Arctic thriller’s film crew struggled to find true
frozen waste
Colin Farrell and his co-stars in the BBC’s North
Water shocked at the loss of wilderness at the north pole from global heating
Dalya
Alberge
Sun 1 Aug
2021 06.00 BST
It’s a
problem that, a century ago, anyone on a ship in the Arctic Circle just didn’t
have to worry about: where is all the ice? Yet this was the unexpected
stumbling block faced by the film-makers of a forthcoming BBC thriller set in
the Arctic in the 1850s.
The North
Water is an epic five-part adventure about an ill-fated 19th-century whaling
expedition into the Arctic. In the pursuit of realism, its producers realised
that they could not rely on special effects. Nor would shooting it in a studio
tank or off the coast of Britain achieve the authenticity of filming in the
Arctic, however extreme the conditions and challenges.
But, in
travelling north to shoot the drama in a wilderness of pack ice, they ended up
– thanks to the effects of global heating – just 22 miles away from the north
pole.
“We had to
keep going further and further north,” Hakan Kousetta, one of the executive
producers, told the Observer. “It was quite shocking to realise how far we had
to go. It really is like turning up to a desert and finding out there is not
enough sand.”
He added:
“We had made assumptions about where you’d find ice in the Arctic Circle. It
turned out you have to keep going north to very extreme locations when, just a
few years ago, you didn’t have to. We were filming in incredible places that
look almost unreal.”
The North
Water is a brutal story of a disgraced ex-army surgeon, who becomes a ship’s
doctor on a vessel with a murderous psychopath on board, played by Jack
O’Connell and Colin Farrell respectively. It is based on Ian McGuire’s
acclaimed novel, about which the Observer reviewer wrote in 2017: “I have never
read a novel that has unsettled me to this degree. It is relentless in its
examination of life aboard an English whaling boat in 1852 – though it is
difficult to understand why anybody would board this ship, bound for the
Arctic, in the first place. When the surrounding waters freeze for hundreds of
days on end, conditions worsen: the ship becomes a hotbed of sodomy, murder,
drink and theft.”
It has been
adapted for the screen and directed by Andrew Haigh, who, inspired by McGuire’s
depiction of the brutal beauty of the Arctic, said: “I wanted us to feel the
biting wind, the bitter cold. I wanted to capture that fear that comes from
being so far from civilisation.” And, as he recalled: “All of us were terrified
at times.”
Filming in
such an extreme environment over four weeks was fraught with danger. Rifles
were on hand to scare away approaching polar bears. Cast and crew battled sea
sickness and frozen fingers and toes. Each morning, they searched for sea ice
strong enough to work on, recreating a whale-hunt in a remote glacier bay and a
seal-hunt on a moving ice-floe. In the pack ice, they had sets that spun 180
degrees in the night, and others that broke up three hours into filming.
The
film-makers cannot say for certain that they travelled so far north because of
the climate crisis, but it is a well-documented fact that one effect of a
heating planet has been thegradual retreat of ice in the Arctic. Last year, the
annual Arctic report card issued by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (Noaa) showed that in 2020 the Arctic sea ice shrank to its
second lowest summer extent in the 42-year satellite record.
Executive
producer Jamie Laurenson noted that they also had to go further north in search
of pack ice because they were shooting in September: “If you want ice, you go
later, but you wouldn’t get the light conditions right and it would be too cold
for people to work.”
He also
said that, while filming in the Arctic increased production costs, the imagery
“feels and looks real. The performances you get from actors who are actually
standing in water in the cold, all those things are intangible but profound in
terms of the effect they have on the show.” Farrell said: “The environment did
so much for us. It instantly created a sense of tension and pressure in your
body. Physiologically, your body is responding in a way and with an aggression
never shown before – because it has never been in an environment like that
before.”
While the
Hollywood Reporter noted that “some of the visuals of frozen, barren nature are
jaw-dropping”, Variety wrote that the drama “creates a sense of chilliness that
will permeate one’s bones on even the hottest summer night”.
The North
Water was commissioned by the BBC and made by See-Saw Films for BBC Two and
iPlayer, and will be available this autumn. Iain Canning, managing director of
See-Saw Films – whose previous productions include the Oscar-winning The King’s
Speech – said: “The North Water is a love letter to the Arctic. We wanted to
capture the beauty of the area and believe it needs to be protected.”
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