catalogue - Moving Images Distribution
Transcription
catalogue - Moving Images Distribution
CATALOGUE Autumn | 2011 PA S S I O N AT E MEMORABLE R E L E VA N T 511 West 14th Avenue, Suite 103, Vancouver, B.C. V5Z 1P6 Tel: 800 684 3014 | Fax: 604 684 7165 | www.movingimages.ca ABOUT US Moving Images Distribution is marking its 32nd year of providing access to quality Canadian independent film and video productions. Many of the works in this catalogue have won awards. Many of them inspire creativity, provoke thought and encourage discussion, relevant for use both in education and an arts milieu. Please visit our new online catalogue at www.movingimages.ca for a complete list of works in distribution, with indexing by title, director and subject. We can also privide files for digital preview upon request. Moving Images Distribution is not-for-profit in structure and strives to link artists and audiences through a variety of intense distribution, presentation and outreach efforts. We gratefully acknowledge support and assistance from The Canada Council for the Arts (Media Arts Section and Office of Audience and Market Development) and from The British Columbia Arts Council. Questions? Call our North American toll-free line: 800.684.3014. The office is open Monday to Friday, from 8:30 to 4:30 Pacific time. You can also reach us by e-mail: mailbox@movingimages.ca but for timesensitive inquiries, we recommend contact by phone. ABOUT THIS CATALOGUE The films in this catalogue are what we’ve selected to present for viewing at the autumn showcases in Alberta or Ontario. We’ve grouped titles in the catalogue in sections and sub-section encompassing areas where the works would find the most use in an educational context. These are listed in the Table of Contents; but since many of the films have multiple areas of use and cross curriculum, please observe the “See also” notations at the end of sections or sub-sections. Where the “See also” notations include titles that appear in the New Releases Supplement, the page number is designated by the notation NRS. A Title Index at the back will help you find specific films quickly. Everything in the catalogue is available in DVD format. Prices shown here include public performance rights for circulating use in school districts, colleges and universities. Please inquire about other pricing levels for the following: rental for presentation in front of an audience, purchase for public performance use for single schools or non-profit organizations, purchase for circulating home use for public libraries. Licensing for digital delivery to password-protected sites or for continuous exhibition in galleries or museums may also be negotiated upon request. Moving Images Distribution Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 1 Cover Images Top: ...And This Is My Garden, p. 20 Middle (L-R): Travelling Medicine Show, p. 23; SAMAQAN: Water Stories, p. 28; Cry Rock, p. 29 Bottom: growing up among strangers, p. 34 2 Moving Images Distribution Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 CONTENTS Animation........................................................................................4 Arts.................................................................................................7 Cinema Studies........................................................................7 Dance.......................................................................................11 Music & Performance..............................................................11 Theatre....................................................................................13 Visual Arts................................................................................13 Education.........................................................................................20 English Language Arts & Media Literacy.......................................22 English Literature & Philosophy.....................................................24 Environmental Studies & Geography.............................................26 Agriculture & Sustainability...................................................26 Forestry....................................................................................26 Urban Planning.......................................................................27 Water.......................................................................................28 First Nations & Indigenous People.................................................29 Guidance & Values..........................................................................33 Bullying....................................................................................33 Careers.....................................................................................33 Cultural Diversity.....................................................................33 Ethics........................................................................................35 Family Relationships...............................................................36 Health Sciences & Social Work.......................................................37 Addiction.................................................................................37 Disability..................................................................................37 Eating Disorders......................................................................38 Healing & Mental Health........................................................38 Homelessness...........................................................................40 Hospice Care............................................................................40 Medicine..................................................................................41 Sexual Assault..........................................................................42 Youth Violence........................................................................42 History..............................................................................................43 Holocaust.................................................................................43 North American history..........................................................43 Internment..............................................................................45 War history..............................................................................46 Social Sciences.................................................................................47 Gender & Sexuality.................................................................47 Globalization...........................................................................48 Human Rights & International Relations...............................48 International Development....................................................49 Women’s Studies.............................................................................50 Title Index........................................................................................52 www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 3 ANIMATION Amma Brücke A lovingly hand-drawn animation of a young girl’s life and her magical connection to her grandmother. The life of a First World War veteran and the climate of a forgotten time are poetically showcased in Brücke. His quest to find where he once felt whole through his passion leads him to forge far depths on his own terms. This film was inspired by the Verism artistic movement of Germany in the 1920s. 6:00 • 2008 • $150 Aparna Kapur The Art of Drowning 2:00 • 2009 • • $140 Diego MacLean Talented animation from Diego MacLean meets the poetic talent of American poet Billy Collins to ponder the possibilities of those last few moments of life. The film is a visual interpretation of the poem by Billy Collins. Diego MacLean is a graduate of Emily Carr University of Art + Design. Billy Collins is a distinguished professor at Lehman College and the City University of New York and was named U.S. Poet Laureate from 2001 to 2003. Basic Space 3:00 • 2011 • $120 Carrie Mombourquette Basic Space explores the reality of sharing a small apartment with a less-than-ideal roommate. Traditional techniques merge with digital technology in this papercraft animation. Stopmotion techniques with paper models and puppets were painstakingly photographed, printed and cut out to create a tactile work employing a mixture of live-action and animation. 4:00 • 2011 • $120 Kristen Turcotte A Case of Rape 3:30 • 2009 • $120 Jonathan Amitay Coloured sand is used in stop-motion animation to interpret the variety of emotions stemming from a story of sexual assault that was told to the animator by a friend. ¡Císcalo císcalo diablo panzón! 5:30 • 2006 • $150 Amanda Wallace/Antonio Cerdán Studio Kinétika With music and no dialogue, this chalk pastel animation brings to life a traditional Mexican Holy Week celebration. An old artisan readies the main attraction, and soon his fireworks explode in the night sky. No one could be happier than the artisan himself until his final creation, a great papier-mâché devil, refuses to be lit. This fanciful animation emphasizes the imagination and ingenuity behind an age-old festivity. Dancing with Northern Lights 2:30 • 2009 • $120 Jonathan Amitay Traditional dances of Canada’s First Nations people and the wondrous spectacle of northern lights are the inspiration for this coloured sand stop-motion animation by one of Canada’s most gifted animators. 4 Moving Images Distribution Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 ANIMATION Dinner Parade Nature on its Course Dinner Parade is an animated narrative that takes the viewer through fluid metaphors portraying consumption, both as the theme and protagonist. Although consumption is an abstract concept, the characters embody this concept by devouring or consuming different scenarios, spanning from Darwinism and survival of the fittest to interrelationships and corporate hierarchies. Nature on its Course is a short mixed-media animation about a careless hunter who takes more than he needs. It’s a reminder to viewers to respect their environment and not to underestimate the forces of nature. 2:30 • 2009 • $120 Gillian Cole For You, My People 4:30 • 2007 • $150 Jose Pablo Gonzalez Senator Salvador Barrera believes he is a man of the people, a politician favoured by everyone. But one day, his apparent compassionate public persona has to confront his false promises through a series of flashbacks into the populace’s miserable lives. John’s Untilted Clock 4:00 • 2007 • $130 Mi-Hyang (Shine) Park Using pencil on paper and 2-D computer animation, Shine Park creates a surrealistic depiction of how one’s character is influenced by interactions with others. Key Tumi? 7:00 • 2008 • $150 Kunal Sen Caramel custard, ping pong and potty all play an important role in this charming animation about a young Indian boy exploring where he came from as he prepares for the performance of a lifetime. In his film, Key Tumi?, Kunal Sen creates a modern idiom for the contemporary Indian family. This playful story has its roots in actual events, spanning 40 years and two generations. 2:30 • 2009 • $120 Su-An Ng Nothing Like Her 8:00 • 2009 • $150 Seana Kozar Single Handed Films English and French subtitles available 3-D animation, stop motion and digital painton-glass techniques are combined in this short film-within-a-film about how a disabled animator’s understanding of her life and work changes after she suffers a miscarriage. Peter & the Space Between 4:00 • 2011 • Sitji Chou • $120 It is difficult for Peter to create human connections with others. He has rationalized this through distorted scientific logic and because of this, ironically alienates those around him in the process. This animated short is about the difficulties of communication, its effect on relationships, and how one’s internal can become distorted. Much of the animation was in PhotoShop with the lasso tool and composited in After Effects. The stop-motion clouds are made of cotton and composited in, and the rock is made of drawn textures that were scanned in and masked. Emily Carr University of Art + Design: President’s Award 2011 Labyrinth 8:30 • 2008 • $190 Patrick Jenkins Night-time at a detective agency: a knock at the door, a mysterious stranger, an enigmatic locket, two shadowy figures and beings from the afterlife—this paint-on-glass animation by Patrick J enkins weaves a spellbinding exploration of the fantastic that is reminiscent of the writing of Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges. www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 5 ANIMATION Ray Condo’s Crazy Mixed Up World 4:00 • 2010 • $150 Deb Dawson This charming and lively animation by Vancouver artist Deb Dawson pays tribute to the genius of the late Canadian musician commonly known as Ray Condo (1950-2004). Born as Ray Tremblay, he grew up in Ottawa and worked as a visual artist before moving to music, playing with the bands the Hardrock Goners in Montreal and, later, the Ricochets in Vancouver. With a style of music that embraced jazz, roots, country and western swing, Ray Condo developed a strong following of fans in North America and Europe. Remnants 2:00 • 2011 • $120 Sarah OuYang In a dark, baroque-inspired mansion lined with extravagant and bizzare ornaments, a young girl succumbs to the allure of embellished beauty and heedlessly reconstructs herself into a human doll. Remnants was made using traditional animation methods with both hand-drawn frames and digitally-composed colours and textures. Stillwaters “What Are You Anyways?” 11:00 • 2005 • $150 Jeff Chiba Stearns/Ruth Vincent meditating bunny studio Jeff Chiba Stearns explores his cultural backgrounds growing up a mix of Japanese and Caucasian in the small Canadian city of Kelowna, B.C. This short, classically animated film looks at particular periods in Jeff’s life where he battled with finding an identity as a half-minority—from his childhood origins to the epic showdown against the monster truck-drivin’ redneck crew. It is a humourous yet serious story of struggle and love and finding one’s identity through the trials and tribulations of growing up. Yellow Sticky Notes 6:00 • 2007 • $120 Jeff Chiba Stearns meditating bunny studio Blinded by overwhelming “to do” lists, a manic animator re-examines his life by drawing on over 2300 4x6-inch yellow sticky notes with only a black ink pen—a small internal reflection on his role as an artist manifests into a discussion about major political and environmental crises all told through the medium that once threatened to consume him. 3:40 • 2007 • $130 Andrew Ford In this computer animation, a bird-napping competitor learns the hard way that his elderly victim does more with his time than just feed his animals. Tree for Two 6:30 • 2006 • $150 Joel Furtado A quick-tempered witch moves into her new treetop home, only to find its lush setting a little too cheerful for her liking. While she makes a day of scorching her surroundings, her dejected dog explores the nearby wood and encounters the more likable magic of an elderly neighbour. That night a battle ensues as the old man tries to undo the witch’s destruction. This fantastical film combines 2-D and state-of-the-art 3-D animation. See also: 12 TAKES.......................................................................................... 13 Cry Rock........................................................................................... 29 Oh Me 2: a case of BiPolar DisOrder.............................................. 39 One Big Hapa Family....................................................................... 34 Best Animated Production, Best 3-D Animation, Best Character Design, Canadian Awards for the Electronic and Animated Arts (Student Category); Grand Prize Winner, Reveal ’06 – Canadian 3D Animation Showdown; 2006 Digital Art Awards, Keio Research Institute (Tokyo) – Grand Prize, Cinema category. 6 Moving Images Distribution Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 ARTS Cinema Studies • Dance • Music & Performance • Theatre • Visual Arts CINEMA STUDIES Apart 7:30 • 2009 • $150 Richard Martin Avant-garde filmmaker Richard Martin creates an atmospheric meditation, a cinematic poem on rain. Views of Vancouver, seen through tracks of rain on glass, combined with a powerful yet subtle sound design, create an experience that is both soothing and unsettling. Brain Clever 4:30 • 2009 • $150 Lulu Keating Red Snapper Films China is the largest manufacturer in the world, and English translations of Chinese instructions often say more about the culture than they do about the product. This is evident with the “Hand-Pressing Flashlight,” a practical flashlight that requires no batteries. The instructions, titled “Product Characteristics,” offer more than any tool can deliver. Filmmaker Lulu Keating brings these instructions to life, creating a land of extremes, in which Industrial Man travels from winter to meet Environment Woman in the glory of summer. The two opposites collide in a perfect union, brought together by the innocuous “Hand-Pressing Flashlight.” Dawson Town Melted Down 6:00 • 2007 • $100 Lulu Keating Red Snapper Films “1,300 people, 2,000 dogs. Why did you move to Dawson City, Yukon?” Lulu Keating seeks to answer that by creating this playful portrait of her new hometown. Just what is real in this frontier town? Certainly not the buildings with their false fronts, claiming to be what they aren’t. Kim Beggs’ song describes this spiritual place where the narrator’s heart, “a frost-heaved ground” is melted down. Most of the film was shot on 16mm high-contrast negative film with a Bolex wind-up camera and hand-processed. www.movingimages.ca Dog=God 4:00 • 2009 • $160 Karen Hines/Lulu Keating A girl loves dogs. She wants to be one. Shot on location in Dawson City and on Manitoulin Island, Dog=God is an experimental, musical, ecstatic ode to dogs and those who both master and worship them. Filmed on Super 8, it began as an experiment in creative geography woven together with the yearning melodies of acclaimed Yukon singer/ songwriter Kim Beggs. The Films of Frank Cole 2010 • $250 Francis Miquet Necessary Illusions Productions Frank Cole (1954-2000) was an award-winning Canadian documentary filmmaker who became the first North American to cross the Sahara Desert alone on camel from the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea, earning him a place in the Guinness Book of World Records. His documentary Life Without Death chronicled this 1990 solo crossing and won him several prestigious awards as well as being released theatrically in Paris. In 2000, Cole returned to cross the Sahara again, and was found in October, murdered by bandits outside Timbuktu. Frank’s editor and colleague, Francis Miquet of Necessary Illusions Productions, has created a tribute to Frank Cole and his work in this DVD. It includes Frank’s two feature documentaries: Life Without Death (83:00, 2000) and A Life (75:00, 1987), along with two short works, The Mountenays (22:00, 1982) and A Documentary (12:00, 1979). A ten-page booklet of personal recollections of Frank Cole, written by his long-time friend Francis Miquet, is included with the DVD. FALL 2011 7 ARTS Forever Independent: Films by Lulu Keating 52:00 • 2007 • $395 Lulu Keating Red Snapper Films One of Canada’s most prolific and dynamic filmmakers serves up a potpourri of short films she made between 1980 and 2005. Her personal narratives are creative yet accessible, filled with insight and humour and employing a variety of techniques including animation, hand-processing and optical printing. The director is an instructor as well as a filmmaker, and in an extras section, she shares what was learned in making each film with comments that are informative, encouraging and inspiring. This compilation includes: Lulu’s Back in Town (2:00), The Jabberwock (3:00), Funny Things People Can do to Themselves (5:00), City Survival (25:00), Ladies in Waiting (9:00), All Things Nice (4:30) and Inside Out (3:45) Her Man Plan 5:00 • 2010 • $150 Lulu Keating Stephanie always knew the time would come when she would need a man to father her children. From her isolated northern cabin in the Yukon, she hitches up her dog team to fetch her man of choice. But on the frozen Yukon River, she is ambushed by the man who has chosen her. Johnny Tootall 93:00 • 2005 • • $275 Shirley Cheechoo/Danielle Prohom Olson In this feature drama, Johnny Tootall, a soldier discharged from the Bosnian War, is haunted by the murder of a young boy. He also carries other demons—leaving the love of his life, the death of his father and his departure from destiny as Chief of his Band. Upon his return home, Johnny is greeted by a new war—his estranged brother is leading a revolt to save their sacred land. The dilemma for Johnny is whether to fight to save his people or concentrate on saving himself. His journey guides him to realize that they are the same. 8 Moving Images Distribution Mahjong & Chicken Feet 47:00 • 2008 • $350 Jacqueline Levitin Soleil Films A group of men in a variety store in Harbin, China candidly discuss a foreigner with a camera amongst them, assuming she doesn’t understand Chinese and forgetting that her camera is recording. Later in Kaifeng, miles to the south, the woman noses her camera into people’s homes, searching for traces of the city’s 1,000-year-old Jewish settlement, while her guide attempts to render her questions polite in translation. The woman is Jacqueline Levitin, filmmaker and professor in Film and Women’s Studies at Simon Fraser University. Her parents and grandparents emigrated to America from Harbin, Manchuria, and she returned to China to seek out traces of her family’s past. Out of reach of the Tsar’s pogroms, the vibrant Russian Jewish Community they belonged to also thrived in Manchuria. A cultured, European-leaning community, these 20th century Jews were unaware of another Chinese Jewish community that long preceded them—the 1,000year-old community of Kaifeng in the heart of ancient imperial China. “The spontaneity of Levitin’s camerawork draws the viewer headlong into the world of the film, revealing the mindset of a people normally inscrutable to westerners. Mahjong & Chicken Feet leaves one feeling one has truly been somewhere, seeing and hearing remarkable human stories.” – Caroline Leaf, Academy Award nominated filmmaker Overview 9:00 • 2011 • $160 Richard Martin A fixed camera observes the city from the perspective of a mysterious time and place. Through translucent glass bricks, it observes the movements of the city—people walking and shifting patterns of light. The emotive and effective use of sound in this work creates a potent and evocative exploration of memory and the subconscious. The sounds of children at play echo from afar as horses on cobblestone echo from another era. The sounds merge with a piano score as pedestrians and machinery add their own chorus, subsiding to syncopation of rain and thunder—all to create a kaleidoscopic experience of a city from beneath. Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 ARTS SAVAGE 6:00 • 2009 • $170 Lisa Jackson/Lauren Grant/Lori Lozinski Clique Pictures This award-winning short drama, directed by Lisa Jackson, comes out of a project called “The Embargo Collective,” a project of Toronto’s imagineNATIVE Festival. A group of seven international Indigenous filmmakers interested in collaboration and open to artistic challenge were brought together and asked to construct a set of obstructions that would encourage each of them to push their creative boundaries in making a short film. Two common principles prevailed: the theme was patience, and the films were to contain no spoken English. Documentary filmmaker Lisa Jackson was asked to create a musical that would include heavy metal, set decoration, and include both actors and non-actors. SAVAGE is the result. It’s late summer in the 1950s, and a young Native girl is on her way to residential school. A Cree woman in her kitchen sings a lullaby in her native language. When the girl arrives at her destination, she undergoes a transformation that turns the woman’s gentle voice into a howl of anger and pain. Once installed in the residential school, life is stern and there aren’t many chances to be a kid… except when no one is watching. “Co-opting the denigrating term ‘savage’ for the title, Lisa Jackson turns the tables on the language of colonization and captures our attention. Meeting creative challenges posed in a powerful way and then dubbing the resulting film as ‘a residential school musical,’ turns our heads again. Without trivializing a dark part of Canada’s history, SAVAGE invites the viewer to reconsider residential schools in a way that pushes the boundaries of thought. While exploring creative perimeters, the film muses on the capacity of children to harness the power of imagination as shelter from the most unpleasant of circumstances.” - Sylvia Jonescu Lisitza Awards: 2011 Genie Award for Best Live Action Short Drama; 2010 Yorkton International Short Film Festival: Golden Sheaf Award for Best Multicultural Film; 2010 Leo Awards: Best Actress (Skeena Reece) and Best Editing (Hart Snider and Brendan Woollard). Storytellers in motion: Series One, Two & Three Jeff Bear/Marianne Jones/Kristy Assu Storytelling is a cultural cornerstone for Indigenous people around the world. Three series celebrate the achievements of Indigenous storytellers as they consider their place in mainstream culture. Most are Canadian, and they range in age from their 20s to 70s. They work in a range of media that includes photography, screenwriting, directing, acting, producing, print journalism, broadcast, network news, documentary filmmaking and video art. Two longer episodes move beyond Canada to celebrate the works of Indigenous filmmakers in the Pacific (Hawaii) and New Zealand and introduces the concept of “fourth cinema.” Please see our Storytellers in motion series brochures for descriptions of each episode. SERIES ONE Series price: $1800 (12 DVDs) Single episode prices as listed below The Indigenous Voice 24:00 • $175 Out of the Shadow: Christine Welsh 24:00 • $175 Hunkpapa Woman: Dana Claxton 24:00 • $175 Culture Shock in Alert Bay: Barb Cranmer 24:00 • $175 Finding My Talk: Paul Rickard 24:00 • $175 Town Crier: Jim Compton 24:00 • $175 The Syilx Voice: Tracey Jack 24:00 • $175 Mr. Tapwe: Doug Cuthand 24:00 • $175 From the Edge: Gil Cardinal 24:00 • $175 Our First Lady of Cinema: Alanis Obomsawin 24:00 • $175 Lights, Camera and Action: Tantoo Cardinal 24:00 • $175 The Maori Voice (Pts 1 & 2) 48:00 • $275 www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 9 ARTS SERIES TWO Series price: $1800 (12 DVDs) Single episode prices as listed below The Intrepid Native Reporter: Duncan McCue 24:00 • $175 Mi’kmaq Storyteller: Catherine Martin 24:00 • $175 Spirit Catcher: Bert Crowfoot 24:00 • $175 Danis Goulet 24:00 • $175 Jesse Green 24:00 • $175 Zoe Ballentyne 24:00 • $175 Laura Milliken 24:00 • $175 From the Trapline: Shirley Cheechoo 24:00 • $175 Barry Barclay 1944-2008: A Requiem Pts 1 & 2 48:00 • $275 Haisla Anchor: Carla Robinson 24:00 • $175 The Indigenous Voice, Pt 3 24:00 • $175 Kibitzing with Podemski: Jennifer Podemski 24:00 • $175 It’s a Spiritual Thing: Rodger Ross 24:00 • $175 The Entrepreneur: Brenda Chambers 24:00 • $175 Modern Indigenous Aboriginal Native Indian Type Dude: Jordan Wheeler 24:00 • $175 Starting Out: Lisa Jackson 24:00 • $175 Reflections: Bak Wo Son–Reflections: Jeff Bear Pts 1 & 2 48:00 • $275 The Indigenous Voice, Pt 2 24:00 • $175 Street of Dreams 6:00 • 2010 • $150 Peter Sandmark Street of Dreams is an abstract expressionist homage to a romantic vision of Montreal in the ‘50s, set to the music of jazz saxophone legend Charlie Parker. Superimposed nighttime footage of the city’s legendary street, rue Saint-Cathérine, creates an illusory space of floating lights. Neon signs and taillights swirl into abstractions of colour, light liquid paint floating on jazz. See also: Call It a Day...................................................................................... 22 Down Here....................................................................................... 40 firebear called them faith healers… an aboriginal story............................................................. 22 & 30 Lest We Forget................................................................................ 48 SERIES THREE On a Moving Path........................................................................... 50 Series price: $1800 (12 DVDs) Single episode prices as listed below Out In The Cold............................................................................... 23 The imagineNATIVE 24:00 • $175 Dennis Jackson & Melanie Jackson 24:00 • $175 Regarding Vancouver..................................................................... 27 Shi-shi-etko...................................................................................... 32 “a spiritual land claim”................................................................... 32 Tending Toward Silence.................................................................. 23 Travelling Medicine Show............................................................... 23 Your Mother Should Know............................................................. 36 Tracey Deer 24:00 • $175 Gail Maurice 24:00 • $175 Joseph Lazare 24:00 • $175 Thirza Cuthand 24:00 • $175 10 Moving Images Distribution Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 ARTS DANCE Music & performance Aboard the Pater Noster Appassionata: The Extraordinary Life and Music of Sonia Eckhardt-Gramatté 17:30 • 2008 • $180 Daniel Conrad Rhodopsin Productions Internationally-acclaimed choreographer Aszure Barton collaborates with filmmaker Daniel Conrad to portray a little tribe of humans trying to make sense of their dehumanized lives as they pass through the city of Prague. In the beginning, the dancers ride on a “pater noster,” a cyclical, continuous elevator in which multiple doorless cars are strung along cables like beads on a rosary. They then board a streetcar cycling in an endless loop, and react to the car’s wild movement and the city’s unpredictable natural light as the streetcar lurches through traffic. Aboard the Pater Noster expands our vision through themes of circularity, the craving for human contact and the sense of being simultaneously alone and together. A Cup of Wine: 5 Poems from the Tang & Song Dynasties 6:30 • 2010 • $150 Daniel Conrad Rhodopsin Productions Choreographed for the camera by Wen Wei Wang and directed by Daniel Conrad, this film is inspired by poetry from the Chinese Tang & Song Dynasties (960-1280 A.D.). Daniel and Wen Wei interpret and savour the images found in the poems, which reflect Buddhist ideas of perception and illusion, the Taoist love of nature and human sentiment in relationship to nature. Dancers seem suspended and float through the air. Many of the images are superimposed. The result is an exquisite dance work that offers new ways of seeing through reimagining old ways of looking. 94:00 • 2006 • • $275 Paula Kelley Buffalo Gal Pictures Appassionata is a journey into the passion of Sophie-Carmen (Sonia) Eckhardt-Gramatté, an artistic rebel who defied all barriers to become one of the great modern classical composers of the 20th century. Throughout an astonishing career that would take Sonia from Paris, Berlin and Vienna to the new world of Winnipeg in Western Canada, she and her two great loves—the artist Walter and the writer Ferdinand—would remain forever inseparable in death as much as in life. Chris Award, Columbus International Film Festival Ferron: girl on a road Two versions: 48:00 & 73:00 • 2009 • • $275 (73:00 festival version) • $225 (48:00 version) Gerry Rogers Augusta Productions “I did my best to follow the calling of my soul…” So sings lesbian singer/songwriter pioneer Ferron, from the song Girl on a Road. The road is that ubiquitous metaphor, the chronicler of journeys. In this dynamic film from director Gerry Rogers, the road serves as both the metaphor for the direction of a life and the literal narrative thread, tracing Ferron’s reunion with her band and their first concert trek together in over a decade. Part performance film, part bio-pic, Ferron: girl on a road traces the life, the songs, the loves, the heartbreaks and the pioneering path carved by a true folk legend. At once intimate and sweeping, the film moves beyond chronicle and captures in word and deed the essence of a visionary artist and the soul of an icon. On the Nose 4:00 • 2010 • $150 Peg Campbell In this short work of dance for the camera, the nose takes the centre stage. Director Peg Campbell and choreographer Gail Lotenberg worked with 13 dancers to create a humourous and poignant look at that useful part of our body that most people don’t like about themselves. Innovative choreography, a sea of faces and comments from dancers elicit compelling memories about relationships and lost loved ones. www.movingimages.ca On The Nose FALL 2011 11 ARTS From the Mouthpiece On Back 61:00 • 2008 • $250 Colleen O’Halloran/Jason DaSilva/Todd Tiberi TBC Project Meet the TBC Brass Band—a group of high school students from two of the poorest neighbourhoods in New Orleans, the Seventh and Ninth Wards. Teens from these wards were traditionally enemies, engaged in street fights and often at risk. An enterprising high school teacher found a way to pull them together in a brass band, promoting a musical tradition for which New Orleans is famous. The students excelled, their pride grew, they became close friends and the band was hot—but just as it was about to make it big, Hurricane Katrina blew into town. In the chaos that ensued, band members became displaced and had to move to several different states, along with thousands of others left homeless by the hurricane. From the Mouthpiece On Back traces their struggle to reunite and continue with what has become central to their lives—their music and their friendship—culminating with with their triumphant reunion on Bourbon Street, where their music buoys the spirits of a crowd of enthusiastic residents who remain, amid the devastation. From the Mouthpiece on Back shows how music programs in schools build good citizens and nurture leadership skills. i see the fear 9:00 • 2010 • • $200 Joe Average/jamie griffiths Primal Divine Productions After 27 years living with AIDS, award-winning Canadian painter Joe Average enters into a therapeutic photography project with fellow artist jamie griffiths in order to keep making art, after feeling no longer able to paint. Although the initial intention was to make art and express his feelings, the film succeeds in bringing to light the shocking reality of lipoatrophy; the medicationinduced side effect of body wasting. i see the fear is about the lonliness of a degenerative life threatening illness. It is about the healing power of art, the artistic creative drive for self-expression and the dual use of art by artists as a powerful social tool for education, bringing an important message to a “post-AIDS” western world, that AIDS cocktails do not magically return you to a “normal” life. i see the fear challenges the audience to look more deeply at their prejudices and misconceptions. 12 Moving Images Distribution Turn Me Loose - Astrid 7:30 • 2010 • • $180 Fumiko Kiyooka Turn Me Loose - Astrid is a performance piece featuring musician and performance artist Astrid Sars and dancers Noam Gagnon and Sonja Perreten. This poetic interpretation of a dysfunctional relationship is filmed largely in blackand-white, opening with a dance duet. Hard, chiaroscuro grid lines cut across the floor, and the camera weaves gently with the dancers, the tumult of the movement revealing their struggle. The film cuts to the central character, portrayed by Astrid, seated and in obvious emotional pain, the female dancer portraying her emotional struggle through movement. A lone, desultory female voice sings. Astrid rises and walks through nocturnal streets that are lit in a film noir style. The female dancer reappears as a black shape, then in an alleyway, her movement becoming more intense as she breaks free and then disappears, the film shifting to colour as Astrid walks away across an open landscape of sand dunes and sky. Yabai: Asian North American Art Culture 11:00 • 2009 • $150 Matthew Johnson From jazzy scratch turntablism and ear-deafening electro breakdowns to contemporary fashion and articulate androids, Yabai features four of the most influential Asian North American artists in the scene today. They include Canadian marsupial turntablist Kid Koala (a.k.a. Eric San), born and raised in Vancouver and now based in Montreal, as well as Vancouver fashion designer Natalie Purschwitz (Hunt & Gather). They join California artists Eric Nakamura, publisher of Giant Robot magazine, and Dim Mak DJ Steve Aoki to share their stories of becoming definitive figures in Asian North American art and culture. See also: Mississippi ReMixed......................................................................... 44 Ray Condo’s Crazy Mixed Up World................................................. 6 Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 ARTS Theatre Visual Arts Girls On Top 12 TAKES 52:00 • 2010 • $250 Cassandra Nicolaou Fighting Fish Pictures Caryl Churchill’s 1982 play Top Girls is a brilliantly comedic but devastating examination of the challenges working women face, both in business and society. This canon of women’s theatre—with its non-linear construction, use of overlapping dialogue and mix of fantasy and reality—is a challenging play to mount. The opening scene is a dinner party celebrating the main character’s promotion, and the guests at the party are women who are either long-dead or fictional characters from literature or paintings. 28:30 • 2010 • • $180 John Bolton, Jenn Strom, Kevin Eastwood, Kenneth Sherman, Jesse Savath, Katrin Bowen, Blaine Thurier Opus 59 Films In 28 minutes, seven B.C. filmmakers create potent short glimpses of the lives and work of 12 talented British Columbian artists. The media in which they work include music, architecture, design, dance, photography, installation, writing and spoken word performance. Included in the compilation (directors in parentheses) are: Nick Bantock, visual artist and author of Griffin and Sabine (Jenn Strom); Girls On Top goes behind the scenes with eight women in Toronto who rehearse and perform Top Girls in Soulpepper Theatre Company’s 2008 award-winning production. The cast is a mix of Canadian screen and stage icons, including actors Megan Follows, Ann-Marie MacDonald, Cara Pifko, Liisa Repo-Martell, Kelli Fox, Diana Donnelly, Robyn Stevan and director Alisa Palmer. Douglas Coupland, visual artist and author of several best-selling novels (Kevin Eastwood); While the play presents a bleak picture of how women are faring in contemporary life, the powerhouse cast of Top Girls seems to contradict the play’s message. As they hone their performances, it’s clear they are striving and succeeding, just as the characters in the play do, but they’re far from isolated and individualistic. The production environment is the antithesis of the one of characters they portray. However, as Girls On Top reveals more about the personal lives and professional battles of these actors, it becomes clear that their passion for the project and each other is the exception that proves the rule—Churchill’s worldview is perhaps more accurate than they would like to admit. 605 Collective, an emerging B.C. dance troupe (Kenneth Sherman); See also: Out In The Cold............................................................................... 23 Travelling Medicine Show............................................................... 23 Omer Arbel, designer and architect (John Bolton); Organelle Design, a Vancouver design firm that repurposes found objects and off the shelf items in innovative ways as they prepare an installation at the Go!Gallery (John Bolton); David Burdeny, photographer with a background in architecture and design who makes images of landscape with long exposures (Jesse Savath); Noam Gagnon, dancer and choreographer of the Holy Body Tattoo troupe (Kenneth Sherman); Reece Terris, installation artist who creates multi-media installations to alter the expected experiential qualities of a place or object by shifting the primary function of an original design as in the Ought Apartment installation at the Vancouver Art Gallery (Jesse Savath); Shane Koyczan, spoken word artist who drew acclaim for his performance during the opening ceremonies of the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics (Katrin Bowen); Carl Newman, rock musician and frontman of the band the New Pornographers (Blaine Thurier); National Broadcast Orchestra in practice, rehearsal and performance of classical music (John Bolton); and Roy Henry Vickers, internationally renowned First Nations artist working in printmaking (Jenn Strom). www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 13 ARTS The Artist’s Life cArtographies The Artist’s Life, Series Three profiles both emerging and established Canadian artists and provides insight into their artistic processes. For the first two series profiling Canadian artists, please see our online catalogue. This inspiring and playful “mapping” of 23 British Columbian artists contemplates their work as it moves around the province. Animated map segments join each individual portrait, and the artists feature work with several media as a form of artistic expression—painting, drawing, carving, design, glass-blowing, photography, film and video, choreography and dance. Arists include: Series Three (12 parts) 24:00 each part • 2007 • $150 per part • $1500 for full series Michael Glassbourg TickleScratch Productions Listed below are the 12 documentaries in the series. Please see our Artist’s Life brochure for detailed descriptions. 49:00• 2010 • $250 Brian Johnson/Leah Mallen John Kosrud, composer and conductor (Vancouver); David Blackwood (Printmaking) 24:00 • $150 Germaine Koh, visual artist and roller derby queen (Vancouver); Eric Cator (Mixed media) 24:00 • $150 Battersby/Howat, designers (Vancouver); Jim Chambers (Photography) 24:00 • $150 Ken Danby (Painting) 24:00 • $150 Brendan Tang, sculptor (Kamloops); ManWoman, painter and poet (Cranbrook); Laura Hollick (Mixed media) 24:00 • $150 René Van Halm, visual artist and educator (Vancouver); Heather Horton (Painting) 24:00 • $150 Veda Hille, musician (Vancouver); Natalka Husar (Painting, mixed media) 24:00 • $150 Jesse Zubot, musician and composer (Britannia Beach); Mara Korkola (Painting) 24:00 • $150 Lui Liu (Painting) 24:00 • $150 Mark Mickie and Sol Maya, carver and glass blower (Tofino); Charles Pachter (Painting, sculpture, design) The PoolHall Gospel, rock and roll band (New Westminster); 24:00 • $150 Ernestine Tahedl (Stained glass, painting) 24:00 • $150 Margaux Williamson (Painting) 24:00 • $150 Judith Steedman and Robin Mitchell, authors and designers (Vancouver); The Tomorrow Collective and Chick Snipper, dance performers and choreographer (Vancouver); Kristi Malakoff, visual artist (Nelson); Burning Rubber 52:00 • 2009 • $180 Ariella Pahlke/Barbara Badessi When Airella Pahlke leaves her house in rural Nova Scotia, she often encounters black marks that twist and turn along the road. Burning Rubber is an investigation into these marks, a provocative reframing of burnouts and rural car culture. The documentary weaves a predominantly male car culture together with artists and the curiosity of outsiders, ultimately stimulating larger questions about identity, creativity, gender, freedom and how we decide what is valued and given meaning as art. “The driver of a motorcycle can be very close to the artist. The motorcycle driver is a person who is driving, who has a tool to escape. It gives you some power. It gives you a tool to get to another place, to create the idea of freedom.” Michael Turner, writer (Vancouver); The Electric Theatre Company, theatre collective (Vancouver); Crystal Pite, choreographer (Vancouver); Stan Douglas, visual artist (Vancouver); Paul Ternes, theatre artist and performer (Vancouver); Alex Cuba, singer and songwriter (Smithers and Victoria); Dace, clothing designer (Vancouver); Zoe Hodgson, painter (Vancouver); Raakhi Sinha and Footedge Dancers (Surrey and Whistler); and Fumiko Kiyooka, filmmaker and Roy Kiyooka, painter and poet (Vancouver). – Lori Hersberger, artist (Zurich, Switzerland) 14 Moving Images Distribution Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 ARTS Dark Pines: a documentary investigation into the death of Tom Thomson 48:00 • 2005 • $180 David Vaisbord/Ric Beairsto Laughing Mountain Communications On a rainy summer day in 1917, beloved Canadian painter Tom Thomson paddled alone onto Canoe Lake in Ontario’s Algonquin Park and was never again seen alive. He was just 39 and had painted only 50 major works. In the decades following, this body of work would become the single most influential in Canadian landscape painting and Thomson would grow into a figure of mythical proportions. For 50 years, new evidence and testimony continued to surface in his mysterious death. Most people familiar with the story think Thomson drowned accidentally, but this richly crafted docudrama reconsiders events surrounding his untimely end. The details—a summer love affair that may have spawned bitter rivalry and unwanted consequences, a rumoured political debate that took a violent turn, secret gambling debts, a haphazard investigation, even an exhumed body from Thomson’s casket that proved to be the remains of another man—come vividly to life with performances from some of Canada’s best actors. In the end, the only certainty is that Thomson’s strange death has added to the enduring appeal of this Canadian icon and his powerful work. Death Is in Trouble Now: The Sculptures of Mark Adair 48:00 • 2007 • $180 Patrick Jenkins Ontario artist Mark Adair has been creating contemporary sculptures in a Gothic style for over 25 years. As an environmentalist, he explores man’s impact on the environment and the stresses of urban life. Fascinated with myths, his sculptures are provocative and frequently incorporate written text with mixed media. Adair’s sculptures explore diverse subjects that include spirituality, consumerism, interpersonal relationships, pollution and the devastating forces of nature. Both the artist and curators comment on his work in this portrait of sculptor Mark Adair, whom some have called a master of the grotesque and ecologist of the human soul. www.movingimages.ca E.J. Hughes Restoration: Triumph Over Hard Times 58:00 • 2009 • • $250 Jeremiah Patton/Jeffrey Patton Cinnabar Vista Alef Productions While tearing down the grand old Malaspina Hotel in Nanaimo, British Columbia, workers discovered a spectacular wall mural hidden behind a false wall. Like buried treasure, they had uncovered a lost masterpiece, featuring work by one of Canada’s greatest landscape artists, E.J. Hughes—a 1938 wall mural entitled “Lieutenant Malaspina Sketching the Gabriola Galleries.” Hughes, along with West Coast artists Paul Goranson and Orville Fisher, was hired in the 1930s to paint murals depicting the maritime explorations around Vancouver Island. Now valued at $3 million, the mural contains all the elements of E.J. Hughes’ mature artistic style. Conservator Cheryle A. Harrison reveals some of the work that took place over the 13-year period required for the restoration of this mural. Ian Thom (Senior Curator, Vancouver Art Gallery), Charles C. Hill, (Curator of Canadian Art, National Gallery of Canada), and Dr. Laura Brandon, (Historian for the Canadian War Museum) comment on the mural, its place in Hughes’ body of work, and his place as one of Canada’s greatest