud Below, is a 1961 French documentary film. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature and was entered into the 1961 Cannes Film Festival.
The film documented a 7-month, thousand-mile Franco-Dutch expedition led by Pierre-Dominique Gaisseau, into uncharted territories of what was then Netherlands New Guinea. The expedition began in the northern region of the Asmat. The group interacted with tribes of cannibals, headhunters and Pygmies; battled leeches, hunger, and exhaustion; and “discovered” and named the Princess Marijke River, named after Princess Maria Christina (Marijke) of the Netherlands.
Cast
Pierre-Dominique Gaisseau - team leader
Gérard Delloye - co-leader
Herve de Maigret - radio operator
Jan Sneep - liaison officer
Tony Saulnier-Ciolkkowski- photographer
William Peacock - Narrator (English version)
See also
References
External links
Sky Above and Mud Beneath at IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Academy Award untuk Film Dokumenter Terbaik
- Daftar julukan kota di Amerika Serikat
- Sky Above and Mud Beneath
- List of Academy Award–winning films
- Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Film
- Jan Sneep
- Arthur Cohn
- List of Academy Award–nominated films
- Pierre Dominique Gaisseau
- 34th Academy Awards
- 1961 Cannes Film Festival
- List of foreign-language films nominated for Academy Awards