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First peoples' cinema and vidéo !

From June 10 to 22

Cinéma ONF 1564,Saint-Denis Street

Complete schedule of films and videos


 
A caterpillar squirming in its cocoon
Seymour Polatkin (portrayed by Evan Adams) is a famed, admired poet, but not be a prophet among his own people. His success and lifestyle - Seymour is gay - make him suspect in the eyes of his best friend Aristotle Joseph who still lives on the reserve. Business of Fancy Dancing, a feature film written and directed by Sherman Alexie, focuses uneasy existence of many First Nations youth. Seymour has pulled ahead of the pack and overcome the statistics of despair too often found in Amerindian communities (record dropout rates, illiteracy, unemployment, etc.) only to become a pariah hero, at once admired and suspected of contempt for his roots.
Justin, the young hero of Moccasin Flats, directed by Randy Redroad, believes he can escape from the Regina ghetto by winning a scholarship to study in Vancouver. But he will also have to learn alongside a reality that raises its head despite all his efforts. Produced by the dynamic Big Soul production company, as part of a film professions teaching program, this video has proven so attractive that it will be the basis of a new TV drama series to air on APTN. Filmgoers will recall that Randy Redroad directed Doe Boy, the feature film that took the Teuikan grand prize at First Peoples' Festival 2002). Landon Montour from Kahnawake (whose video will also be featured at First Peoples' Festival 2003) co-stars as Jonathan. This story reminds us that hope is close at hand and a new guard is emerging, determined to overcome obstacles and succeed.
But the best of lessons don't always have a happy end
American Indian Movement activist Annie May Aquash was found dead in the desert with her hands cut off so her body couldn't be identified. Many years afterwards, Catherine Martin looks back at the fate of her Mi'gmaq compatriot. Martin's documentary Spirit of Annie May takes an unflinching look at a tumultuous period and questions not only the FBI's political subterfuge but also the machismo found in activist groups.
Fighting to Survive

Activist film continues to document the struggles for First Peoples' rights that haven't been fully secured anywhere on our planet.
Alanis Obomsawin asks the Mi'gmaq community in Burnt Church the question Is the Crown at War with us? at the height of the lobster war.
Never-ending commitment
First peoples' never-ending resistance and patience, the effort to survive and regain lost ground is a virtue passed on from generation to generation. The elders' example remains a source of inspiration in life as in film.
Rebirth of Nations
In Je suis Tu es l'invention des Jivaros, a production in the tradition of the top-flight productions created for the ARTE network, the director starts out by questioning an invented tradition and takes the path to discovery of a people's current reality. Yves de Peretti has blazed an original trail based on a very personal obsession. This journey took him far from his home base to encounter an indigenous American culture.

The Australian film Explorations is a series of fictional short subjects filmed by young Aboriginal filmmakers with a full array of resources at their disposal. Its opening slot at First Peoples' Festival 2003 did not come by chance. New perspectives open up as imaginative worldviews long relegated to the sidelines of cultural production take front and centre. Providing First Peoples youth the means to affirm their original outlook is now an imperative and should be given the energy and the resources this task warrants - here and now
Schedule for Films and videos

June 2003

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Alphabetic search:

7 Fires 4 U… Kitchi Manitou
Anaana (Mother)
Attache ta tuque !
Blood River
Bow and the Lyre (The)
Business of Fancy Dancing (The)
Bunddle in Good Standing
Century of genocide in the americas (A)
Ceux qui attendent
Changing Ground
Comme des Pommes
Is the crown at war with us ?
Day she Paid (The)
De Huron à Wendat: l'expansion
Dread (The) by Merata Mita
Enfants de Kitcisakik (Les)
EXPLORATIONS Confesions of a Headhunter
EXPLORATIONS Harry's War
EXPLORATIONS Road
EXPLORATIONS Wind

Fire on the horizon
Fragments
Inuk Woman city blues
K'anchariy: Enciendiendo la Luz del Espiritu
Kikkik El-472
Kinja Iakaha, One day in the village
Laurel
Mocassin Flats
Natalie of Wood
Native Youth Movement
Only the Devil speaks Cree
Pito o te Henua : Rapatanui (The) by Merata Mita
Rescuing the Rupert
Rez Robics / Rezrobics for the couch patato skins
Rooster Rock: The story of Serpent River
Shit Skin
Shoo Na - Tule Boat
Si le temps le permet
Song of the Earth
Spirit of Annie Mae (The)
Spirit of the game
Story of Mitiarjuk (The)
Sur les traces de Riel
Take Back the Land
Thorn Grass
Tout un monde à découvrir: La journée nationale des autochtones et le festival "Terres en vues"
Trial of Poundmaker (The)
Tu es, je suis ou l'invention des Jivaros
Ùraga
We Speak Against Injustice (Palabras Zapatistas Contra La Injusticia)
Whapmagoostui Art Factory
White Buffalo Returns (The)
Young Enough


 
Merata Mita retrospective

Claude-Jutra auditorium and the NFB theatre

Price, schedule and program available at the festival site

June 12-22


Merata Mia's film catalogue can read like a tour along the beaches of Aoteora (New Zealand) where the ocean comes to nourish the daydreams of a solitary wayfarer contemplating pebbles and seashells, fragments of civilisations cast adrift, seaweed and oil slicks, pensive drowning victims and multicoloured debris. Beachcombers can find heroic contemporary struggles against racism and apartheid with the sound of boots and cries of hope (Patu), rebuilding the legendary Maori boats that made it possible to colonise the Pacific islands (Mana Waka); ancient Easter Island ceremonies (Te Pito o Te Henua Rapanui); Maori drum (Te Pahu). And the reggae sounds of the Rastifarians (Dread), jazz and the existential questions of modern man in an artist's body of work (Hotere). In short, a universe smashed and reassembled in a maritime mosaic. A vast panorama that could hold the polyphony of worlds and seas in a great conch shell.
Nanook of the North

At the Cinémathèque québécoise, salle Claude-Jutra,

June 11th at 8:30 p.m


A classic can only become a classic if it still has meaning long after its creation. What more can be said about Robert Flaherty's masterpiece, Nanook of the North? This film's powerful imagery continues to cast its spell. The astounding story behind its filming, and the extraordinary efforts needed to complete this work, have made Nanook a major turning point in the history of cinema.
The spellbinding sounds of throat singers Sylvia Cloutier and June Shappa, seeming to emanate from within, act as a counterpoint to piano improvisations. Through her training in theatre and dance, Sylvia Cloutier has developed a creative spirit of openness and a listening ability to develop a stunning universe in sound. She and her colleague have mastered the astonishing art of throat singing. They pass it along as they have received it, with respect and dignity. By combining this art form with Thibaudeau's music and Flaherty's breathtaking imagery, they enable viewers to experience the excitement of the hunt, the exhaustion of a long journey or rest after a hard day's work almost from within.

 

Adresses Montreal's First Peoples' Festival 2003

 

Émilie-Gamelin park, corner of Sainte-Catherine Street and Berri Street

NFB Cinema, 1564, Saint-Denis Street

Cinémathèque québécoise, 335, de Maisonneuve blvd East

Kateri Hall, Kahnawake

Usine C, 1345, Lalonde Street

Bibliothèque nationale, Saint-Sulpice building, 1700, Saint-Denis Street

Belvédère Kondiaronk, mount Royal

 

 

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