painters. Anecdotes about Hughes’ life and struggles as an artist from two nieces and his confidante, Pat Salmon, round out the portrait of this shy genius of Canadian landscape art. From the Spirit (26-part series) 24:00 each part • • 2005, 2007, 2009 Raymond Yakeleya/Bill Stewart Earth Magic Media This 26-part series of half-hour documentaries presents the work and thoughts of a diverse group of Aboriginal artists. Twenty-four of them are Canadian—from British Columbia, Alberta, the Northwest Territories and Ontario; the other two are American—a painter from Montana and a glass blower from Seattle. By definition, artists are people who live “on the edge,” and Aboriginal artists have had a tougher journey than most. The stories in this series are from artists who would not quit, even in the face of adversity and who have made a difference to both their communities and to the world of contemporary art. FALL 2011 15 ARTS Roy Henry Vickers 24:00 • $150 As one of Canada’s top artists from British Columbia, Roy has established a loyal audience for his prints, paintings, carvings and designs. His distinctive art style has combined the traditional and contemporary, old and new, personal and universal themes. George Littlechild 24:00 • $150 This internationally acclaimed painter was raised in foster homes separated from his Alberta Cree community. Mixed-media paintings record his personal and family history as well as his reclamation and reconnection with his ancestral culture. George believes colours possess spiritual cleansing and purifying powers. Archie Beaulieu 24:00 • $150 This Dogrib Dene from Fort Rae in the Northwest Territories is known for his bold and unique style of painting. Archie Beaulieu’s art reflects his background of hunting, fishing and trapping and his connection to the land and its spirit. Joane Cardinal-Schubert 24:00 • $150 A Blackfoot artist and visual storyteller, Joane Cardinal-Schubert lived and worked in Calgary until her untimely death in September 2009. Her multimedia works reflect a strong spirituality and have been described as visual stories of personal experiences, layered against a backdrop of social and historical issues. Joane talks about her life and work, including the influence of the traditional petroglyphs that dot the Blackfoot country. Jim Hart 24:00 • $150 A member of the Eagle clan from Old Massett in Haida Gwaii, Jim is one of the Northwest Coast’s most accomplished artists. He worked with Bill Reid from 1980 to 1984, carved several totem poles for private commissions and, as a hereditary Chief, is committed to working with emerging young artists from his community. Eli Nasogaluak 24:00 • $150 Eli is an Inuvialuit from Tuktoyaktuk in the Inuvik region of the Northwest Territories. He creates beautiful sculptures depicting a variety of traditional and contemporary images, and his work reflects the animal and spirits of the north and their relationship to him. Jane Ash Poitras 24:00 • $150 Jane Ash Poitras was born in Fort Chipewyan in northern Alberta. She completed a degree in microbiology and didn’t really connect with her native heritage or art until she was 30. She has 16 Moving Images Distribution a BFA in print and design from Yale University and an MFA at Columbia University in New York. Her paintings incorporate emotive images and words and her work frequently explores the clash of Aboriginal and mainstream cultures. Rocky Barstad 24:00 • $150 From T’suu T’ina heritage, Rocky owns the Two Feathers Gallery in High River, Alberta. He has studied and traveled throughout Arizona and promoted Aboriginal Art and the importance of keeping it authentic in Europe. His paintings and bronze statues have made him one of the most successful First Nations artists in Alberta. John Farcy 24:00 • $150 John is a Dene artist who lives in Fort Providence on the MacKenzie River, Northwest Territories. Although he studied art for two years in Victoria, he’s primarily a self-taught artist. John works in ink in a style known as “pointillism.” He frequently draws on his experiences in hunting, fishing and trapping as a basis for his art. Daniel Crane 24:00 • $150 Daniel is from the Tsuu T’ina Nation near Calgary, Alberta. He is an entertainer, artist and musician who has struggled with substance abuse but, through the flute, has found his spiritual voice. Fred McDonald 24:00 • $150 This Woodland Cree from Fort McMurray in northern Alberta hunted and trapped with his family along the Athabasca River as a child. Fred attended the University of Calgary, completing a BFA in 1995 and an MFA in 2002. His work is a mixture of styles and expressions, and he uses colours and symbols to capture the experiences, the characteristics and the spirituality of his people. Terry McCue 24:00 • $150 Terry was born at the Curve Lake First Nation north of Peterborough, Ontario. As a youth, this self-taught Ojibway painter watched and learned from his cousin Arthur Schilling. Terry talks about his struggle with alcohol, his lack of formal training and his success as a painter producing unique works that are bold and beautiful. Dale Auger 24:00 • $150 A Sakaw Cree from Bigstone Cree Nation in northern Alberta, Dale spent seven years at the University of Calgary, completing a B.Ed., an MA and a Ph.D. in education. He became a highly acclaimed painter as well as a renowned comedian and motivational speaker until his untimely death in September 2008. He speaks about his work and how he sees his role as that of a modern-day Medicine Man. Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 ARTS Tim Paul 24:00 • $150 Tim is from Esperanze Inlet, north of Tofino, British Columbia. He began carving in 1975 at the Arts of the Raven Gallery in Victoria, under the direction of Ben Andrews. From 1984 to 1992, Tim was Senior Carver at the Royal British Columbia Museum and left that position to oversee a Native education program on Vancouver Island. Tim’s work portrays legends of his Nuu-Chah-Nulth culture. Sean Couchie 24:00 • $150 This member of the Nipissing Band of Ojibways makes his home in London, Ontario. He is a graduate of Fanshawe College and considers winning the Peace Hills Trust Native Art Contest in 1992, 1996 and again in 2005 as one of the major contributors to his success in his career as an artist. Sean creates highly detailed works, incorporating different media and techniques such as oils, acrylics, pen and ink, scratchboard and wood burning. April Mercredi 24:00 • $150 Born to a Chinese father and a Cree-French mother in Alberta, April grew up at Rocky Mountain House. She began painting in her 60s and uses natural elements like feathers, rocks and sticks in her artwork, while drawing on Aboriginal imagery and experiences as a former life skills coach. John Rombough 24:00 • $150 This Chipewyan Dene artist was born in Sioux Lookout, Ontario, and raised by adoptive parents on Prince Edward Island. As a young adult, John began to search for his birth parents. He discovered that his father, Alfred Catholique, was living in Lutsulk’e on the shores of Great Slave Lake in the Northwest Territories and moved to Lutselk’e to reconnect with his family and cultural identity. Aaron Paquette 24:00 • $150 This young Edmontonian is an artist, educator and community builder. A descendant of the Cree, Cherokee and Norwegian people, Aaron uses distinct colour and clear forms in his work. In talking about his work, Aaron says, “When I began to work seriously as a painter, I wanted to do something that would help reinforce the positive aspects of Native spirituality, and to reflect back to First Nations people everywhere the feeling of strength, unity and pride in our shared heritage. I hope that my works can act as a catalyst for greater understanding.” www.movingimages.ca Abraham Anghik Ruben 24:00 • $150 Abraham is an Inuvialuit artist from the Western Arctic. This contemporary sculptor was born in Paulatuk, Northwest Territories and studied at the Native Arts Centre of the University of Alaska. His carvings are deeply rooted in the Shamanic traditions of his ancestors, and his work is in major collections all over the world. Kevin Red Star 24:00 • $150 Kevin was born in Lodge Grass, Montana, where he still lives and works. A member of the Crow Indian Nation, he is known for conjuring evocative images of his ancestors, their culture and history. His works are in collections of major American galleries and museums. Preston Singletary 24:00 • $150 The European glassblowing tradition merges with imagery from traditional Tlingit culture in the work of this Seattle artist whose work is in major art museums. Preston Singletary attended the Pilchuck Glass School in Seattle, where glass artists from all over the world come to learn. Michael Massie 24:00 • $150 Michael Massie was born in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, Labrador, and is an artist of Inuit, Métis and Scottish descent. He studied at the College of the North Atlantic in Newfoundland and Nova Scotia College of Art & Design, and now lives in Kippens, Newfoundland. His work includes drawing, carving in wood and stone and silversmithing and he has exhibited across North America and in Europe. LauraLee K. Harris 24:00 • $150 This artist from Mississauga, Ontario discovered that her “French” grandfather was also Sioux, Cree, Chipewyan, Ojibwe and Montagnais. April has studied at the Ontario College of Art & Design and creates unique paintings on wood, utilizing and incorporating the natural grain to create beautiful, organic works. Andy Everson 24:00 • $150 Andy was born in Comox, British Columbia. He has always been driven to uphold the traditions of both the K’omoks and Kwakwaka’waka First Nations. He began drawing Northwest Coast art at an early age and has followed in the footsteps of his Kwakiutl ancestors in creating bold and unique representations that remain rooted in the age-old traditions. FALL 2011 17 ARTS Lee Claremont 24:00 • $150 This First Nations artist and educator of Mohawk and Irish descent has taught at the En’owkin Centre, an internationally recognized Aboriginal Educational College located in Penticton, British Columbia. A member of the Iroquois Grand River Six Nations in Oshweken, Ontario, she says, “my art making takes me to a place of creation, soaring with Skywoman to create an eclectic perception of nature, people, spirituality and Mother Earth.” James Wedzin 24:00 • $150 James is a Tlîcho artist from Behchoko (Fort Rae), Northwest Territories, who praises his grandmother for inspiring and encouraging his early interest in traditional art. He watched her create intricate beadwork endlessly and developed his own sense of art style. James is known for his northern landscapes, animal imagery and northern lights. GENERAL IDEA: Art, AIDS, and the fin de siècle 48:00 • 2008 • • $350 Annette Mangaard General Idea Films It’s 1969, the summer of love. In Toronto, three young Canadian artists come together to form a collective called GENERAL IDEA. They change their names and adopt new personas to become Jorge Zontal, AA Bronson and Felix Partz. They are gay and irreverent, and they launch “The Miss General Idea Pageant” to investigate the nature of glamour and celebrity. Fully utilizing their ironic camp sensibility, the trio present themselves as “Art Stars.” They publish an art magazine called FILE, for which they gain notoriety and prompt a lawsuit from LIFE magazine for “simulation of LIFE.” It isn’t until three years later that Andy Warhol publishes the like-minded Interview. 18 Moving Images Distribution GENERAL IDEA achieved celebrity status in Europe in the 1970s. Treated like rock stars, they exhibit in major museums in Amsterdam, Berlin and Paris and are invited to make video-art for Dutch television. The 1980s bring the first labelled cases of AIDS. GENERAL IDEA responds by making art that addresses the plague virus. In an unforgettable coup, it appropriates the well-known “LOVE” painting by Robert Indiana and replaces those four letters with AIDS, for the now world-famous logo. GENERAL IDEA continues to tour Europe and North America with massive political installation pieces that chronicle the devastating spread of the disease and its impact on their community, including an early end to the lives of two members of GENERAL IDEA. AA Bronson, the sole survivor of GENERAL IDEA, narrates this documentary lending personal relevancy to a poignant story of art and sexual politics. GENERAL IDEA: Art, AIDS and the fin de siècle is a tale of love, fame, overwhelming loss and, ultimately, of renewal. Gordon Smith: The Reflective Canvas 2009 • 30:00 • $200 Mike Bernard/David James Vancouver artist Gordon Smith is one of the most prominent and prolific artists working in Canada today. For more than 50 years, he has painted the Canadian landscape and explored the mediums of drawing, painting and printmaking in inventive and expressive ways. This documentary reveals an artist in the twilight of his life and at the pinnacle of his career. It follows him in his current process of examining the interplay between what is directly taken from the landscape and what is intrinsically his own response to it, a key dynamic in his work. A definitive view of Gordon Smith’s philosophy and approach to his work is rounded out by comments from art curators on his place in art and praise from mid-career artists for Smith’s generosity in his encouragement of young, upcoming artists. Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 ARTS Killer Whale and Crocodile 48:0 • 2007 • • $250 Peter Campbell/Art Holbrook Gumboot Productions/Arthur Holbrook Productions Carvers from two of the world’s great carving traditions come together, share each other’s cultures and learn about the myths and legends that inform their art. Coast Salish carver John Marston travels to Papua New Guinea, with Elaine Monds of the Alcheringa Gallery in Victoria. Elaine champions the work of Papua New Guinea and Northwest Coast carvers and has built up trust over the years with her commitment to fair trade practices through advising these Indigenous artists on the value of their work in the fine art market. Traveling by dugout canoe along the Sepik River, they visit carver Teddy Balangu and are welcomed into the rich culture of the carvers of Palembei, Teddy’s home. Months later, Teddy leaves his home, at the invitation of Dr. Carol Mayer, to come to Canada as artist-in-residence at the University of British Columbia’s Museum of Anthropology. While in Canada he and John renew their friendship and Teddy is welcomed by the Coast Salish people into their culture. A journey of great physical distance and lasting bonds, Killer Whale and Crocodile explores the soul of creativity and inspiration, in two cultures, half a world apart, but now bonded together through art. The Life & Work of Daphne Odjig 49:00 • 2008 • • $250 Dr. Raoul McKay First Voice Multimedia One of Canada’s greatest artists, Daphne Odjig, is a Potowatomi from Manitoulin Island. Her work, based on Indigenous traditions and way of life, spans over four decades. This epic goes beyond her paintings and drawings and looks at the forces that molded her spirit and her keen interest in art. Duke Redbird calls her a “national treasure” for her unique style and her often spectacular painting, much of which is shown in this film. Her work reflects a wide range of topics such as spirituality, tradition, education, politics and humour. This heart-warming story of her life and her art will appeal to her many admirers around the world and garner new enthusiasts for her work. www.movingimages.ca A Look at the Life of Morgan Green 12:00 • 2007 • $180 Kelvin Redvers Morgan Green is a young, female Tsimshian carver from Prince Rupert, B.C. She is also a Tsimshian fashion designer; a knife maker, pottery maker, painter, art teacher, mask maker and more. This 23-year-old Aboriginal artist leads a unique life in eastside Vancouver and is very passionate about every art form, whether it be traditional or contemporary. Her world is an amazingly inspiring one, told with a youthful charm and a deep love for all things artistic. This documentary follows a few days in her life, as she spends time being herself, followed by young Métis filmmaker Kelvin Redvers. The Making of a Haida Totem Pole 16:30 • 2007 • $180 Kelvin Redvers Totem poles have been made for many centuries. Don Yeomans is a contemporary Haida carver who was commissioned by the Vancouver Airport Art Foundation to make two 40-foot totem poles for the building linking domestic and international terminals at YVR. The poles are a mix of unique color, tradition and cultures. Métis filmmaker Kelvin Redvers portrays the making of these unique poles—from log to installation—and provides insight into the carver’s creative process, his relationship with family and culture, and his philosophy about art and tradition. Painted on the Spot: On the Road with Ernie Luthi... 14:00 • 2009 • $150 Fiji Robinson Rudecat Pictures Between his drawings and paintings, it’s estimated that Dr. Ernest Luthi created some 10,000 artistic works, many of which he painted “on the spot” in rural Saskatchewan. Ernie claimed it was his love of nature and the changing times that fuelled his passion for painting the Saskatchewan landscape. See also: The Brush, The Pen and Recovery...................................................38 FALL 2011 19 EDUCATION …And This Is My Garden 57:30 • 2010 • • $180 Katharina Stieffenhofer This documentary about the award-winning Mel Johnson School Gardening Project has caught the attention of the David Suzuki Foundation and the United Nations. Two Manitoba teachers, Eleanor Woitowicz and Bonnie Monias, are literally growing a healthier community through a sustainable, school gardening project in Wabowden, Manitoba. Over the past five years, these teachers have established 72 small vegetable gardens in their students’ backyards in this community of 600 residents just north of the 54th parallel. They have also begun to include Elders paired with young gardeners in the program. The film follows the teachers and their students for a season from seeding to planting, to harvesting, to the final celebration of the fruits of their collective labour at the school’s annual Community Harvest Display and Feast. The school gardening project is based on the Frontier School Division’s Science curriculum and teaches students valuable skills in sustainable food production, healthy eating and food preparation. Participation in the project encourages healthier food and lifestyle choices and instills the students with a sense of price, accomplishment and success. The Boy Inside Two versions: 47:00 & 43:00 • 2006 • $250 (47:00 version) $275 (43:00 chaptered version, includes discussion guide) Marianne Kaplan MSK Productions A rare portrait of Asperger syndrome from the inside out, this film documents a young boy’s struggle with a form of high-functioning autism. Adam and his family share their everyday challenges and triumphs to provide unparalleled insights into this increasingly common disorder. A groundbreaking resource for educators, healthcare workers, parents and anyone who works with children, the film includes interviews with autistic children and their families, and features Dr. Temple Grandin, a noted authority on Autism Spectrum Disorders. Japan Prize, Best Youth Program; Freddie Award, Medical Media Competition; CINE Golden Eagle Award 2007 20 Moving Images Distribution Corporations in the Classroom 46:30 • 2007 • • $250 Jill Sharpe/Lynn Booth Make Believe Media In a climate of funding shortfalls for education, corporate sponsors are stepping up to the plate, offering promotions, sponsorships and even free curriculum. There is no stopping the flow of advertising in covert forms—it’s called Trojan horse marketing, and it’s designed to create life-long brand name consumers, not life-long learners. First come sponsorships, then naming rights and even learning materials in the classrooms. Donations become classroom resources and product placement opportunities. The good news is some school districts are fighting back and succeeding in keeping the classrooms a safe haven from the marketing hype. Corporations in the Classroom provides a reality check on the role of education in today’s society and questions whether it is being compromised. Mr. H and his Unruly Puppets 30:00 • 2009 • • $190 Annie O’Donoghue Robert Heidbreder—“Mr. H.” to his Grade 1 students—is a recipient of the Prime Minister’s Award for teaching excellence. Throughout his 30-year tenure with the Vancouver School Board, he has developed a classroom where learning is challenging and fun. A cast of over 50 puppets, led by the wise wizard Alphaterwa and the unruly Stanley C. Crow, transforms the Grade 1 curriculum into a year-long interactive drama. Children learn to read because each puppet has a poem that is used to activate that puppet’s power. Mr. H.’s passions as a poet and an award-winning children’s author are evident in the letters, clues and riddles written by Mr. H. and sent to the children by the puppets each morning. The children’s responses to the letters create the content, climax and resolution for their daily adventures under the watchful eye of the puppet master and teacher, Mr. H. In a climate of standardizing educational ideologies, Mr. H and his Unruly Puppets shows a refreshing counterbalance, celebrating a style of collaboration with young children that truly exemplifies the art of teaching. Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 EDUCATION One Week Job Standing Tall After graduating from university and struggling with the question of what do to with his life, Sean Aiken created the One Week Job Project. His goal: to work 52 jobs in 52 weeks in search of his passion. As word of the project spread, the offers began pouring in. He traveled across Canada and the United States, reinventing himself as a firefighter, stock trader, radio DJ, martial arts instructor, NHL mascot, snowshoe guide and more. This 24-minute documentary is set in Winnipeg, Manitoba’s North End, an area where many of the city’s poorer people live and an area where many Indigenous people make their homes. It profiles a program introduced into two schools, at the Grade 5–8 levels, William Whyte Community School and Niji-Mahkwa School. Two versions: 74:00 & 44:00 • 2010 • $250 Ian MacKenzie One Week Job Productions During the course of his seven-day stints, whether at a dairy farm in Alberta or a real estate office in Beverly Hills, Sean discovered many others struggling to answer the same question of finding one’s calling. To find the answer, he continued to ask himself and his employers about the nature of success and the real meaning of happiness—all while having the adventure of his life. School of Secrets 54:30 • 2007 • • $250 Eunice Lee/Melanie Wood Bossy Boots Productions “How did they get control? Well the answer is we all let them. The teachers, the administrators and the taxpayers, the neighbours, the kids themselves. We allowed them to take control, and we should never do that”. – Dr. Ted Hunt, former Vice-Principal, Prince of Wales Secondary School For over a decade, the Prince of Wales Secondary School in Vancouver ran a special outdoor education program called “Quest.” Three male teachers worked with a selected group of students for five months in the classroom followed by five months in the wilderness. Students in the Quest program were isolated from the rest of the student population and considered “special.” Decades later, former students share stories of control, manipulation, exploitation, isolation and abuse—a powerful illustration of the difficulty and length of time it can take for victims of abuse to come forward. Now in their 40s, some of them are moving forward to heal. School of Secrets provides a sober lesson in the need for transparency and accountability in any public institution. 