Film festivals London Film Festival 2016

The Eagle Huntress

London Film Festival 2016: The Eagle Huntress | Review
Public screenings
6th October 2016 12.30pm at Vue West End
9th October 2016 12.00pm at Vue West End

There’s a good film to be made out of The Eagle Huntress. It’s a shame this isn’t it. A documentary about a young girl aspiring to become the first female eagle hunter in Mongolia – a tradition that dates back along the male line – there’s something obviously inspiring about the premise of a young girl standing up to patriarchal standards. Unfortunately the film, narrated and executive-produced by Daisy Ridley, manipulates its footage to make its message as loud and emotional as possible.

The girl in question is Aisholpan, a 13-year-old nomadic Kazakh who lives in the Altai Mountains. Her father, Nurgaiv, introduces her to eagle hunting; he teaches her how to call the eagle, feed the eagle, and steal the eagle’s babies so that she, too, can have an adorable critter to call her own. She demonstrates such obvious talent that they attend a local contest, with encouraging results; she eventually ends up in the snow-covered mountains hunting a fox – the final test of an eagle hunter’s skill.

There’s some genuinely worthwhile stuff here, particularly when Aisholpan actually sets a record for calling the eagle during the contest. The problem is the form. Director Otto Bell seems to find his footage boring, so he bombards it with music at every turn. A climb down a cliff is accompanied by a frenzied drum solo; a soaring, X Factor-esque theme is replayed at every moment of triumph; the film even has a Sia song play over its closing credits.

Perhaps an explanation for this is that it’s a picture for kids: but then, are kids really prepared to read subtitles? And this doesn’t explain the fact that Bell tries, at every turn, to make the men of the Altai Mountains look like sexist dinosaurs. Interviews with elderly guys, explaining how women should be at home, cooking and cleaning, is interspersed with close-ups of other male competitors looking vaguely annoyed as Aisholpan prepares to compete in the contest. But are they really reacting to her? Or is that just how their faces are naturally formed? The whoops and cheers that accompany her success would imply that their community is not nearly as backwards as Bell would have us believe. This is filmmaking that is perhaps best suited for the Discovery Channel, not the cinema.

Sam Gray

The Eagle Huntress does not have a UK release date yet.

For further information about the 60th London Film Festival visit here.

Read more reviews from the festival here.

Watch the trailer for The Eagle Huntress here:

More in Film festivals

“The movie’s whole goal is to provide trans kids a source of joy, a source of light and a source of safety”: Siobhan McCarthy and Nico Carney on She’s the He

Mae Trumata

Orwell: 2+2=5

Christina Yang

Nouvelle Vague: On the red carpet with Richard Linklater at London Film Festival 2025

Mae Trumata

Finding Optel

Christina Yang

Black Rabbit, White Rabbit

Christina Yang

Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery

Mae Trumata

One Woman One Bra

Mae Trumata

Lady

Ronan Fawsitt

Rental Family

Christopher Connor