In Dark Places
SAT APR 27 | 11am
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
New Zealand | English | Feature | 2018 | Directed by Michael Bennett | 99 min
In Dark Places is the moving true story of a 17 year-old New Zealand Māori man imprisoned for over 21 years for a crime he did not commit, and an ex-cop's heroic battle to win him freedom.
A Creation Story
SAT APR 27 | 1pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Short | 2018 | Youth Film | Directed by Susan Joy & Alexis Almightyvoice | 4 min
This story is based on an Elder’s story of creation that was passed down about the bear, buffalo, otter, eagle, mole and man & women.
Etatshimakant Aiasheu (The Legend of Aiasheu)
SAT APR 27 | 1pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | Inuktitut (w/ English subtitles) | Short | 2019 | Directed by Christine Poker | 39 min
From the Innu legends of Northern Labrador, a story of love and a son's revenge for a wrong done years ago.
SG̲aawaay Ḵ'uuna (Edge Of The Knife)
SAT APR 27 | 1pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | Haida (w/ English subtitles) | Feature | 2018 | Directed by Gwaai Edenshaw and Helen Haig-Brown | 99 min
Edge of the Knife is a 2018 Canadian drama film co-directed by Gwaai Edenshaw and Helen Haig-Brown. It is the first feature film spoken only in dialects of the Haida language. Set in 19th-century Haida Gwaii, it tells the classic Haida story of the traumatized and stranded man transformed to Gaagiixiid, the wildman.
Giant Bear
SAT APR 27 | 4pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | Inuktitut (w/ English subtitles) | Animation | 2018 | Directed by Daniel Gies & Neil Christopher | 12 min
ᓇᓄᕐᓗᒃ / Giant Bear A timeless Inuit legend about a solitary man, a giant bear and their daunting foes: each other. Centered on a confrontation between the last monster bear and an Inuit hunter, Giant Bear is a chilling short that brings an ancient story out of the North. In Giant Bear, we follow a hunter in the depths of starvation. The snow is thick, his dogs are mysteriously dying and food is nowhere to be found. A quest for answers leads him straight to a nanurluk, an iceberg-sized polar bear, setting up a “kill or be killed” battle that pits one man’s wits against a fearsome foe. A co-production between Taqqut Productions (Iqaluit) and e→d films (Montreal) this animated short film follows a lone Inuit hunter as he uses his wisdom, courage, and experience to find and confront his terrifying adversary -- a nanurluk (an iceberg-sized polar bear) in an epic battle for survival. Animated in a painterly, hybrid 2D and 3D style, some of the film was made using real time animation from Unity game engine, via the open source Scene Track plug-in. This traditional Inuit legend explores the power, beauty, and perils of nature through a meticulously handcrafted CG animation lens. The score, by composer Tyler Fitzmaurice in collaboration with singer Beatrice Deer, bassist Michael Felber, synth player Parker Shper, and electronic musician Greg Debicki (Woulg), features traditional northern singing techniques woven into an ethereal soundscape to bring the tundra to life.
Hant Quij Cöipaxi Hac (The Creation of The World)
SAT APR 27 | 4pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Mexico | Seri (w/ English subtitles) | Animation | 2019 | Directed by Antonio Coello | 10 min
The creation myth is adapted into an animated short film made by Seri Indigenous children and Elders.
BA'O - The Cannibal Giant
SAT APR 27 | 4pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Short | 2018 | Directed by Nick Dangeli | 7 min
A young girl sits with her grandmother around the campfire where she learns cultural stories.
Akornatsinniitut - Tarratta Nunaanni (Among Us - In The Land Of Our Shadows)
SAT APR 27 | 4pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Greenland | Greenlandic (w/ English subtitles) | Feature | 2017 | Directed by Marc Fussing Rosback | 93 min
This suspense-filled sci-fi adventure for all ages draws on Greenlandic culture, myth, folklore and legends, with a healthy dose of humour. When Nukappi (Casper Bach Zeeb) begins to have strange dreams he does not understand, he and his childhood friend Mio find themselves swept up in a world of Angakkoq (shaman), sorcerers, and evil spirits. When Nukappi is told he is one of the last remaining Angakkoq in Greenland, the stage is set for a future he never envisioned and a power he must learn to yield. After discovering the Tarratta Nunaanni, a dark parallel world that threatens their own, the guys become key players in an epic battle between good and evil with our reality hanging in the balance.