24:00 • 2009 • $180 Raoul McKay/Monique McKay/Dino Schiavone First Voice Multimedia English and French Méchif versions available Standing Tall is a project organized by the Manitoba Métis Federation to counteract poor test results produced by the existing education system and to encourage Métis parental and community input into the schools. The story highlights the participation of trained Métis staff who carried out the program, providing encouragement, positive feedback and personal interaction for the students, the comfort of “the nest” provides an atmosphere of security and well-being. Community involvement and parental support are the key to the program’s success. Trolls 7:00 • 2009 • $150 Brianne Nord-Stewart There comes a time in every kid’s life when they realize their parents are up to more than just “cleaning their room.” For nine-year-old Billy, this discovery only comes with the help of his know-it-all younger cousin, Genevieve. When she explains the rules and point system of the “adults only” game, Billy and Genevieve start counting up their own points. Soon playground gossip turns anatomical, and Billy, with Genevieve close behind, tries to get to the bottom of what “doing it” actually means. Trolls is a hilarious reminder of those childhood moments which made growing up exciting, embarrassing and downright confusing and makes an excellent discussion starter for professional development sessions with teachers who teach sex education. See also: Finding Our Way ............................................................................ 29 From the Mouthpiece On Back...................................................... 12 growing up among strangers......................................................... 34 Working to Help My Mom.............................................................. 48 www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 21 ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS & MEDIA LITERACY Call It A Day 5:30 • 2008 • $160 Jason DaSilva Award-winning media artist Jason DaSilva combines black-and-white footage, a simple piano score by Frank Tachikoma and voice-over spoken word by the Philippine-born poet Eric Gamalinda to create a contemplative essay on everyday existence. Fate Scores 12:00 • 2008 • $150 Albert M. Chan Two strangers, a guitarist and an introspective young woman, cross paths at a long bench along the side of a city building. One by one, additional strangers join the pair on the bench— a distressed woman in a foot cast, an insecure jogger, a famished pregnant woman, an anxious businessman at lunch, a curious child with an ice cream cone, two quarrelsome women and a dignified collector of drink cans. Amidst a whirlwind of interactions that lead to both harmony and discord, the guitarist and the young woman eventually discover they have something special in common. firebear called them faith healers... an aboriginal story 17:00 • 2009 • $180 Kelvin Redvers What is a story? What power is in our experiences? This video presents an Aboriginal story, vignettes of storytelling, from the life experience of acclaimed Métis author Richard Van Camp. Seven people, of different ages and race, stand in front of a white background to tell a story in three vignettes: The Dream, The Fight and The Faith Healers. Lines from the vignettes are passed from one storyteller to the next to form one over-arching story of a mysterious man, “The Quiet One,” who haunts their dreams and their lives. Told from the foundation of Aboriginal storytelling, firebear called them faith healers is an Aboriginal story, meant to be passed on. It questions the forces that exist beyond what we can see, touch or hear and will stimulate discussion on storytelling, filmmaking and spirituality. 22 Moving Images Distribution As an extra, the DVD includes a conversation between Métis director Kelvin Redvers and storyteller/author Richard Van Camp about the role of storytelling in the culture of First Nations people. Gibson Woods 23:00 • 2011 • $190 Ann Verrall This short musical drama explores a universal theme—the out-migration of young people from small rural communities that seem destined to disappear. Feeling confined by family and history, Jasmine can’t wait to leave her community of Gibson Woods. She and her group are headed to Halifax to perform and for her, the city is the key to her future. Her brother wonders what will remain of their community and its history with so many young people leaving. A sudden highway detour and engine trouble land Jasmine and her friends on a Mi’kmaq reserve. Disconnected from Wi-Fi and other distractions of the modern world, they focus on their surroundings. Ironically enough, they come face to face with a young man who’s been searching for the very community they just left—one he believes no longer exists. They return with him to Gibson Woods to help connect him with his roots. Very little has been written about shared historical connections between the Black Loyalists of Nova Scotia and the indigenous Mi’kmaq communities who welcomed them. Youth from African Nova Scotian and Mi’kmaq communities participated in writing the script and music for this film. They perform, rap and appear in several sequences as a mythical chorus who have returned to the world because their history has been forgotten. Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS & MEDIA LITERACY i luv spam 6:00 • 2010 • $120 Michael Korican Churchill Korican Services i luv spam is a modern interpretation of the Faust theme: today the Devil lives in cyberspace and, in exchange for your soul, will make your unsolicited e-mail come true. It explores greed and concludes that cyberspace is soulless. This short comedy combines Machinima with liveaction dramatic film. Machinima is an emerging form of animation that utilizes video game engines to create and animate characters in computer game-generated environments. Out In The Cold 30:00 • 2008 • • $200 Cheryl Jack/Colleen Murphy/Sarah Abbott Amoeba Works On a night so cold it hurts to breathe, Soft as Snow and Cold as Ice meet Thomas, a young man in a drunken stupor who has been dumped at the side of the road on the outskirts of town. When Thomas suggests the two men should walk back to the city with him, Cold as Ice and Soft as Snow persuade him to stay the night. Each man has a different motive: Cold as Ice wants Thomas to die and join them; Soft as Snow wants Thomas to survive the night so he can return to the city and tell people their story. So Far and Soar 10:30 • 2009 • Jocelyne Chaput • $150 A researcher is emotionally drained as she searches for connections, both in her lab work and relationships. So lost is she in the depth of her studies that it takes an unexpected event to change shift her perspective to a new direction. Tending Toward Silence 10:30 • 2007 • $150 Arlin McFarlane Ten Thousand Doors Set in the Yukon, Tending Toward Silence weaves a story of three different moments: time in the hospital, a summer spent collecting rocks and another reality, both mysterious and sustaining. The film bridges the world between life and death and suggests that our last journey has possibilities that we may not have considered. Travelling Medicine Show 28:00 • 2009 • $150 (includes discussion guide) Amnon Buchbinder Fishing Trip Productions An adolescent boy encounters a creation play by Dr. Theo’s Travelling Medicine Show on an isolated beach. Vivid imagery, large scale props, masks, puppets and sparse dialogue creates a poetic, ambiguous narrative based on the creation story. Travelling Medicine Show can inspire exploring themes of creation, environment, rites of passage, imagination and storytelling. A discussion guide and extras on the DVD, including an interview with the director, can be used to provide further avenues of study and creative exploration. See also: Animation section............................................................................. 4 Corporations in the Classroom....................................................... 20 This black-and-white drama is rich in metaphor, poignant, non-judgmental and even humorous. It was inspired by the freezing deaths of several First Nations men in Saskatoon, allegedly as a result of the non-sanctioned police practice of taking individuals to an isolated edge of town where they would be beaten or abandoned—a practice that earned Canada a place on the 2001 Amnesty International report of human rights abuses. www.movingimages.ca firebear called them faith healers...an aboriginal story.......................................... 22 & 30 the gesture...................................................................................... 36 Me, Masi & Mr. Clean...................................................................... 34 The Sacred Seven............................................................................. 39 Storytellers in motion (39-part series).............................................. 9 This Time Last Winter . .................................................................. 36 FALL 2011 23 ENGLISH LITERATURE & PHILOSOPHY The Cave 8:00 • 2010 • $120 Dereck Toker The Cave is an account of one man’s journey towards enlightenment and the true nature of a philosopher king. The film contrasts ancient Greek dialogue from Plato’s Republic with modern-day existence. Paris Stories: The Writing of Mavis Gallant of everyday things. Chris Gallagher skillfully merges several genres of cinema, including documentary, structural, poetic, narrative and personal, to create a statement on the human condition that is complex, coherent and intellectually stimulating. The director has written a discussion guide that will enhance the use of this film beyond film studies for courses in philosophy and astronomy. “The most brilliant film on its subject I’ve ever seen, Time Being is cool and non-academic, yet deeply engaged and beautifully shot. An educational film in the best sense.” - Tony Reif, Vancouver International Film Festival 48:00 • 2006 • • $200 Lynn Booth Make Believe Media This documentary explores the force of fiction of the Paris-based short story master, Mavis Gallant, considered by both critics and her literary peers to be one of the most “talented women writing in the English language.” Many of her works were published in the New Yorker magazine and are available in collections that include Montreal Stories, Across the Bridge and Paris Stories. This film offers an intimate glimpse of a fiercely private woman devoted to the compact elegance of the short story. Robert Fulford, Margaret Atwood, Russell Banks and others offer insight into her influences and legacy, while selected readings, in-depth interviews and archival footage of a younger Gallant bring the author and her writing into deeper focus. “Paris Stories: The Writing of Mavis Gallant is a lovely meditation on the place of art as created by one of literature’s finest.” - The Gazette (Montreal) Time Being 88:00 • 2010 • $350 (includes discussion guide) Chris Gallagher Does time exist or is it just a human idea that happens to permeate every aspect of our consciousness? If it does exist, what does it look like? Time Being is a thoughtful and moving meditation on the concept of time. Created from 88 one-minute shots or sequences, it investigates the wonderfully paradoxical nature of time. Visually striking and engagingly written, Time Being sees the clock ticking in the movement 24 Moving Images Distribution What to make of it all? The life and poetry of John Newlove 48:00 • 2006 • • $200 Robert McTavish Non-Inferno Media Productions Acclaimed poet John Newlove (1938-2003) emerged as a major literary voice in Canada at a time when poetry mattered. In the 1960s and ‘70s, poets sold more books, attracted more readers and rode a wave of notoriety as they gave voice to a new and self-conscious nationalism. Newlove, who had abandoned the rural Saskatchewan of his childhood for the beatnik heyday of Vancouver, spent years weaving in and out of literary communities across Canada. He was among the most acclaimed and most notorious of his generation—known almost as much for his wild drinking as for his lyrical, terse writing. Poignant interviews with Newlove in his last years are punctuated with commentary from George Bowering, Patrick Lane, Joe Rosenblatt, John Metcalf and the many poets and friends who knew the public persona and the private man. Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 ENGLISH LITERATURE & PHILOSOPHY Great Canadian Books (13-part series) 24:00 each part • 2009, 2010 • Michael Glassbourg TickleScratch Productions • $1600 for full series What do Mary Walsh, Valerie Pringle and Justin Trudeau have in common? They are avid readers who present books they’ve enjoyed reading in this series that celebrates examining some of Canada’s finest literature. Hard Light by Michael Crummey presented by Mary Walsh 24:00 • $150 In this episode of Great Canadian Books, actor and comedian Mary Walsh presents the book Hard Light by Michael Crummey—a powerful series of short stories and poems about the people of Conception Bay. Who Has Seen the Wind by W.O. Mitchell presented by Valerie Pringle 24:00 • $150 Valerie Pringle, a prominent Canadian television host and journalist, celebrates Who Has Seen The Wind, the classic novel by W.O. Mitchell, a beautiful depression-era story set in Saskatchewan. Stunt by Claudia Dey presented by Rex Harrington 24:00 • $150 Rex Harrington, a ballet dancer with the National Ballet of Canada, celebrates Stunt, the quirky first novel of Claudia Dey. This Can’t Be Happening At MacDonald Hall by Gordon Korman presented by Justin Trudeau 24:00 • $150 Former English teacher, now Member of Parliament, Justin Trudeau celebrates the book that turned him on to reading: This Can’t Be Happening At MacDonald Hall by Gordon Korman, a wonderfully funny story that appeals to the adolecent in everyone. The Golden Spruce by John Vaillant presented by Valerie Pringle 24:00 • $150 Valerie Pringle celebrates The Golden Spruce by John Vaillant, an incredibly riviting true story of a man who cuts down a one in a billion trees sacred to the Haida People. The Birth House by Ami McKay presented by Silken Laumann 24:00 • $150 In this episode, Olympic medal-winning rower Silken Laumann presents The Birth House by Ami McKay, a moving novel set on the Fundy coast of Nova Scotia. Late Nights On Air by Elizabeth Hay presented by Lisa Ray 24:00 • $150 Toronto actress Lisa Ray (star of the films Bollywood/Hollywood and Water) celebrates the award-winning novel Late Nights on Air by Elizabeth Hay. The Diviners by Margaret Laurence presented by Mary Walsh 24:00 • $150 Canadian actress and television personality Mary Walsh celebrates The Diviners by Margaret Laurence, a notoriously brilliant work that is on any “best” list of great novels. Coming Through Slaughter by Michael Ondaatje presented by Patricia O’Callaghan 24:00 • $150 In this episode, Canadian mezzo-soprano opera singer Patricia O’Callaghan celebrates Coming Through Slaughter by Michael Ondaatje, the fictionalized story of a real jazz cornetist who ends up going mad. Fugitive Pieces by Anne Michaels presented by Amy Sky 24:00 • $150 Singer, songwriter, theatre actress and television host Amy Sky celebrates Fugitive Pieces by Anne Michaels, a book whose poetic writing and powerful emotional story has won much international recognition. The Book Of Negroes by Lawrence Hill presented by Molly Johnson 24:00 • $150 Canadian jazz singer and radio personality Molly Johnson celebrates The Book of Negroes by Lawrence Hill, an elegant novel that examines the experience of slavery. Whale Music by Paul Quarrington presented by Patricia O’Callaghan 24:00 • $150 Mezzo-soprano opera singer Patricia O’Callaghan returns to present Whale Music by Paul Quarrington, a book that articulates the creative experience with humour and truth. Three Day Road by Joseph Boyden presented by Lorne Cardinal 24:00 • $150 Actor Lorne Cardinal, of Corner Gas fame, celebrates Three Day Road by Joseph Boyden, an incredible novel of two Native Canadian sharpshooters in the First World War that is an unforgettable story. See also: The Art of Drowning......................................................................... 4 Call It A Day..................................................................................... 22 www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 25 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES & GEOGRAPHY Agriculture & SustainabilITY Growth Rings 12:00 • 2009 • $120 Mairin Deery Deer Tracks People who live in the seemingly pastoral setting of Canada’s West Coast and the First Nations people of the area reflect on the pressures from outside for change that will impact on their ways of life and the fragile ecosystem, specifically the liquid natural gas terminal proposed by Enbridge Gas for Texada Island. On the Line 52:00 • 2011 • $180 Frank Wolf The Northern Gateway Pipeline Project is a proposal by the Enbridge Corporation to construct a 1,170 km oil pipeline from Bruderheim, Alberta to Kitimat, British Columbia. The pipeline would cross 773 watercourses and bring supertankers to BC’s pristine North coast for the first time ever in order to deliver Tar Sands bitumen to Asian markets. In the summer of 2010, filmmaker Frank Wolf and his friend Todd McGowan biked, hiked, rafted and kayaked the GPS track of the pipeline in order to uncover the truth about the proposal. Through the voices of people they meet along the way, their rough and tumble journey reveals the severe risks and consequences associated with this 5.5 billion dollar mega-project. Over Land 60:00 • 2008 • • $200 Steve Suderman/Robin Schlaht Orangeville Road Pictures This farm story, from the inside out, paints an intimate portrait of a Canadian family facing a crisis in agriculture. Between 1996 and 2006, amidst warnings of an impending food shortage, prices for farm goods dropped to their lowest point in Canadian history, driving many farmers off the land. With a family history of farming spanning generations, the Sudermans face a challenge that 26 Moving Images Distribution threatens to pull the family apart. As Suderman films his family, the fight for economic survival becomes a touching story of hope, determination and the search for purpose. For links to articles addressing issues in this documentary, visit www.orangevilleroad.com. The Sharing Farm 14:00 • 2007 • $160 Michael Gazetas/Keith Berhman Richmond Fruit Tree Sharing Project What began as a project to collect surplus fruit going to waste in Richmond, B.C. and distribute it to the poor has grown to an inspiring community movement that helps the poor and aids food security. Started by a small group of determined volunteers, the Richmond Fruit Tree Sharing Project has grown to include a community garden and greenhouse on some agricultural land that wasn’t being used. After its inception by a small group of grandmothers, it wasn’t long before the success of this project expanded to include other members in the community, including an agrologist and an elementary school teacher and his class. The Terra Nova School Yard project sees elementary school students working in this community garden and learning about nature, food and food security as well as nurturing the values of community service in these young citizens of the future. Forestry Do It With Joy! DVD release 2007 • $225 Nicholas Kendall/Keet Neville Orca Productions This classic tree-planting documentary of the 1970s follows an itinerant group of tree planters in the wilds of northern British Columbia. Musicians, ex-loggers, environmentalists and a mime artist all come together for this uplifting film. The original hour-long documentary is included on this 30th Anniversary DVD, along with the more upbeat 27-minute version, which won several international awards. Included as an extra is Do it with Joy! Fast Forward, a new 22-minute film that links old footage with new and checks back with Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES & GEOGRAPHY some of the original planters to see what they are doing today. The Hollow Tree 55:00 • 2011 • $200 Daniel J. Pierce The Hollow Tree is an ancient Western Red Cedar that has become an icon in the city of Vancouver. Immortalized by a century of photographs, people from far and wide–from British pioneers to Chinese tourists–have journeyed to Vancouver to pose in front of its gnarled roots and stand within its gaping interior. After a massive windstorm in Stanley Park, the Hollow Tree is left with an ominous lean. Public debate erupts around what the fate of the tree should be. The Parks Board deems the tree a safety hazard and votes to cut it down, but a group of citizens–an engineer, a physicist, a historian and an arborist–intervene with a solution that will right the tree back to vertical and anchor it to the ground for centuries to come. Urban Planning Imagining Home 65:00 • 2010 • $180 Richard Wilhelm/Sue Arbuthnot Hare in the Gate Productions humanizes the effects of top-down planning policies and demonstrate that to truly invigorate cities requires work to understand and empower all members of the communities being developed. Regarding Vancouver 22:30 • 2010 • $180 Laurynas Navidauskas Regarding Vancouver looks at the mythologies and image-making of a city with thoughtful comments from local residents such as architects Matthew Soules and Annabel Vaughan, poet and author Roy Miki, writer Derek Simons, Métis filmmaker and community planner Kamala Todd and SFU professor Jerry Zaslove. Urban Goddess: Jane Jacobs Reconsidered 52:00 • 2008 • • $250 (includes discussion guide) John Thomson/Sharon Bliss Bliss Pictures This salute to the late Jane Jacobs examines how she affected urban planning by challenging the norms of urban design from the early 60s in New York until her death in Toronto in 2006. She fought to give residents a voice at City Hall through consultation on plans affecting their neighbourhoods. The film follows recent debates between citizens, developers and municipal officials in two cities where she had a profound influence—Brooklyn, New York (with the Atlantic Shipyards project) and Toronto, Ontario (with the Queen Street Triangle development). Imagining Home tracks the complete transformation of Columbia Villa—a historic, cherished and maligned Portland, Oregon public housing neighbourhood enduring poverty, gang violence and racial discrimination—yet hoping for a new chance. Despite notable failures in the social engineering of the urban poor, the “Villa” is demolished and rebuilt as a controversial, mixedincome development. The film follows several main characters over five years through displacement, relocation and return to the new development. A poignant sense of loss and deep yearning for stability provide deep emotional undercurrents. Despite obstacles, several residents tenaciously work together to rebuild the soul of their community. Clips of interviews with Jacobs and anecdotes from her son Ned are combined with comments from Ron Shiffman, Urbanist at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, Margaret Zeidler, a community activist in Toronto, and Larry Beasley, former Vancouver city planner. Vancouver architecture critic Trevor Boddy questions the value pursuing one aspect of Jacobs’ philosophy to an extreme and muses whether her ideas can be transplanted into 21st century urban planning without further reflection. Urban Goddess: Jane Jacobs Reconsidered is a fascinating portrait of a critical thinker who understood the need for citizens to become involved in determining public policy that shapes the cities in which they live. But when New Columbia is re-inhabited, tensions around race and class threaten newfound stability. How will homeowners meld with public housing families? Will gangs once again derail this neighbourhood? Who really has “ownership” in a mixed-income community? Imagining Home See also: www.movingimages.ca Down Here....................................................................................... 40 