Shortly after, almost simultaneously on the other side of the world, another branch of documentary filmmaking strayed away from politics and explored entertainment, bringing new experiences and exotic lands to easily accessible outlets. Robert J. Flaherty, an American filmmaker, presented the last frontiers and anthropological view one of the last remaining primitive people, the Inuit people in Nanook of the North (1922). Nanook of the North is considered the first feature-length documentary.