Don't Just Talk About It
SAT APR 27 | 7pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Documentary | 2019 | Directed by Cher Obediah | 32 min
Learning more and getting connected to my culture created as sense of alignment and belonging. I felt purposeful and afraid in a good way. I woke up one morning excited, hopped out of bed and said to myself “Don’t Just Talk About It!” and there it was...the title was gifted to me in my sleep. The project is filled with bits of information I wish I would have known sooner about my culture, about life and the power we have over our own patterned thinking.
My Lyric I Never Knew
SAT APR 27 | 7pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Short | 2019 | Directed by Nauzanin Knight | 9 min
SHERITA, a young Indigenous woman, and up-and-coming singer in Canada, who has emerged anew from a turbulent youth—one of drug abuse, and a violent romantic relationship which resulted in her comma and the forced adoption of her baby— is set to take the stage tomorrow with her new song called “My Lyric, I Never Knew”, about the child she never knew. Moments before she is to perform, she is seized with fear about whether she should reveal her vulnerabilities before the public, but while backstage, she sees the excitement in the eyes of a fan of hers, a NATIVE CHILD in the studio audience. Sherita takes the stage and performs her song of imaginations about how the tragic episode of her youth has resulted in a happier life than she would have been able to offer to “her Lyric” (daughter).
Falls Around Her
SAT APR 27 | 8pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Feature | 2018 | Directed by Darlene Naponse | 101 min
Exhausted by years of touring the world with her band, renowned Anishinaabe musician Mary (Tantoo Cardinal) comes home to Atikameksheng Anishnawbek First Nation in northern Ontario. She returns to the land to restore herself, but her past success makes her a commodity to some, and she finds it difficult to hide from the demands of the outside world. Her sister Betty (Tina Keeper) senses there may be more to Mary’s need for isolation and urges her to reconnect with family and old friends. As Mary gets out more and even starts dating, new possibilities arise. However, the past has a way of catching up, and when Mary starts to hear disturbing noises around her cabin, she becomes paranoid that someone may be after her. In spite of the trauma in Mary’s past, writer-director Darlene Naponse refuses a narrative of victimhood, and instead explores the multiple facets of resilience. Mary knows how to survive, but she also deserves to thrive — and that means gathering the ability to be open to the healing that comes from love, self-expression, family, community, and, especially, the land.
Okichitaw - Refeathering the Warrior
SUN APR 28 | 11:30am
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Documentary | 2019 | Directed by Meegwun Fairbrother | 55 min
A documentary film featuring the Plains Cree martial art Okichitaw and the man who assembled it all, Okimakahn George Lepine. Master George tells the story of his forty years of research into the ancient warfare techniques of his ancestors and how he structured Canada's first Indigenous martial art form. Featuring Elder Vern Harper and the Nehiyawak (worthy people) who practise Okichitaw, this documentary takes the audience on a journey of empowerment as students rediscover the gifts of their Indigenous culture and traditional teachings.
Sembradoras De Vida (Mothers of the Land)
SUN APR 28 | 1:15pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Peru | Spanish, Quechua (w/ English subtitles) | Documentary | 2019 | Directed by Álvaro & Diego Sarmiento | 74 min
Mothers of the Land accompanies five women from the Andean highlands in their daily struggle to maintain a traditional and organic way of working the land. In the Andean worldview, women and the earth are strongly interrelated. Both, a women’s body and the earth’s soil are capable of giving and nurturing life. In the context of an ever-growing industrialisation of agriculture, the use of chemical pesticides and genetically modified seeds it is women, who, connected to the earth through bonds of sisterhood, take on the role of protectors.
The Crossing
SUN APR 28 | 2:45pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
United Kingdom | Tibetan (w/ English subtitles) | Animation | 2018 | Directed by Chris Shaw | 5 min
Every year, hundreds of Tibetans make the perilous journey across the Himalayas, the world’s highest mountain range, into India - fleeing the persecution they face in their homeland, which has been occupied by China for more than 60 years.