FALL 2011 27 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES & GEOGRAPHY WATER Eco-Pirate: The Story of Paul Watson 110:00 • 2011 • $295 Trish Dolman Screen Siren Captain Paul Watson has been on a crusade to save the oceans for 40 years, and he isn’t about to stop now. Through the life and convictions of this notorious activist, director Trish Dolman crafts an epic tale of the birth of the modern environmental movement and the founding of Greenpeace and the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. Part highoctane adventure, the film follows Watson and his crew as they hunt down a Japanese whaling fleet in the vast expanse and stunning beauty of Antarctica’s Southern Ocean and seamlessly segues in and out of a wealth of archival footage from decades of confrontational activism around the world. In-depth interviews with Watson, Bob Hunter, Patrick Moore and Farley Moway, among others, capture the heroics, the ego, the disputed tactics and the urgency of Watson’s mission. SAMAQAN: Water Stories 13-part series • 2010 • Five 22:00 programs: $180 each Four 2-part programs at 44:00: $300 each Full series available for $2,000 North America’s Indigenous people have always had a sacred relationship with water. This series shows their perspective on a most precious resource—a resource to be protected, not a commodity to be exploited. Water Stories 22:00 provides an overview of the series, the significance of water for Indigenous people and why society takes it for granted. Akwiten 22:00 follows the rebirth of the birch bark canoe, inspired by the emergence of an ancient Maliseet canoe from a European collection. Kim and Wayne Brooks are central figures here, with the launching of a replica of the 180-year-old Grandfather Akwiten canoe in the Wolostok River in 2009. Haida Gwaii 22:00 goes to the northern archipelago on Canada’s West Coast where ecology, economy, culture and traditional knowledge all hold value. Subsistence harvesters, biologists and artists talk about the strategy of Marine protection and the link between oceans and Haida art and culture. Akwesasne 44:00 goes to the Mohawk enclave of Akwesasne, turned into one of the most polluted first nations communities in the world by the Saint Lawrence Seaway. They talk about how they survived this industrial assault. Posonut: The Maliseet Basket 22:00 visits the northern reaches of the Tobique River of New Brunswick, where the Bear clan, of the Maliseet people, have harvested ash and made baskets for countless generations. Water plays a central role here, in this documentary on the making of a multi-purpose basket with the last basket maker of the Wollostoqiyik of Negootkoog. Sacred Head Waters: Loveman Nole 22:00 visits a vast territory in northern British Columbia where a watershed is now threatened by an open pit mining operation. Loveman Nole passes on his knowledge of the region as a hunter, trapper and raconteur. Fraser River 44:00 travels down the longest river in British Columbia, a river that has become a major economic corridor and is shared by a half dozen First Nations. Sto:Lo Chiefs and a Musqueam Elder share their special relationship to this mighty river with some water stories. Tetzan Biny: The Disappearance of Fish Lake 44:00 visits one of the last great water systems of the Chilcotin plateau, now threatened by gold and copper mining operations that will destroy the trout population and affect migratory patterns of moose and caribou. Remembering Celilo Falls 44:00 shows how the Dulles Dam, which drowned the Celilo Falls on the lower Columbia River, affected the Nez Perce and Klickitat people and the salmon migration. 28 Moving Images Distribution Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 FIRST NATIONS & INDIGENOUS PEOPLE Besieged Land Finding Our Way In Southern Chile, in a region of vast forestry plantations, two neighbours, a powerful landowner and a respected Mapuche Chief, fight over contested land. One night, the landowner’s home catches fire. He blames his neighbour and, without listening to the Mapuche Chief’s protestations of innocence, takes him to court. What starts as a mere dispute between neighbours escalates into “The Trial of Pascual Pichún,” a clash between two cultures that have opposing views of the world. At the centre of the conflict lies, in desolation, the land. This is a story of a people dispossessed, deep historic wounds, and still unresolved conflict between Indigenous people, governments in Canada and industry. It’s a story of the struggles of two First Nations in the Carrier territory of north central British Columbia, Canada, for land and sovereignty, for healing and revitalization. The DVD is structured into “chapters” of three 30-minute documentaries, and it comes with an extensive discussion guide. 65:00 • 2007 • subtitled • $250 María-Teresa Larrain Spanish w/ English subtitles Cry Rock 28:30 • 2010 • • $200 Banchi Hanuse Smayaykila Films Today, less than fifteen Nuxalk language speakers and storytellers remain in Bella Coola, British Columbia. One of these elders is the director Banchi Hanuse’s 80-year-old grandmother. In a technologically obsessed century, it would seem easier to record Nuxalk stories for future generations, but Hanuse resists. Instead, she asks whether an electronic recording can capture the true meaning and value of these oral traditions. More importantly, can it be considered cultural knowledge? Cry Rock examines how Nuxalk stories are more than mere words. With the passing of an elder, an invaluable link to a treasure of knowledge and experience reflecting the Nuxalk world view is lost. As Hanuse struggles with the decision, a spinetingling story about the Cry Rock in the bend of the Atnarko River, nestled in the Bella Coola Valley, is retold by Clyde Tallio, a young Nuxalk man. 90:00 (3 chapters, 30:00 each) • 2010 $200 (includes discussion guide) Leonie Sandercock/Giovanni Attili Chapter 1, The Contagion of Colonization, looks at the historical circumstances, including the settlement of the west, Canada’s Indian Act and the residential school system. It provides the background on how these First Nations people find themselves in the situations they face today. Chapter 2, High Noon at Burns Lake, tells the story of the Ts’il Kaz Koh First Nation, or Burns Lake Band. Its people have been in conflict with the Village of Burns Lake over appropriated lands for almost a hundred years, a conflict that culminated in the municipality shutting off water and sewerage services to their reserve in the year 2000. This led to a ruling in favour of the Band by the Supreme Court of British Columbia. Chapter 3, Keeping Our Heads Above Water, tells the story of the Cheslatta Carrier Nation, whose people were evicted from their homeland in 1952 by Alcan’s hydroelectric project. Today, they are still struggling to “keep their heads above water,” culturally and economically. This is 21st century Canada, and the story of two communities—colonizers and the colonized. It’s a story with a question mark. After almost a century of apartheid in this region, the film asks: is there a way forward? Immersive and revealing, the documentary blends interviews set against the wild beauty of the Bella Coola Valley with vivid watercolor animations. Cry Rock illuminates the intersection of Nuxalk history, place and spirit that are at the heart of an oral storytelling tradition. www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 29 FIRST NATIONS & INDIGENOUS PEOPLE firebear called them faith healers… an aboriginal story Nehiyawetan: Let’s Speak Cree Series 1, 2 & 3 What is a story? What power is in our experiences? This video presents an Aboriginal story, vignettes of storytelling, from the life experience of acclaimed Métis author Richard Van Camp. Nehiyawetan means “Let’s speak Cree.” This dynamic six-part series combines live action and animation in an innovative approach to making the Cree language accessible to young children. It follows a group of Aboriginal children, ages five to seven, as they learn to speak Cree in the city. The approach taken reinforces learning through play, music, adventure and storytelling. Nehiyawetan promotes language retention, offers a Cree perspective of the world and encourages smart choices about living in the city. 17:00 • 2009 • $180 Kelvin Redvers/Rhonda Dent Seven people, of different ages and race, stand in front of a white background to tell a story in three vignettes: The Dream, The Fight and The Faith Healers. Lines from the vignettes are passed from one storyteller to the next to form one over-arching story of a mysterious man, “The Quiet One,” who haunts their dreams and their lives. Told from the foundation of Aboriginal storytelling, firebear called them faith healers is an Aboriginal story, meant to be passed on. It questions the forces that exist beyond what we can see, touch or hear and will stimulate discussion on storytelling, filmmaking and spirituality. As an extra, the DVD includes a conversation between Métis director Kelvin Redvers and storyteller/author Richard Van Camp about the role of storytelling in the culture of First Nations people. Ki-Hi-Ka-Ste: Life of Chief George Tall Chief 63:30 • 2010 • $200 Amy Tall Chief George Tall Chief is a key figure in the history of the First Nations people in the Osage county of Oklahoma. When the discovery of oil on land they had purchased brought wealth to the Osage people, the “Reign of Terror” followed—a number of murders at the hands of white ranchers over mineral rights. When his father was among those murdered, nine-year-old George and his four younger brothers were placed in boarding and military schools and were forced to sign away their land to guardians. Despite these adversities in his life, George Tall Chief became a teacher, a coach, a Superintendent of School and a School Trustee. He also was a professional rodeo cowboy and one of the first Chiefs to be inducted into the “National Native American Hall of Fame.” Through an inspiring account of his life, this documentary pay tribute to his contributions to community, his wisdom and his ability to shape his own destiny. 30 Moving Images Distribution Loretta Todd/Kamala Todd/Jason Krowe Mama-oo Pictures SERIES ONE (a 6-part series) 24:00 each part • 2008• $850 for full series • $175 per part Greetings 24:00 • $175 Numbers 24:00 • $175 Action 24:00 • $175 Family 24:00 • $175 Animals 24:00 • $175 Fun 24:00 • $175 SERIES TWO (6-part series) 24:00 each part • 2009 • $850 for full series • $175 per part In the Garden 24:00 • $175 Colours 24:00 • $175 Seasons 24:00 • $175 Clothing 24:00 • $175 Weather 24:00 • $175 Feast 24:00 • $175 SERIES THREE (13-part series) 24:00 each part • 2009 • $1800 for full series • $175 per part Review 24:00 • $175 Storytelling 24:00 • $175 Sports 24:00 • $175 Canoeing In the City 24:00 • $175 Making Art 24:00 • $175 Theatre 24:00 • $175 Being Healthy 24:00 • $175 Winter/Solstice 24:00 • $175 Sun, Moon, Stars 24:00 • $175 Music 24:00 • $175 Scary Stuff 24:00 • $175 Coyotes in the City 24:00 • $175 Pow-Wow 24:00 • $175 Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 FIRST NATIONS & INDIGENOUS PEOPLE Our First Voices 31:00 • 2010 • • $200 (includes discussion guide) Helen Haig-Brown/Zoe Leigh Hopkins/ Lisa Jackson/Kelvin Redvers Bliss Pictures With the help of her grandmother, a young mother composes a lullaby to her baby in Halq’eméylem; at the Chief Atahm School in Adams Lake, children learn math in the Secwepemctsin language of their ancestors; and on Haida Gwaii, musician Vern Williams honours his culture with songs in his traditional language of Xaad Kil. These are just three of the 13 stories in Our First Voices, a film that celebrates B.C. First Nations languages and pays tribute to the drive to preserve and revitalize the languages for future generations. First Nations producers Marilyn Thomas and Catarina Longmuir joined Sharon Bliss to produce this omnibus of 13 poetic meditations on the importance of Native languages for future generations. The DVD consists of 13 short films, varying in length from two to four minutes. The films are directed by four talented young Indigenous media artists—Helen Haig-Brown, Zoe Hopkins, Lisa Jackson and Kelvin Redvers. While noting the effect the Indian Residential School system had on the decline of Indigenous languages, Our First Voices focuses on efforts being made today to create a whole new generation of teachers and learners. Using innovative technology and creating entertaining learning tools, generations come together with a common goal to reinvest in the future of their communities. Policy Baby: The Journey of Rita/Bev 50:00 • 2008 • $250 Susan Stewart/Michael Glassbourg/Bev Jones TickleScratch Productions Bev Jones is from Keeseekoowenin, a First Nations reserve in western Manitoba. Apprehended at two months of age and put into foster care with a non-Native family, she was returned to the reserve when she was six. Dislocated from her family and without a native tongue, she suffered abuse; she was then uprooted again and returned to her foster home. She spent years in a state of dislocation between two cultures, without solid roots in either one. Today she is a social worker and riveting storyteller in her mid-forties, who coined the term “policy baby” to encapsulate her all-too-common story of dislocation and loss. In Canada, it is estimated that in the 1950s and ‘60s alone, over 16,000 Aboriginal children were www.movingimages.ca disconnected from their families in this way. This is the story of two cultures and two histories and how Bev Jones was able to thread a pathway across extremely unstable ground to reconnect with her roots and heal. Potlatch <To Give> 23:00 • 2011 • $180 2 shorts: 10:00 & 13:00 Barb Cranmer Kwakwaka’wakw director Barb Cranmer has created two short films that recreate the experience of the modern-day potlatch, still practiced in her community of Alert Bay, British Columbia. The first film is a 10-minute narrative documentary showing the potlatch ceremony and discussing its importance in the passing down of history and connection to ancestry. The second 13-minute films immerses the viewer in the experience itself with a powerful soundscape that was film in the Bighouse during this traditional ceremony that connects families and community for Canada’s Indigenous Northwest Coast people. Reservation Soldiers 48:00 • 2007 • • $250 Lisa Jackson/Trish Williams/Trish Dolman Screen Siren Pictures Adventure. Discipline. Cold hard cash. This is what the Canadian military program Bold Eagle offers Aboriginal youth from Western Canada’s remote reserves, and it looks good. But for the ‘lucky’ ones who beat the fierce competition to get into this six-week boot camp for First Nations youth, Bold Eagle is no cakewalk. For many of these young men and women, this is the biggest challenge they have ever encountered. Not only are they going through arduous training and the challenge of adapting to military culture very different from their own, they are on the verge of entering the Canadian Forces at one of the most dangerous times in recent history. Reservation Soldiers takes a closer look at the complex relationship between the Canadian Forces and First Nations youth, following three young men from Saskatchewan reservations over a period of two years. The military have pushed their recruitment drive into high gear, and Native youth represent the perfect untapped resource. Why are these teens so keen to join up? Is a career in the military the only way out? Is it really the best option for both? FALL 2011 31 FIRST NATIONS & INDIGENOUS PEOPLE Shi-shi-etko 12:00 • 2009 • $160 Marilyn Thomas Monkey Ink Media Halq’emalem w/ English subtitles Shi-shi-etko, a six year old Native girl, has only four days before she is taken to residential school. Each of these days she spends with either her mother, her father or her Yayah (grandmother). Knowing what’s in store, each of them reminds her of the beauty of her culture, who she is and most importantly, to never forget. Best Canadian Short Film, imagineNATIVE Film Festival 2009; Best Drama, Winnipeg Aboriginal Festival; First Prize, The Legacy Awards, Vancouver Women in Film Festival ‘NAMEGAN’S OM DLU’WANS AWINAGWISEX We Are One With the Land 32:00 • 2009 • $200 Barb Cranmer ‘NAMGIS First Nation Chief & Council The people of Vancouver Island’s ‘NAMGIS First Nation travel in traditional canoes on an expedition through the traditional territory of their people, a territory that goes back thousands of years. Everything they are comes from their land, and their territory defines them in their spirit, songs, dances and their relationship to the land that has sustained them for thousands of years. In 1997, they signed a Statement of Intent to negotiate a modern-day treaty with the Government of British Columbia and the Government of Canada. As Chief Bill Cranmer of the ‘NAMGIS First Nation states, “One of our real strengths is our culture and I think with that strength we can really show British Columbia and the rest of Canada that we are distinct people and that we need to be recognized as distinct people.” “a spiritual land claim” 27:00 • 2006 • $250 Dorothy Christian Dorothy Christian is a member of the Okanagan and Secwepemc Nations of the British Columbian Interior. She combines drama, documentary and poetic prose in “a spiritual land claim” to express the violence of colonization in a very artful way. Portraying the transformation of one woman through her spiritual journey as she returns to her traditional homelands, the director uses traditional and contemporary Indigenous songs and haunting instrumentation to travel with the “spirit” on its healing journey back to its ancestral homelands. See also: Ayaa: A Hero’s Journey................................................................... 46 Cedar and Bamboo......................................................................... 33 Finding Our Way............................................................................. 29 From the Spirit (26-part series)....................................................... 15 Johnny Tootall................................................................................... 8 Killer Whale and Crocodile............................................................. 19 The Life and Work of Daphne Odjig.............................................. 19 A Look at the Life of Morgan Green............................................. 19 The Making of a Haida Totem Pole............................................... 19 Our First Voices................................................................................ 31 Out In The Cold............................................................................... 23 SAVAGE ............................................................................................. 9 Standing Tall.................................................................................... 21 Storytellers in motion (39-part series).............................................. 9 32 Moving Images Distribution Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 GUIDANCE & VALUES BULLyING Cultural Diversity Kid Colours All ah We 7:30 • 2011 • • $150 Ruben Castelblanco Everyone is the new kid at some point in their life. In this short drama Alejandro, a new student with limited English skills, has difficulty understanding his high school peers and teachers. Under pressure, he finds a way to escape the stress of confrontation and adapt to his new environment with dignity. Sheep 24:00 • 2011 • $160 (includes discussion guide) Kelvin Redvers In this short drama, directed by a teenager for teenagers, a mishap in shop class leads to a new hot trend in the high school. The question is: to what length will students go just to fit in and be considered cool? Besides being a good discussionstarter on self-esteem and independent thinking versus “the herd instinct” and bullying, Sheep will inspire creative writing, containing good examples of metaphor and symbolism. CAREERS One Week Job Two versions: 74:00 & 48:00 • 2010 • $195 Ian MacKenzie One Week Job Productions One man, one year, 52 jobs. See page 21 for full film description. 10:30 • 2011 • $160 Karen Chapman Smallaxx Media Productions Second generation Canadian Karen Chapman undergoes a cultural transformation into a carnival masquerader at Toronto’s Caribana Parade. On this colourful journey, she discovers her Afro and IndoCaribbean heritage while asking, “Can you call a place home if you have never been there?” Beauty Lies 20:00 • 2010 • $180 Karen Chapman Bad hair days are familiar to most women—but for those of African descent, the roots of discontent are more complex. Mass media fully represents models with long, straight hair. This is not the kind of hair they have naturally. Karen Chapman decides to investigate hair—the beauty industry, representation of hair in popular media and the link between beauty and power in society. Friends, family, a youth counselor, a former model and Canadian playwright Trey Anthony (Da Kink in My Hair) offer their comments. Dr. Rinaldo Walcott, a sociology professor at the University of Toronto adds an analytical perspective dating back to colonization and slavery. As she proceeds through her exploration, Karen shaves her head and discovers a new sense of liberation and identity. Cedar and Bamboo 22:00 • 2010 • $180 Diana E. Leung/Kamala Todd/Karin Lee/Jennifer Lau Chinese Canadian Historical Society of BC Cedar and Bamboo explores identity and relationships through the lives of four people who are offspring of intermarriages between Chinese immigrants to British Columbia and Indigenous people. At the age of five, elder Judy Joe was taken from Vancouver to her father’s village in China where she was raised by her stepfamily. She fought to reclaim her Canadian identity, returning to Vancouver by herself at age 14. There, she felt like an immigrant in her place of birth. www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 33 GUIDANCE & VALUES Musqueam elder Howard Grant, who shares a long heritage of the Musequeam people through his mother and a Chinese heritage through his father, reflects on his experiences with both cultures. Siblings Jordie and Hannah Yow, who grew up in Kamloops and are now in their 20s, reflect on growing up in an absence of information on their cultural backgrounds. As an extra on the DVD, 1788: A History of Chinese and First Nation Relations in British Columbia provides 10 minutes of academic commentary from Harley Wylie of the Mowachaht/Muchalaht First Nation and Professors Jean Barman and Henry Yu of the University of British Columbia on the shared histories in British Columbia of these two peoples. growing up among strangers 26:00 • 2009 • $200 (includes discussion guide) Nina Sudra butterflytyphoon pictures Growing up among strangers examines the duality of growing up in Canada’s cultural mosaic. Several young Canadians from diverse cultural backgrounds talk about their struggles to balance two worlds—the traditional, cultural values of home and the westernized culture that lies outside. Their stories are combined with comments from Canadians of earlier generations who understand this dilemma very well—author Wayson Choy (The Jade Peony), Zarqa Nawaz, creator of Little Mosque on the Prairie and YTV host Carlos Bustamante. This combination of current anecdotes and memories upon reflection sheds light on the difficulties and benefits of living in two different cultures while remaining true to one’s self. Me, Masi & Mr. Clean 34 One Big Hapa Family 85:00 • 2010 • • $250 Jeff Chiba Stearns/Ruth Vincent Preconceptions about racial purity are under the microscope in this fast-paced, heart-warming documentary by Jeff Chiba Stearns, who has a heritage that is half-Japanese, half-European. The spark for this film was ignited at a Koga family reunion in Kelowna, British Columbia. Looking around at all his relatives, Stearns realized that everyone in his Japanese-Canadian family had married inter-racially after his grandparents’ generation. This spurred him to investigate and to explain statistical evidence that people of Japanese origin marry non-Japanese partners at a rate of 95 per cent, much higher than is the case with people of other origins. Jeff Stearns puts his talents as an animator to task, mixing them with keen observations, frank discussions with four generations of his family and a humourous and personable approach. What results is an entertaining and intelligent examination of how mixed children today perceive their unique identities. It leaves him wondering if mixing could be the end of multiculturalism as we know it. 8:00 • 2010 • $150 Nina Sudra butterflytyphoon pictures Secrets in the Forest The prevailing notion of “fair and lovely” is under the microscope in this playful and entertaining short drama. Seema, a precocious 11-year-old girl, is constantly goaded by her “Masi” (Aunt) about her dark skin. Since her aunt is big on cleaning, Seema resorts to a few bottles of a beloved household cleaning product to see if she can remedy this flaw. After an unexpected turn of events, a beautiful truth is revealed. Four Vancouver women reflect on their status as “culturally hybrid” in the 21st century. All are Métis; all are conscious of how colonization made their ancestors want to forget their heritage. Michelle LaFlamme is a Ph.D. candidate, instructor and filmmaker; Tasha Fay Evans is an actor and playwright who wrote and performs in a play called She Stands Still; Reina Sinclair is an administrator in education and Luisa Sanchez is Mitsoza from Nicaragua. The play makes them think about their relationships‚ to nature, family, motherhood and their Aboriginal grandmothers. Moving Images Distribution 5:00 • 2007 • $100 Rita Godbout Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 GUIDANCE & VALUES Streetcar from Zanzibar Who the Jew Are You? In the bustling streets of Stone Town, on the island state of Zanzibar, most people never leave their neighbourhood, but 21-year-old Rukia is preparing to cross the ocean and start a new life in Toronto. A stranger in Canada awaits her for an arranged marriage. Her younger sister Shemsa helps her to prepare and seems convinced that Canada will bring prosperity. Alan Goldman is a man with a mission. As a disconnected Jew who marries a non-Jewish woman, he becomes a new father—only to learn that his new son is not technically a Jew. If Alan could just figure out what relevance Judaism has in his own life, he’d be able to help his son find his place in the Jewish world. His journey is as important as the answers he seeks; and along the way, he uncovers a progressive, modern reinvigorated Judaism. 