Pre-production Murnau was coming off two troubled
Fox Studios productions,
Four Devils (1928) and
City Girl (1930), while Flaherty's Native American documentary
Acoma the Sky City had been shut down. The two directors knew each other through Flaherty's brother David, and Murnau expressed a desire to make a film in
Tahiti with Flaherty who had experience with the natives there. Murnau and Flaherty wrote a story called
Turia and started their own production company, Flaherty-Murnau Productions.
Turia was based on a legend Flaherty had heard while working on
W. S. Van Dyke's
White Shadows in the South Seas (1928) and contained many elements which would later evolve into
Tabu: A Story of the South Seas. Murnau visited Tahiti in May 1929 and was joined by Flaherty a month later to scout for locations on the nearby island of Bora Bora. To cut costs, Murnau sent the Hollywood crew home and trained the natives to work as the crew. He also scrapped plans to shoot the film in colour and changed to black and white. The film's script was rewritten and the title was changed to
Tabu: A Story of the South Seas to avoid potential legal issues with Colorart. This was the start of a poor working relationship between Flaherty and Murnau. Flaherty disliked the new script, feeling it was overly plotted and Westernized.
Production Production began in January 1930, with Flaherty directing the opening scene of the film. This would be the only scene he directed. Flaherty began having technical problems, as his camera was causing the film to rip. He called in cinematographer Floyd Crosby for help and the rest of the film was shot by Crosby. Murnau, Flaherty, and Crosby were the only professional filmmakers working on
Tabu: A Story of the South Seas; the rest of the crew was made up of local natives. Flaherty worked on the story with Murnau during production, but he was not the co-director as he originally thought he would be. He spent most of his time on the film working in the lab developing the film. Flaherty disliked Murnau immensely because of this and the arrogance and selfishness Murnau displayed during production.
Post-production Production finished in October 1930. Flaherty had been living on only $40 a week and was broke by the end of the shoot. A couple of days after the wrap, Flaherty sold his share of the film to Murnau for $25,000. Returning to Los Angeles, Murnau spent the winter editing the film and used the last of his money to hire
Hugo Riesenfeld for the music scoring. The distribution rights were sold to
Paramount for five years for a sum of $75,000, which helped Murnau pay off Flaherty. He died in a car crash shortly before the movie’s premiere ==Release and reception==