Wiñaypacha (Eternity)
SUN APR 28 | 2:45pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Peru | Aymara (w/ English subtitles) | Feature | 2019 | Directed by Óscar Catacora | 87 min
Nestled over 5,000 metres above sea level a day’s journey from the nearest town, the modest farmhouse near the peaks of the Andes is the only place Willka and Phaxsi have called home. Elderly but still mobile, the couple tends to their beloved herd of sheep as they live a near-solitary existence of subsistence, with only themselves and their animals for company. As the passage of time and circumstance leave their lives hanging in a fragile balance, the couple yearn for their long-absent son to return home from the city. Wiñaypacha is a deeply emotional experience and features stunning cinematography that must be seen on the big screen. This landmark film is the first feature filmed entirely in the Aymara language and has swept awards at festivals around the world. The story of Willka and Phaxsi (Sun and Moon in Aymara) will touch your heart and soul.
Esperanza del Oriente (Hope of the East)
SUN APR 28 | 2:45pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Chile | Spanish (w/ English subtitles) | Documentary | 2013 | Directed by Patricia Albornoz | 12 min
The Esperanza del Oriente boat sets sail from Riberalta to provide medical care for the Indigenous people of the village of Portachuelo.
Territoire Ishkueu Territoire Femme (Ishkueu Territory Woman Territory)
SUN APR 28 | 4:30pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | French (w/ English subtitles) | Documentary | 2018 | Directed by Claude Hamel | 63 min
Eight native women storytellers, writers and poets performing live at the Atalukan Storytelling and Legends Festival in Mashtueiatsh (Pointe-Bleue), Quebec. Virginia Pésémapéo Bordeleau tells the genesis of her relations to the Bears; her paintings illuminate the documentary. Joséphine Bacon and Natasha Kanapé Fontaine give us their vision of the world while Marie-Andrée Gill delivers poems of brute force. Sonia Robertson, director of the festival, Alice Germain, adventure guide and Telesh Bégin, shaman, make us discover their territory while Kathia Rock offers beautiful chants in Innu and French.
Quilombo Mata Cavalo
SUN APR 28 | 4:30pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Brazil | Portuguese (w/ English subtitles) | Documentary | 2018 | Directed by Jurandir Amaral | 16 min
In quilombo Mata Cavalo, quilombolas residents of six communities resist to preserve their cultural traits, maintain community integration and conquer the regularization of lands inherited from their ancestors.
Three Feathers
SUN APR 28 | 7pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Short | 2018 | Directed by Carla Ulrich | 44 min
When harm is done, justice must heal. After committing a shocking crime that devastates the innocence of their small community, Flinch, Bryce and Rupert are sent to live on the land for 9 months to explore the power of restorative justice. The Elders reconnect them to a life that was taken from them long ago, but it’s up to the boys to acquire the humility needed to return home and face their past.
This showing will be followed by a panel.
Out of Nothing
SUN APR 28 | 9pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada |English | Documentary | 2018 | Directed by Alexandra Lazarowich & Janna Kyllastinen | 15 min
This experimental documentary examines parallels between Western science’s “Big Bang” and the creation story of the Shinnecock Nation to engage with the ever fascinating question: “Where do we come from?”
Fast Horse
SUN APR 28 | 9pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Documentary | 2018 | Directed by Alexandra Lazarowich | 13 min
FAST HORSE is a rare look at the world of bareback horse racing through the experience of one Siksika horseman, Alison RedCrow, as he strives to build a team and take on the best riders in the Blackfoot Confederacy. This old tradition is alive and well.
Just One Word
SUN APR 28 | 10pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Short | 2017 | Directed by Jani Lauzon| 12 min
Kim Morin is a successful Metis lawyer surrounded by luxury, security and Contemporary Native Art. Inner peace? Not so much. Kim needs things to be perfect. She wants the wrongs in her community and her family to be right. So when she finally tracks down her half-sister Asha who is scarred from years of foster care, carrying bundles of abandonment issues and drinking like a fish, Kim brings out the old Just One Word board game she loved as a child and makes her “to die for” cupcakes. Kim’s plan? An intervention for Asha using the board game Just One Word. But Kim and Asha’s idea of a party are as far apart as the upbringing they both experienced. So when Asha arrives for the party with her own personal supply of scotch and beer chasers, Kim’s vision of a smooth and successful intervention soon being to unravel as she discovers that Asha is not the only one who has issues that need healing and not even a board game and love filled cupcakes may be enough to help reconcile generations of pain.