23:00 • 2006 • subtitled • • $180 Karen Yarosky Wander Woman Productions Across the globe, deep in Toronto’s winter, Nuru struggles to weather the boredom and cold she feels being locked in her new city. Two years new to Canada, she grew up in Zanzibar just streets away from Rukia and her sister. At 15, Nuru is in high school, hangs out at the mall, has ditched traditional garb for hip-hop gear and spends half her life on the Toronto Transit system. She yearns for the home she has left behind. This film illustrates the difference 13,000 kilometres can make to two young Muslim women. It offers both a glimpse of a faraway world and a frank look at the dreams, expectations, discoveries and disappointments of those who want to call Canada home. Who Killed the Goldfish? 11:00 • 2009 • subtitled • $160 Jin Hong English & Korean w/ English subtitles This short drama explores the power dynamic between a mother and the eldest daughter in a Korean immigrant family whose members vote to speak only English at home. The daughter takes advantage of her fluency in English to overpower her mother’s authority. With their father remaining in Korea to work, the geographical and psychological separation of the family become amplified by the obstacles of communication. Cracks caused by individual transition provide a powerful glimpse of the domestic struggles of an immigrant family. 48:00 • 2009 • $200 Alan Goldman Blue Plate Productions See also: Finding Our Way............................................................................. 29 From the Spirit, 26-part series........................................................ 15 growing up among strangers......................................................... 34 Mahjong & Chicken Feet.................................................................. 8 SAMAQAN: Water Stories............................................................... 28 Storytellers in motion (39-part series).............................................. 9 Yabai: Asian North American Art Culture..................................... 12 Ethics 419: The Nigerian Scam 20:00 • 2009 • • $160 Sorin Mihailovici Every year, more than 50,000 people fall victim to the Nigerian Scam. It usually starts with an e-mail about a business proposal or winning a lottery, followed by stories with tempting outcomes until the victim’s lifetime savings are lost. Article 419 in the Nigerian Constitution deals with this scam reported to be the third most lucrative one in the country, generating over 5 billion dollars in the last 20 years. This short drama, based on a true story, shows how the scam works. See also: Down Here....................................................................................... 40 Finding Our Way............................................................................. 29 FLESH................................................................................................ 50 For You, My People........................................................................... 5 Out In The Cold............................................................................... 23 School of Secrets............................................................................. 21 www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 35 GUIDANCE & VALUES Family Relationships the gesture 9:00 • 2010 • $120 Nathan Zeitner This short drama concerns the mending a family relationship after a long period of estrangement and the consequences of prejudiced and homophobic attitudes. A young woman has been estranged from her grandmother for many years and has moved to another city to get on with her life. The sudden arrival of her grandmother, who hopes to make amends, challenges the young woman to forgive this past rejection by her family and move forward on a new path. While not closed captioned, a version with subtitles for the Deaf and hard of hearing is available. This Time Last Winter 25:00 • 2010 • $200 Ann Verall/Sarah Abbott Amoeba Works This short drama explores violence in young relationships. Iona has suffered a violent incident and lost consciousness. As she struggles to recall what happened, her mother tells her it was caused by Iona’s indie rock musician boyfriend. Iona refuses to believe it. To find out for herself, she returns to the location of her last memory—his funky warehouse apartment, full of love, desire and magic. Through interracial relationships and the healing of a talking circle, the film explores the moment of choice we face when the urge to be violent surfaces. Your Mother Should Know 18:00 • 2008 • Peg Campbell My Son the Pornographer 45:00 • 2008 • • $250 Peter Campbell/Art Holbrook Gumboot Productions/Arthur Holbrook Productions This love story between a father and son explores the consequences of life choices and how they can tear families apart. Art, a man raised with conservative moral values, visits his son Kole, who works as a writer and actor in the pornography business in Prague. Art is concerned that Kole’s choice of career is linked to the sexual abuse he experienced in Canada as a child. He hopes to open up lines of communication and get Kole out of a life that he believes is negative and soul destroying. As they inch their way to common ground despite a clash of values, Art persuades Kole to return to Canada to confront his past so that he can begin healing his troubled life. This moving and surprisingly humorous documentary examines the complexities of parenting and the long-lasting impact of sexual abuse on victims and their families. • $200 This viscerally personal film examines the relationships between mothers and daughers and resonates with the passion and helpless love that overwhelms almost every mother. Campbell assembles small moments snatched from memory, snapshots and home movies that trace the line between three different lives—her mother’s, her daughter’s and hers. Set against these personal stories is a collection of teenage girls offering blunt assessments of their roles in the age-old dance between mothers and daughters. See also: Cedar and Bamboo......................................................................... 33 Embracing Bob’s Killer.................................................................... 38 Finding Our Way............................................................................. 29 growing up among strangers......................................................... 34 Mississippi ReMixed......................................................................... 44 One Big Hapa Family....................................................................... 34 Over Land........................................................................................ 26 She’s a Boy I Knew........................................................................... 47 Who Killed the Goldfish? .............................................................. 35 Who the Jew Are You?................................................................... 35 Best Documentary, Leo Awards - British Columbia Film & Television Awards 36 Moving Images Distribution Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 HEALTH SCIENCES & SOCIAL WORK Addiction Disability Letter to Myself Almost Normal: Stories from the Well Within 22:00 • 2007 • $180 Beth Miller Acorn New Media Kim and Carla met during treatment for crystal meth addiction. Their struggle to overcome this addiction is powerfully portrayed in their own words, comments from family and counsellors and text of a letter Kim wrote to herself during her darkest days at rock bottom. Not a Game 10:00 • 2007 • $150 Eva Wunderman/Toby Hinton Wunderman Films/Odd Squad Productions The harsh realities of crystal meth, an increasingly popular drug for young people, come to light in this documentary created for elementary school level and up. Addicts currently battling the addiction share their experiences and the dreams they once had for their future. An elementary school teacher and her class discuss strategies to refuse the drug when approached, and a medical doctor provides frank and real insight into the horrific damage crystal meth can cause. Revolving Doors 12:30 • 2009 • $180 Kristen Korns Public health nurses Evanna Brennan and Susan Giles have developed innovative strategies in their work with Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. Over the last 15 years, they’ve provided street-level home care nursing to an essentially homeless population surviving the effects of drug addiction, mental illness and now HIV. Revolving Doors follows them through the harsh streets of Canada’s poorest postal code for a glimpse of their extraordinary approach and amazing dedication to reach out to this fragile population. 46:00 • 2004 • Seana Kozar • $200 Storyteller and folklorist, Dr. Seana Kozar is a woman with an invisible disability. When she was born with cerebral palsy, her parents were told she would never enjoy a full life. At just 19, she was offered a fully funded spot in a Ph.D. program. In Almost Normal, Seana takes a deeply personal journey with four other women whose disabilities—attention deficit disorder, auditory disability, bi-polar affective disorder, reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD), rheumatoid arthritis and asthma—are as diverse as their life experiences. They discuss the challenges they have encountered at work, school and home, and the coping strategies they have developed to survive. Honourable mention, Documentary category for work by a filmmaker with a disability, Picture This International Disability Film Festival First Steps 12:00 • 2009 • $150 Jason DaSilva InFace Films Vancouver filmmaker Jason DaSilva made his first film at the age of 20. Just two years later, his second short film played at the Sundance Film Festival and qualified for an Oscar nomination. Four years after that, Jason was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis at the age of 26. First Steps is a short personal diary on film, documenting how Jason’s world has changed over the first four years of this neurological disorder. His determination to learn about this neurological disorder and continue his career as a talented filmmaker and artist is inspiring. See also: Blue Skies & Rocky Shores............................................................... 40 Nothing Like Her............................................................................... 5 See also: Down Here....................................................................................... 40 www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 37 HEALTH SCIENCES & SOCIAL WORK Eating Disorders Healing & Mental Health No Numbers: Identity beyond measure The Brush, The Pen, and Recovery Living in a society that is heavily dominated by capitalist narratives and media values makes many feel like they don’t quite measure up. As a model and actor, Dena Ashbaugh has battled eating disorders for many years and is particularly media savvy. She and other individuals share their stories in this examination of the general sense of “disease” in a society where dissatisfaction with selfimage is increasingly becoming the norm. The Brush, The Pen, and Recovery follows a group of artists preparing work for exhibition at the Gallery on the Bay in Hamilton, Ontario. They are members of the Cottage Studio, a studio space established in 1993 to promote mental health and the artistic realization of its members. The film focuses on three artists in particular, all with schizophrenia. As they work on art pieces that show stunning talent, they talk frankly about their illness, their long road to recovery, and the role art has played in their lives. 2 versions (includes discussion guide) 62:00 • 2009 • • $275 46:00 • 2010 • • $250 Sonja Ruebsaat/Dena Ashbaugh beatroute productions Three women use film to move away from the self-destructive practices of disordered eating toward those that are self-creating. They rediscover values in life that move beyond inches, weight and other measures that society too often champions as benchmarks for success. Treatment for eating disorders often fails to break out of this numbers game, resulting in frustratingly low recovery rates and unacceptably high mortality. The stories of recovery by the three women in No Numbers, although personal, are inescapably connected to society and thus to the community as a whole. Through True Eyes: the process of recovery from eating disorders 23:00 • 2009 • • $180 (includes discussion guide) Daphne Curtis Atlantic Mediaworks This documentary is based on research by Kate Weaver, R.N., Ph.D, University of New Brunswick. Three women share experiences of their battle with eating disorders, through onset, hospitalization and recovery. The issue of control in their lives was paramount for all, whether it was for body image or to counter complex childhood traumas including sexual abuse or the loss of family members. Frank and intimate recollections inform the reality of those who embark on the long process of overcoming anorexia nervosa. 33:00 • 2009 • $180 Marvin Ross/David Laing Dawson Bridgeross Communications “…great moments that really land the idea of the place art can have in recovery, the pride people get from their work and the identity as ‘artist’.” - Bruce Saunders, Founder, Movie Monday Society, Victoria, B.C. “Educational, accurate, human, and compelling.” - Dr. Peter Cook, Department of Psychiatry, McMaster University Embracing Bob’s Killer 46:00 • 2007 • • $200 Helen Slinger/Sue Ridout Dreamfilm Productions When lawyer and triathlete Bob McIntosh died a senseless death in Squamish, B.C., his widow Katy Hutchison fell into the national media spotlight. Her pleas for the killer to turn himself in were met with an impenetrable code of silence. Determined not to be victimized further and harbour the same anger that led someone to kick her husband in the head, she embarked on a remarkable journey of forgiveness and began a speaking tour, talking to high school students about the consequences of bad decision-making and the importance for each individual to take responsibility for his or her actions. Then, she invited her husband’s killer to join her onstage, even while he was still in prison for manslaughter. Although their lives had collided through tragedy, they formed a kind of collegial friendship—and together, could deliver a very powerful message. Embracing Bob’s Killer shows how each person close to the victim was affected and how some can forgive, while others cannot. It sheds light on the complexities of restorative justice as well as the nature of forgiveness and the human need to judge even this most “divine” of acts. 38 Moving Images Distribution Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 HEALTH SCIENCES & SOCIAL WORK Glimpses of Light 15:00 • 2010 • $160 (includes discussion guide) Emma Kendall/Nick Kendall/Keet Neville Orca Productions Different voices from diverse cultural backgrounds share life stories about the paths travelled while navigating their experience of mental illness. Their messages are meant to serve as a catalyst for ongoing discussion to deepen our understanding of needs and experience of people who experience mental illness and, in particular, Aboriginal people and their families. They offer suggestions for a more holistic system that includes an approach of respect, not blame, and an understanding of their need for cultural reconciliation. A health care provider comments that respect for the patient’s personal experience is an essential first step along the path to healing. This film is an initiative of the Cultural Society working group of the First Nation, Métis and Inuit Advisory Committee of the Mental Health Commission in collaboration with the Mood Disorders Association of Canada and the Native Mental Health Association. The Light of Family Burnam Oh Me 2: a case of BiPolar DisOrder 20:00 • 2008 • $180 Jonathan Amitay In this personal and endearing film, a prolific and brilliant animator reveals his battles with bipolar disorder to lay the path for a new understanding of this condition. His son, a clinical psychologist, adds his own comments, from the perspective of a health professional and family member. The Sacred Seven 9:00 • 2010 • $150 (includes discussion guide) Jordan Molaro/Sami Tesfazghi In this short drama, a foster child’s morals far surpass those of her neglectful foster mother. Seven-year-old Mellissa grounds herself with the seven sacred teachings taught by the late Elder Doris Campbell. Mellissa realizes that her only safe haven from this home is by living her life in spiritual harmony. The film offers a glimpse into a neglectful foster home and the efforts of a child to establish a sense of balance. It is accompanied by a discussion guide that explains The Seven Teachings, written by one of Canada’s First Nations Elders and spiritual leaders, David Courchene, Jr., from the Ashinabe Nation in Manitoba. 19:30 • 2009 • • $200 Marshall Axani/Douglas Kerr Awkward Moment Productions Terminally-ill 10-year-old Wyler Burnam plans for his upcoming funeral with the help of his youngat-heart grandfather, Richard. Wyler’s father, Michael, struggles with the fact that his son will soon be gone. Having already experienced the loss of his wife a few years earlier, Michael feels helpless as the people he loves most are slowly being torn from his life. Furthermore, Michael’s father Richard seems reluctant to acknowledge the boy’s worsening condition and continues to perpetuate Wyler’s imagination that he still has all the time in the world. But when Wyler’s condition worsens, his dad is forced to finally open up and become the father that Wyler needs. In so doing, it’s Michael’s last chance to embrace the lighter side of death, find some redemption within himself and fully enjoy the time he has left with his son. Best Short Film, Heart of Gold Festival 2009 in Australia See also: Almost Normal: Stories from the Well Within.............................. 37 Down Here....................................................................................... 40 Finding Our Way............................................................................. 29 the gesture...................................................................................... 36 Glimpses of Light............................................................................. 39 Mississippi ReMixed......................................................................... 44 My Son the Pornographer.............................................................. 36 No Numbers: Identity beyond measure ....................................... 38 Nothing Like Her............................................................................... 5 On a Moving Path........................................................................... 50 Policy Baby: The Journey of Rita/Bev............................................. 31 SAVAGE ............................................................................................. 9 Through True Eyes: the process of recovery from eating disorders.............................................................. 38 www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 39 HEALTH SCIENCES & SOCIAL WORK Homelessness Home 9:00 • 2006 • $120 Wayne Dupuis/Jordan Shaw Building Bridge: A Housing Project for Women 22:00 • 2003 • $150 Jacqueline Levitin Health and Home Research Project/SFU Homeless women and women in desperate straits on Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside found a safe haven when Bridge Housing for Women opened in 2001. This opening culminated a 20-year effort by neighbourhood residents and activists to create a place where women could escape the dangers of the streets and get support to come off drugs and alcohol. The women who created the project and the women who call Bridge home tell their stories. Down Here 30:00 • 2008 • $200 Charles Wilkinson Shore Films Director Charles Wilkinson filmed eight residents in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, with dignity, in a quiet and safe environment. They are streetdwellers in one of North America’s so-called “most livable cities.” They share their stories of how they shifted from seemingly normal lives to their present existence in hostile and toxic environments. Revelations about their daily experiences are combined with images of life on the street in this intimate portrait of people who form the fringes of society—the poor, hungry, sick and ashamed. Most Popular Canadian Short Film, Vancouver International Film Festival; Best Short Documentary, Cleveland Film Festival; Ondo Curta Award - Best Short Documentary, “Circuito Off” Venice International Short Film Festival This documentary, created from still photos, is not only a stark reminder of the unforgiving reality of homeless Canadians, it also looks at the unexpected community and diversity of street life. One homeless man talks about his street family who camp together and keep an eye on each other. A young man, who describes himself as coming “from a good family” argues against the stereotype that all homeless people are addicted to drugs or mentally ill. One woman insists that she doesn’t want a home because on the street, she’s free from the demands of family and friends. A 51-year-old man explains that he works regularly but can’t afford the cost of shelter. Their frank and thoughtful commentary from several professionals who work with them present a closer look at life on the streets. Hospice Care Blue Skies & Rocky Shores 21:00 • 2008 • $160 Linda Rae Dornan Artist and university professor John Asimakos was diagnosed with Pick’s Disease in 1994. This rare form of dementia slowly erodes cognitive abilities. His wife and caregiver, Linda Rae Dornan, documented her experience of caring for John through his illness, over a period of nine years. What emerges is a touching glimpse of caregiving as John struggled to live with dignity and joy as his life drastically changed. Hand to Toe: An Exploration in the Art of Giving 8:30 • 2010 • $100 France Benoit Every Wednesday at the Salvation Army in Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories, men and women from the streets gather to share an evening meal and have their feet washed. They swap stories and the volunteers who provide this service make meaningful connections with their community. Invoking the grace and security of the womb, director France Benoit and videographer Gary Milligan dive foot first into these lively nights with this artful, black-and-white exploration into the act of giving. 40 Moving Images Distribution See also: Tending Toward Silence.................................................................. 23 Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 HEALTH SCIENCES & SOCIAL WORK Medicine Desperately Seeking Doctors 42:00 • 2008 • • $200 Sharon Barlett/Maria Le Rose/Sue Ridout Dreamfilm Productions Canada’s universal health care system was the envy of the world. But today, five million Canadians don’t have a family doctor. As a result, when we get sick we either clog up hospital emergency rooms or go to walk-in clinics that don’t know our medial histories and can offer little continuity of care. The situation is already critical, and is about to get much worse—with a huge bulge of baby boom doctors about to retire and younger doctors not inclined to sacrifice personal lives for their careers. How did we get here? And how do we get back to the level of primary health care that we believe is our right as Canadian citizens? Filmmakers Sharon Bartlett and Maria LeRose set out on a crosscountry journey, talking to ordinary Canadians, doctors and health care experts to investigate the present crisis, its causes and possible solutions. Health Care 911: the plight of immigrant medical doctors 47:00 • 2006 • • $200 Jiyar Gol/Erin Mussolum/Michelle Welygan Artizan Productions Health Care 911 introduces some of the 8,000 medically trained immigrants unable to practice in Canada despite a critical shortage of doctors across the country. Facing the frustration of repeating years of training, exorbitant exam fees and competing for scarce residency positions, doctors from Pakistan, Italy, South Africa and elsewhere describe their battle with government bureaucracy in Canada, a country where less than 5 per cent of immigrant medical doctors (IMDs) will ever practice. Patrick Coady, coordinator of B.C.’s Internationally Trained Professionals Network, points to a 1991 report for Canada’s deputy ministers of health that predicted a doctor surplus and led to a decrease in seats at medical schools. He also questions the role played by the self-regulating colleges of practitioners in preventing IMDs from working in Canada. A representative from the College of Physicians & Surgeons of British Columbia places the blame squarely on lack of government funding. One deputy minister defends his government’s policy as a precaution taken for the safety of patients. Meanwhile a woman with a spinal condition, whose mobility has declined irreversibly while she’s waited months to see a specialist, is one of thousands of Canadians shocked by the long queues for essential medical procedures. As immigrant doctors continue to take jobs as security guards and cab drivers, Health Care 911 probes all sides of the growing problem of health care accessibility in Canada. See also: Captured: From Footbinding to Stilettos....................................... 50 www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 41 HEALTH SCIENCES & SOCIAL WORK Polio Hunters 45:30 • 2008 • subtitled • $200 Jack Silberman Homeward Bound Productions English and Hindi w/ English subtitles The highly contagious polio virus that crippled thousands in Canada in the 1950s has been eradicated in many countries but still thrives in a few places around the world. One of its last strongholds is in northern India, in the state of Uttar Pradesh and in the city of Muzaffarnagar. Polio Hunters follows a two-week immunization campaign there in 2005 assisted by Toronto’s Dr. Yakub Vaid for the World Health Organization. This trip takes Dr. Vaid away from his family and the comforts of his home in Toronto. He returns to the home of his ancestors and, with a tight timeline, he has to employ all the resources he can to find and vaccinate those at risk in a region where many aren’t even aware that the polio vaccine can protect their children. Dr. Vaid is able to mobilize the volunteer resources of street criers and performers, school teachers and students, local midwives and the Muslim leaders to vaccinate as many children as possible to halt the spread of this crippling disease. Sexual Assault Dissolve: a documentary on drug facilitated sexual assault 48:00 • 2009 • • $250 (includes discussion guide) Meghan Gardiner/Michelle Porter Scott Renyard/Amy Belling A little liquid or powder is slipped into a drink. Women are being drugged into unconscious or semi-conscious states and being raped. They often have little or no memory of the attack or attacker, just the feeling that something terrible has happened. With a lack of awareness about these drugs, women don’t realize how vulnerable they are, and rapists are getting away with their crimes. In Dissolve, several women talk about their experiences. Law enforcement officers, lawyers and hospital workers add their comments on the dangers of the drugs used in what now comprises 20 per cent of all sexual assaults. See also: A Case of Rape.................................................................................. 4 My Son the Pornographer.............................................................. 36 School of Secrets............................................................................. 21 Your Mother Should Know............................................................. 36 Youth Violence The Red Jacket 24:00 • 2008 • $180 Angela Bianchi White Angel Productions A chance encounter for a 19-year-old visitor to Victoria led to life-altering consequences. Nicholas Chow Johnson was walking on a street wearing a red jacket, the colour of the Bloods street gang and was beaten by a rival gang member of the Crips. He suffered a brain injury that has left him incapacitated for life. The documentary shows the problems with wannabe gangs in Victoria, B.C. the glamorization of teen violence and its dire consequences. This is a powerful discussion starter for bad decision making and its lifelong repercussions. See also: This Time Last Winter...................................................................... 36 42 Moving Images Distribution Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 HISTORY HOLOCAUST North American History Return to Reichenbach Arctic Shadows: The Arctic Journeys of Dr. R. M. Anderson 60:00 • 2011 • $300 Maureen Kelleher Two women on opposite sides of Hitler’s Third Reich meet in Toronto, years after the Second World War—one, a Jewish girl orphaned by the regime, the other possibly the Nazi guard who protected her. This powerful documentary weaves together their stories, intimately exploring and contrasting their experiences of the ward, crushing losses and their fraught reunion more than half a century later. Return to Reichenbach is the first documentary in the body of Holocaust material that simultaneously captures the stories of an everyday Jewish girl and a German woman in Hitler’s reign. It provides a rare opportunity to view history through their eyes—a survivor searching for closure 50 years later and a German woman who paid a huge price for ideals she blindly supported or was too afraid to oppose. Time Apart: A History of Hope 43:00 • 2009 • • $180 Rachel Bower/Warren Brown Willow Productions 60:00 • 2010 • $200 David R. Gray/Ian Hall Dr. Rudolph Martin Anderson spent seven winters and ten summers north of the Arctic Circle in his career as an Arctic scientist. This documentary salutes his contributions to conservation, Arctic science and cultural knowledge from three different expeditions. His first expedition lasted from 1908 to 1912 and took him to the Western Arctic as a zoologist, accompanying Arctic explorer Vilhjalmur Stefansson— sometimes with him and sometimes on his own, for as long as eight months. A year later, Dr. Anderson sailed again as head of the scientific party for the Canadian Arctic Expedition from 1913 to 1916. In 1928, he sailed again, this time as the Canadian Eastern Arctic Patrol Official Naturalist. From these expeditions, Dr. Anderson collected an amazing number of specimens and artifacts as well as documenting the expeditions with thousands of photographs. Archival film footage, photographs and sound recordings are combined with stunning contemporary footage of wildlife in this film that pays tribute to the work of a great mammologist who has largely gone unrecognized since his death in 1961. Seventy-seven-year old Holocaust survivor Alice Zuckerman never gave up hope she would find her family, lost after the Second World War. When scribbled notes on torn paper reveal clues to her past, Alice and her family reunite. Alice takes us on a moving journey through old Eastern Europe, a world that seemingly disappeared through Nazism and Communism. Yet the world of Alice’s childhood remains vital in the hearts of the people she meets along the way. Time Apart: A History of Hope is a story that proves, as Alice Zuckerman says, “Hope is the last thing to die.” www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 43 HISTORY Beyond the Gardens’ Wall: The Immigrant Workers of Tod Inlet 30:00 • 2011 • $200 David R. Gray/Ian Hall Mountain Studios/Grayhound Productions Mississippi ReMixed 57:00 • 2010 • Myra Ottewell • $275 (includes discussion guide) Significant limestone deposits at Tod Inlet, near Victoria, attracted Owen Sound businessman Robert Pim Butchart to relocate his Portland cement factory to Vancouver Island in 1904. As the limestone was extracted, his wife Jennie took on the task of creating a series of sunken gardens on the 55-acre site. It was in a Canadian classroom that teacher Myra Ottewell, born and raised in Jackson, Mississippi, started on a journey to her past. After watching the film Mississippi Burning, students could not believe that it was possible for Myra or other white Mississippians to have had anything but disrespectful, hated or bigoted relationships with African Americans in the ‘60s. And they doubted things had changed much since. Beyond the Gardens’ Wall tells the story of immigrant Chinese and Sikh workers who worked first at the cement plant and then continued the labour to create what is now known as the Butchart Gardens. Extensive research, narration, rare archival footage and comments from the workers’ descendants, including Victoria’s mayor Alan Lowe, describe a little-known chapter in Canadian history and illustrate the harsh impact of Canada’s immigration laws on these immigrant communities. Frustrated that Canadians had nothing good to say about her state, Myra embarked on a personal journey to investigate the past, returning to her birthplace in Jackson, Mississippi. There she met James Meredith, the first black student to enroll in the University of Mississippi and Dolphus Weary, who left the state on a basketball scholarship and wrote the book, I Ain’t Comin Back. He did return and now runs an organization dedicated to building authentic relationships along racial lines. Canyon War: The Untold Story 46:00 • 2009 • • $250 Eva Wunderman Canyon War Productions Canyon War covers the tumultuous events of 1858 in British Columbia—events which led to a little-known war that could have escalated, had it not been for the persuasive diplomacy of Chief Spintlum of the Nlaka’pamux First Nation. 2008 marked the 150th anniversary of the Fraser River Gold Rush, which saw some 30 to 40 thousand gold seekers flood into the Fraser Valley, culminating in the Fraser River War in August of that year. Many lives were lost, both Native and non-Native, until peace was finally concluded in Lytton by Chief Spintlum and Henry Snyder. But as Myra delved deeper into understanding race relations, she uncovered harsh and troubling information. Growing up white in the segregated South, so well portrayed in Harper Lee’s 1960 novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, Myra had been sheltered from the hate crimes taking place in her state. These intense truths forced her to wrestle with demons of her past, as she gained a deeper understanding of race relations and “white privilege.” Her personal exploration celebrates the transformations occurring and proves that not forgetting Mississippi’s painful past is the key to finding true racial reconciliation. “…a story that is not uncommon and one that still continues today right here where racism still manifests itself in subtle and not so subtle ways.” - Karen Rolston, Centre for Intercultural Communication, UBC Continuing Studies Through the descendants from this time, Kevin Loring and Dr. Dan Marshall, Canyon War provides a lasting legacy of this event and is shot on the war’s little-known battlefields—from the fight of Boston Bar to the peace at Kumsheen. 44 Moving Images Distribution Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 HISTORY INTERNMENT Henry’s Glasses 20:00 • 2010 • • $180 Brendan Uegama/Nicole G. Leier Black Tree Pictures This short drama is set in 1945, in internment camps for Canadians of Japanese origin. A family has been separated, the father in Ontario and his wife and three children in a camp in Tashme, British Columbia. Eleven-year-old Henry finds solace from the dreary life of internment through a pair of magic glasses given to him by his grandfather. These special glasses transport him from a world of darkness to one of beauty and light. Although the glasses mean more to Henry than any of the few possessions he has left, he shares them with Mr. Yamamoto in the hopes of lifting the elderly man from the depths of discouragement. Ohanashi: The Story of Our Elders (10-part series) 2008 • $150 per part • $900 series Susanne Tabata National Nikkei Museum & Heritage Centre Ohanashi: The Story of Our Elders features 10 Japanese-Canadian elders who tell their stories, describing their lives both before the bombing of Pearl Harbour, which led to internment, and after the Second World War. For descriptions on the individual episodes, please see our brochure. Tak Miyazaki 35:00 • $150 Born in Steveston, B.C. in 1929. Kazue Oye 30:00 • $ 150 Born in Steveston, B.C. in 1912. Shirley Omatsu 44:00 • $ 150 Born in Vancouver, B.C. in 1929. Tom and Shig Kuwabara 47:00 • $ 150 Born in Skeena River, B.C. in 1922 and 1924. Susumu Tabata 44:00 • $ 150 Born in Steveston, B.C. in 1925. Alfie Kamitakahara 43:00 • $ 150 Born in Steveston, B.C. in 1929. Marie Katsuno 35:00 • $ 150 Born in East Burnaby, B.C. in 1923. Midge Ayukawa 33:00 • $ 150 Born in Vancouver, B.C. in 1930. May Komiyama 34:00 • $ 150 Born in Vancouver, B.C. in 1922. Irene Tsuyuki 45:00 • $ 150 Born in Vancouver, B.C. in 1925. www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 45 HISTORY Tora 29:30 • 2010 • $200 Wendy Ord/Glen Samuel Mountain Lake Films Jenna, a jaded young urban woman, inherits a lakefront property in the interior of British Columbia. Dilapidated log buildings hidden in the bush and unsettling visions of a ghostly eight-year-old Japanese girl suggests there is more to the inherited property than she’s been told. During her stay there, she encounters Oyama, a mysterious older Japanese Canadian, and the mystery begins to unfold. Jenna experiences the pain of loss, the power of hope and the value of forgiveness when she learns that her new property was once a Second World War Japanese internment camp. Tora features stunning cinematography and stars Kate Bateman as Jenna, Dr. David Suzuki as Oyama and Kevan Ohtsji as young Oyama. The Canadian Government interned more than 22,000 people of Japanese descent during the Second World War, three-quarters of them Canadian citizens. Their possessions were seized and sold to cover the costs of keeping the camps, leaving them with nothing at the end of the war. Tora is a modern-day ghost story that should haunt us all. WAR HISTORY Ayaa: A Hero’s Journey 48:00 • 2008 • • $200 Jason Margolis/Marilyn Thomas Monkey Ink Media English; Cree version w/ English subtitles also included In any small town, you quickly know who your neighbours are, but in a trailer park in Chase, British Columbia, two neighbors discovered a spiritual connection that spanned continents and time, miraculously reuniting them fifty years after their first encounter. Ayaa: A Hero’s Journey is a story of serendipity and karma, exploring the amazing twists of fate that connect Albert Thomas, an Aboriginal Second World War veteran, and Anneke Mercks-Sayer, a Dutch immigrant and Second World War survivor. Through interviews, recreations, photos and archival footage, we journey through the history of one man’s giving nature, his unwavering generosity and the ultimate reward of one person’s heartfelt thanks. Bobby’s Peace 25:30 • 2010 • $160 Susan Rodgers Fat Cat Productions As battles raged during the Second World War many young pilots were casualties of war. To replenish the supply of pilots for the Allies, the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan School was set up to teach navigation to new recruits at Summerside, P.E.I. See also: This short drama, based on letters found in a museum, recreates the story of William and Joe, two flight instructors who arrive in Summerside to teach these recruits. William and Joe are fresh from their first tours of duty in the hell of war overseas. They find themselves staying in a home with relatives of Bobby Cavannaugh, a young P.E.I. boy whose wartime death still haunts William, who was his instructor. Events unfold that bring William to the realization that he must move on and that peace can be attained in unlikely places. Cedar and Bamboo ........................................................................ 33 Finding Our Way............................................................................. 29 Mississippi ReMixed......................................................................... 44 46 Moving Images Distribution See also: Ohanashi: The Story of Our Elders................................................. 45 Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 SOCIAL SCIENCES Gender & Sexuality 100% Woman 59:00 • 2004 • • $250 Karen Duthie/Diana Wilson 100 Percent Woman Productions 100% Woman begins as Michelle Dumaresq’s mountain-bike riding career did, careening down a rocky path to be met with controversy. From some critics comes cautious concern, from others, complete attack. At the centre of it all is the past of this extreme athlete—in particular, the first 20-odd years of life that Michelle spent as Michael. In 2002, Dumaresq became the first openly transgender woman in the world to be named to a national team in any sport. From her days on the B.C. race circuit, to the Canada Cup, national title and berth at the World Championships, her progress is dogged by constant scrutiny from both fellow competitors and the media. Dumaresq insists she doesn’t race to make a stand, but doesn’t shy from being a trailblazer. She grew up in turmoil over her identity and struggled to come to terms with herself as an adult, even with her parents’ whole-hearted support. She takes on the mantle of role model because she understands how isolated others like her feel. Dr. Jerrilyn Prior, the pioneer of sex-hormone use in gender reassignment therapy, backs up Dumaresq’s quest to compete and explains how hormonal changes drastically reduce musculature. This compelling documentary raises timely questions about what it means to be a “real” woman in the world of competitive sports and beyond. Best Mountain Biking Film, Vancouver International Mountain Film Festival; Edith Lando Peace Prize, Reel 2 Real International Film Festival for Youth FLESH and BLOOD: a journey between east and west 24:00 • 2006 • subtitled • $250 Marusya Bociurkiw Winds of Change Productions English and Ukrainian w/ English subtitles What’s the Ukrainian word for sex? Filmmaker Marusya Bociurkiw explores this question in the humorous and provocative Flesh and Blood, the first-ever Canadian film about East European queer sexualities. Coming to the realization that there is no language for sex in Ukrainian culture, she heads to Ukraine to find out why. A queer bar in Kyiv reveals drag queens in traditional Ukrainian costume. A trip to the suburbs introduces transsexual Lena and bisexual Oksana, who live with Oksana’s two husbands and her grandmother in what they call a “poly-family.” Interviews shot in Canada and Ukraine tell the story of sexual and cultural changes since the fall of the Berlin Wall. She’s a Boy I Knew 70:00 • 2007 • $275 Gwen Haworth Shapeshifter Films Vancouver filmmaker Gwen Haworth documents her male-to-female gender transition partially through the voices of her anxious but loving family, best friend and wife. Finding selfempowerment through self-representation, Haworth’s feature debut is a comic, heartbreaking, and uplifting autobiography that breaks away from marginalized depictions of transsexuals that populate mainstream media by focusing on a family whose bonds unexpectedly strengthen as they re-examine their preconceptions of gender and sexuality. Audience Award for Most Popular Canadian Film, Vancouver International Film Festival; Best Screenwriting in a Documentary, Leo Awards - British Columbia Film & Television Awards; Audience Award for Best Documentary, Mix Brazil; Jury Award for Best Documentary, Tel Aviv International LGBT Film Festival See also: Girls On Top..................................................................................... 13 My Son the Pornographer.............................................................. 