Moa Ma Le Pinko (Chicken and Bingo)
SUN APR 28 | 10pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
New Zealand | English | Short | 2018 | Directed by Amberley Jo Aumua, Courtney Montour & Jesse Littlebird | 7 min
Two random strangers at a cemetery have an unlikely connection recounting the deaths of their loved ones and sharing stories of chicken and bingo. Moa Ma Le Pinko was created as part of the third Native Slam, bringing international Indigenous directors together in a 72-hour film challenge.
Dirt McComber: Last Of The Mohicans
MON APR 29 | 1pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Documentary | 2018 | Directed by Ryan White & Joanne Storkan | 73 min
Eric “Dirt” McComber is a rugged individualist who provides for his large family by hunting and fishing the Kahnawake Mohawk Territory near Montreal. But he must straddle two worlds to accomplish his many business, family, and societal functions. Adding to this is his passion and dedication to the sport of lacrosse, not just because of its modern-day significance, but also because it is the spiritual practice founded by his ancestors, the Iroquois of North America, who for centuries played the game to honor the Creator as well as for the wellness of their native communities. Life was running smoothly, and through bartering and selling their food at powwows, the McCombers were able to maintain a good lifestyle. But when disaster struck, and struck hard, Dirt’s entire way of living and supporting his family were threatened. The McCombers are now forced to reevaluate their way of living and become even more resilient during a harsh Quebec winter as well as prioritize what is truly important to them.
Speaking to their Mother
MON APR 29 | 3pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Documentary | 1992 | Directed by Marjorie Beaucage | 6 min
During the summer of 1992 Marjorie Beaucage invited artist Rebecca Belmore to bring her performative artwork Ayum-ee-aawach Oomama-mowan: Speaking to Their Mother to the Mother Earth Wiggins Bay Blockade in Northern Saskatchewan.
Naketuenita (Respect)
MON APR 29 | 4pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Documentary | 2018 | Directed by Kent Martin | 62 min
The Innu Nation were among the last nomadic people in North America. They homeland was a vast territory called Nitassinan in Labrador Pressured by the Church and Governments the Innu were settled into communities in the middle of the 20th Century Then the Churchill Falls Hydro Project flooded vast areas of their land without permission. Their communities fell apart and into despair. Now the Innu are taking back control of their land, government, schools, social services and their resources which are overseen by the Environmental Guardians. This film tells their story.
The Blackfeet Flood
MON APR 29 | 5:30pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
United States | English | Documentary | 2018 | Directed by Torsten Kjellstrand & Ben Shors | 27 min
Butch New Breast left The Blackfeet Reservation in 1964 when a flood washed away his home, his parents and sister. He returns 50 years later "to see if I can still get that feeling, like I am Blackfeet.”
MA'OHI NUI, in the heart of the ocean my country lies
MON APR 29 | 7pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Belgium | French (w/ English subtitles) | Documentary | 2018 | Directed by Annick Ghijzelings | 112 min
Tahiti, French Polynesia. Between the runway of the international airport and a small mound of earth lies a district called the Flamboyant. Over there, one says ""district "" as not to say ""shantytown"". There is another face of contemporary colonisation born of the thirty years of French nuclear tests in Polynesia. By confronting the Ma'ohi spirit with its nuclear history and its fractured existence, the film shows the face of contemporary colonisation and the vital impetus of a people trying not to forget themselves and who, silently, are seeking the path of independence.
Beyond Climate
MON APR 29 | 9:30pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Documentary | 2018 | Directed by Ian Mauro | 40 min
Narrated by David Suzuki, Beyond Climate explores the human and environmental impacts of climate change in British Columbia, and is a timely contribution to the province and country as we grapple with climate change, the paramount issue of our time.
Living Culture Speaking Truth Language Revitalization in our Communities
TUES APR 30 | 1:30pm
Metro Cinema, 8712 109 St NW
Canada | English | Documentary |2018 | Directed by Mike Black, Petie Chalifoux, Alex Lazarowich & Roxann Whitebean | 38 min
Today there are 70 Indigenous languages in Canada, many of which have seen a decline in transmission from generation to generation. “Living Culture, Speaking Truth: Language revitalization in our communities” is an insightful documentary that looks through the lens of 7 Indigenous communities who have taken initiative by employing their own unique strategies, challenging this decline and are on the forefront of strengthening and revitalizing their languages. In uplifting, inspiring accounts of resiliency, these communities epitomize the value and significance language has on the Indigenous People’s of Canada.