36 www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 47 SOCIAL SCIENCES Globalization Consequences: The Private Side of Britain 23:00 • 2006 • • $150 Glen Richards Indignant Eye Productions The downsizing, restructuring, privatization and deregulation movement set in motion by British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the early 1980s spread to Canada in the mid 90s with the signing of NAFTA. Thatcher cut taxes and social services, targeted trade union, sold off public utilities, eroded the power of local governments, and looked to for-profit corporations to move in and fill the gaps. The effects of this conservative ideology and its legacy, commonly known at “Thatcherism,” are evident everywhere in Britain. Consequences traces the impact on that country and draws parallels to similar trends in Canada. Narrator Maude Barlow points out the dire consequences for average Canadians if the hard lessons learned by Britain are ignored. Working to Help My Mom 46:00 • 2007 • subtitled • $200 Leuten Rojas Point of View @ Docs English and Spanish w/ English subtitles Like it or not, child labour is an indisputable reality in today’s world. This documentary looks at the boys, girls and adolescents who have no other option but to work for their survival in Santiago, Chile—a modern metropolis and showpiece of free market economy wherein accelerated growth co-exists with destitution. Their daily reality is mediated by conversations with committed NFO social workers and volunteers that try to help and protect them. Through candid interactions with several working children over a five-year period, the picture that emerges is one that exposes the lights and shadows of globalization. Perhaps one of the most poignant comments comes from a girl who is asked, “What do you want to be?” Her response is, “Nothing. What could I be?” See also: Over Land........................................................................................ 26 Where Credit Is Due........................................................................ 49 48 Moving Images Distribution Human Rights & International Relations Lest We Forget 54:00 • 2003 • $250 (includes discussion guide) Jason DaSilva December 7, 1941: the bombing of Pearl Harbor thrusts America into the Second World War. In the name of national security, all people of Japanese origin are proclaimed “enemy aliens” and interned for the duration of the war. September 11, 2001: a new chapter in national security begins as America suffers another terrible tragedy. This time, a new alien arises: Arabs, South Asians and Muslims. With a critical eye, Lest We Forget explores a lesson that America seems determined to learn twice. By violating civil liberties and alienating their own citizens, vilifying the visible minority, America is bent on homeland security but does this once again cross the line to unlawful treatment of innocent individuals? Special Mention (Right to Know category), One World International Human Rights Film Festival (Prague) reclaiming rights 52:30 • 2009 • $200 Brishkay Ahmed Farsi (Pashtun) w/ English subtitles Hokouk is the word for “rights” in the language spoken by Afghan women. Reclaiming rights follows a team of sassy Afghan lawyers and their clients, the young girls under turquoise blue burqas, in and out of meetings and court appointments. For the uneducated girls, words like “Section 183 of the Constitution” or “Item Number 12 of the Civil Rights Code” mean little. But from their lawyer’s perspective, a window has opened. The opportunity to reclaim lost legal rights through courage and education has arrived. Sex, marriage, love and the law are explored as the girls share their stories to seek freedom with fellow Afghan and filmmaker, Brishkay Ahmed. The DVD includes both a play-through and chaptered version and provides insight into the fight within Afghanistan to preserve human rights and the rule of law in a constitution that fell under pressure from the Taliban. Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 SOCIAL SCIENCES Uganda Rising 82:00 • 2007 • • $250 Jesse James Miller/Peter McCormack/Alison Lawton Mindset Media For two decades, the Acholi people of Northern Uganda have been caught in a civil war between a rebel group whose main objective is inhumane terror and a government whose military response has often increased misery and suffering. Over 1.5 million people have been displaced into camps and over 25,000 children have been abducted and forced to act as soldiers or sex slaves. Yet through it all, every day across Acholi-land something remarkable happens. Against a backdrop of dismal statistics, miniscule opportunity and unpredictable terror, in a part of Uganda forgotten by the world, children who have never known peace, face the day as if to live this way is normal, as if they still believe in the future. These children are the embodiment of resilience and hope. This film is the story of Uganda, her stolen children and the fight to be free. THE U.S. AND US 24:00 • 2008 • Quinn • $180 Directed by award-winning experimental filmmaker and performance artist Quinn, THE U.S. AND US provides an intellectual romp through the past, present and future of Canada–U.S. relations. Questioning the very notion of Canadian sovereignty, this short documentary features an amusing mélange of Quinn’s street performances and sobering interviews from some of Canada’s leading authors, activists and politicos, including Mel Hurtig, Linda McQuaig, Maude Barlow and David Orchard. What emerges in this provocatively entertaining film, completed within weeks of federal elections in both countries, is the picture of an increasingly complicated relationship with our neighbour to the south. See also: Besieged Land................................................................................. 29 Down Here....................................................................................... 40 Finding Our Way............................................................................. 29 Mississippi ReMixed ....................................................................... 44 Working to Help My Mom.............................................................. 48 International Development From Under the Bushy Trees 72:00 • 2008 • • $200 Jan Padgett/Moira Simpson Bear Productions Chad is a vibrant, poverty-stricken country in the middle of sub-Saharan Africa. It is here that the filmmakers ask a central question concerning North America’s involvement in Africa: how can aid be delivered with justice and dignity? From Under the Bushy Trees follows Gerri Graber of Powell River, B.C. to Chad. There she teams up with a young education student, Bartholomew Mokuh, and they work together with the villagers of Manda to build a school. The project captures the imagination of the people of Powell River. As well as the money raised for the school, they also help support a family of seven AIDS orphans. Despite everyone’s best intentions, problems arise. At the heart of the film are the women of Chad, living in a society of ongoing oppression. During the course of filming, these women meet collectively for the first time and begin taking control over the uses of the new school. They understand, along with the outspoken Lynn Whitehouse, Canada’s Honourary Consul for Chad and resident of the country for thirty years, that education is key to building sustainable social change and a better life for themselves and their children. From Under the Bushy Trees takes us on an intimate and challenging journey into the complexities of offering aid to Africa. Where Credit Is Due 21:00 • 2008 • subtitled • $170 Hans Olson/Sahakarini Inter-World Ed. & Dev. Assoc. English and Spanish w/ English subtitles Against a backdrop of oppression and civil war in Guatemala, three women’s groups of the Kaqchikel Presbytery are using micro-credit loans for businesses that include agricultural projects and textiles. The documentary follows the community’s development and is a good illustration of how beneficial micro-credit can be for sustainable human development. See also: Polio Hunters................................................................................... 42 www.movingimages.ca FALL 2011 49 WOMEN’S STUDIES Captured: From Footbinding to Stilettos 10:30 • 2011 • $160 (includes discussion guide) Peg Campbell/Dr. Launette Reib Just as the practice of footbinding was followed for centuries in China, the practice of wearing high heels has been promoted in the western world as a symbol of feminine beauty and desirability. But what happens to the body when they are worn? Captured: From Footbinding to Stilettos looks at the two practices and explores the associated beauty ideals and health risks. The film provides suggestions and tools to sidestep some of the potential harms of wearing high heels. A special features section includes print support materials for the classroom in this resource that is suitable for use in high school through graduate school. FLESH 43:00 • 2006 • $250 Tami Wilson Rough Road Productions In this idiosyncratic documentary, Tami Wilson looks at women and meat in a society obsessed with flesh. She introduces women who have wildly differing relationships to meat—an organic cattle rancher; a manager for a meat-packing plant; a hunting activist; a Vietnamese-Canadian “meatlover”; a 14-year-old vegetarian; and a college student/Hooters waitress who admits to feeling like a “stuffed sausage” in her tight uniform. Amidst the stories and debate, FLESH dishes up a profusion of powerful images. Magazine photos, clips from popular film and television programs, bucolic scenes of cows with their young calves and harrowing footage of animals at slaughter provide a sometimes beautiful, sometimes humorous and sometimes disturbing backdrop. In the end, no perspective wins out unless it is Wilson’s underlying argument that women can and should fully engage with the ethical questions that plague our over-consuming society. On a Moving Path 25:00 • 2007 • subtitled • $180 Myriam Fougère/Francine Plante Vidéo Femmes French w/ English subtitles this documentary portrays the variety of emotions experienced by women diagnosed with breast cancer as they attempt to cope with their new reality and what awaits them in the future. Sisters in Arms 48:30 • 2010 • • $250 Beth Freeman/Cari Green Sisters in Arms Productions There are only ten countries in the world that allow women to fight in ground combat, and Canada is one of them. The mission in Afghanistan marks the first time in Canadian history that women soldiers are fighting on the frontlines. Sisters In Arms is a one-hour documentary that tells the story of three remarkable women who have chosen the most difficult and dangerous military professions and are facing combat on the battle fronts of Afghanistan. Corporal Katie Hodges is an infantry solider, Corporal Tamar Freeman is a medic; and Master Corporal Kimberly Ashton is a combat engineer who leaves behind three young girls at home in Canada. Who are these women and how did they get there? Veterans of the combat trades, including Brigadier General Chris Whitecross, one of Canada’s highest-ranking woman in the military and Lieutenant Colonel Anne Reiffenstein, the first female artillery officer, talk about their decisions for careers in the military and the roles of women over the years. The mothers, fathers and sisters of the three women featuring openly discuss their fears, as they bravely support their loved ones. In Canada, the number of women joining the combat trades has risen gradually for almost two decades, attrition remains an issue, with significantly higher rates of women leaving their military careers than men. Military culture remains a barrier, and today, only two per cent (about 250 out of 14,000) of soldiers in the combat trades are women. Using video diaries filmed by the soldiers in Afghanistan and personal interviews, Sisters In Arms tells their stories, from the frontline from a uniquely female perspective, challenging our perception of what constitutes a soldier. With an approach that is both poetic and personal, 50 Moving Images Distribution Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 WomEn’s studies STRONG COFFEE: The Story of Café Femenino 48:00 • 2007 • subtitled • • $250 Sharron Bates/Carmen Klotz Beyond Your Eye Productions English and Spanish w/ English subtitles Coffee. It is the second most valuable item of legal, international trade after oil. Billions of us drink it every day, but how many of us really know much about the coffee we consume or the farmers who grow it? There are thousands of coffee farms in Northern Peru, employing hundreds of thousands of people. Of those, approximately 30% are women. The attitudes towards Peruvian women in remote farming areas are shaped by the culture of machismo. 44% of women live in poverty and 70% have experienced some sort of violence. It is this repression that drove women to come up with an idea that would give them some financial independence from the men in their community and within their families. Their idea was to create Café Femenino, a women’s coffee co-op. Café Femenino is a truly unique concept which is breaking the chains of machismo, improving relationships between women and men, uplifting families, increasing levels of education, improving quality of life, and helping women in need all over the world. Tiara 22:00 • 2010 • • $180 (includes discussion guide) Monica Mak Siobhan Productions Are beauty pageants on the radar of today’s young women? Tiara discovers that they certainly are in Asian communities in Canada, and particularly in Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal. Tiara explores the connection between the desires of young women from the Chinese, Filipino and South Asian communities for validation of their appearance in the midst of popular media’s narrow representation of beauty. As the film examines the role these pageants play within the AsianCanadian communities, a former contestant raises concerns. A discussion guide is included for use in high school and post-secondary discussion. www.movingimages.ca Under One Sky 20:00 • 2009 • $150 Christine McDowell/Moira Simpson This film is a testament to every woman who has been attacked and fought back. At a women’s martial arts camp on the B.C. coast, women from all over North America explore an extraordinary range of martial arts. They fight collaboratively; and through their discipline, strength, joyfulness and sheer determination, it becomes evident they are on a journey of self-discovery. Under One Sky turns the whole genre of martial arts films on its head as it explores the physical and spiritual nature of the arts as practised by women. See also: Beauty Lies....................................................................................... 33 Building Bridge: A Housing Project for Women........................... 40 Dissolve: a documentary on drug facilitated sexual assault......................................................... 42 Ferron: girl on a road...................................................................... 11 Fury for the Sound: The Women at Clayoquot............................. 26 Girls On Top..................................................................................... 13 growing up among strangers......................................................... 34 Me, Masi & Mr. Clean...................................................................... 34 No Numbers: Identity beyond measure......................................... 38 reclaiming rights............................................................................. 48 Remnants .......................................................................................... 6 Return to Reichenbach................................................................... 43 Where Credit Is Due........................................................................ 49 Your Mother Should Know............................................................. 36 FALL 2011 51 TITLE INDEX 12 TAKES.................................................................. 13 100% Woman.......................................................... 47 419: The Nigerian Scam.......................................... 35 …And This Is My Garden........................................ 20 Aboard the Pater Noster......................................... 11 All ah We................................................................. 33 Almost Normal: Stories from the Well Within..................................... 37 Amma......................................................................... 4 ...And This Is My Garden......................................... 20 Apart.......................................................................... 7 Appassionata: The Extraordinary Life and Music of Sonia Eckhardt-Gramatté................ 11 Arctic Shadows: The Arctic Journeys of Dr. R. M. Anderson..................................... 43 The Artist’s Life: Series 3 (12 parts)........................ 14 The Art of Drowning................................................. 4 Ayaa: A Hero’s Journey........................................... 46 Basic Space................................................................. 4 Beauty Lies............................................................... 33 Besieged Land......................................................... 29 Beyond the Gardens’ Wall: The Immigrant Workers of Tod Inlet............. 44 Blue Skies & Rocky Shores....................................... 40 Bobby’s Peace.......................................................... 46 The Boy Inside......................................................... 20 Brain Clever............................................................... 7 Brücke........................................................................ 4 The Brush, the Pen, and Recovery.......................... 38 Building Bridge: A Housing Project for Women......................................... 40 Burning Rubber....................................................... 14 Call It A Day............................................................. 22 Canyon War: The Untold Story............................... 44 Captured: From Footbinding to Stilettos............... 50 cArtographies.......................................................... 14 A Case of Rape.......................................................... 4 The Cave.................................................................. 24 Cedar and Bamboo................................................. 33 ¡Císcalo císcalo diablo panzón!................................ 4 Consequences: The Private Side of Britain............ 48 Corporations in the Classroom............................... 20 Cry Rock................................................................... 29 A Cup of Wine......................................................... 11 Dancing with Northern Lights.................................. 4 Dark Pines: a documentary investigation into the death of Tom Tomson...................... 15 Dawson Town Melted Down.................................... 7 52 Moving Images Distribution Death Is in Trouble Now: The Sculptures of Mark Adair............................... 15 Desperately Seeking Doctors.................................. 41 Dinner Parade............................................................ 5 Dissolve: a documentary on drug facilitated sexual assault....................... 42 Dog=God................................................................... 7 Do It With Joy!........................................................ 26 Down Here............................................................... 40 E.J. Hughes Restoration: Triumph Over Hard Times............................................. 15 Eco-Pirate: The Story of Paul Watson.................... 28 Embracing Bob’s Killer............................................ 38 Fate Scores............................................................... 22 Ferron: girl on a road.............................................. 11 The Films of Frank Cole............................................. 7 Finding Our Way..................................................... 29 firebear called them faith healers... an aboriginal story.................................... 22, 30 First Steps................................................................. 37 FLESH........................................................................ 50 FLESH and BLOOD: a journey between east and west.................................. 47 Forever Independent: Films by Lulu Keating........... 8 For You, My People................................................... 5 From the Mouthpiece On Back.............................. 12 From the Spirit (26-part series)............................... 15 From Under the Bushy Trees................................... 49 Fury for the Sound: The Women at Clayoquot..................................... 26 GENERAL IDEA: Art, AIDS, and the fin de siècle....................................... 18 the gesture.............................................................. 36 Gibson Woods......................................................... 22 Girls On Top............................................................. 13 Glimpses of Light..................................................... 39 Gordon Smith: The Reflective Canvas.................... 18 Great Canadian Books (13-part series)................... 25 growing up among strangers................................. 34 Growth Rings........................................................... 26 Hand to Toe: An Exploration in the Art of Giving......................................... 40 Health Care 911: the plight of immigrant medical doctors............................ 41 Henry’s Glasses......................................................... 45 The Hollow Tree...................................................... 27 Home........................................................................ 40 i luv spam................................................................. 23 Tel: 604 684 3014 | Toll Free: 800 684 3014 Title Index i see the fear............................................................ 12 Imagining Home...................................................... 27 Johnny Tootall........................................................... 8 John’s Untilted Clock................................................. 5 Key Tumi?.................................................................. 5 Kid Colours.............................................................. 33 Killer Whale and Crocodile..................................... 19 Labyrinth.................................................................... 5 Lest We Forget........................................................ 48 Letter to Myself....................................................... 37 The Life & Work of Daphne Odjig......................... 19 The Light of Family Burnam................................... 39 A Look at the Life of Morgan Green..................... 19 Mahjong & Chicken Feet.......................................... 8 The Making of a Haida Totem Pole....................... 19 Me, Masi & Mr. Clean.............................................. 34 Mississippi ReMixed................................................. 44 Mr. H and his Unruly Puppets................................. 20 My Son the Pornographer...................................... 36 ‘NAMEGAN’S OM DLU’WANS AWINAGWISEX/ We Are One With The Land........................... 32 Nature on its Course................................................. 5 Nehiyawetan: Let’s Speak Cree.............................. 30 No Numbers: Identity beyond measure................. 38 Not a Game.............................................................. 37 Nothing Like Her....................................................... 5 Ohanashi: The Story of Our Elders......................... 45 Oh Me 2: a case of BiPolar DisOrder...................... 39 On a Moving Path................................................... 50 On the Line.............................................................. 26 On the Nose............................................................. 11 One Big Hapa Family............................................... 34 One Week Job......................................................... 21 Our First Voices........................................................ 31 Out In The Cold....................................................... 23 Over Land................................................................ 26 Overview.................................................................... 8 Painted on the Spot: On the Road with Ernie Luthi..................................... 19 Paris Stories: The Writing of Mavis Gallant........... 24 Peter and the Space Between.................................. 5 Policy Baby: The Journey of Rita/Bev..................... 31 Polio Hunters........................................................... 42 Potlatch <To Give>.................................................. 31 Ray Condo’s Crazy Mixed Up World......................... 6 reclaiming rights..................................................... 48 The Red Jacket......................................................... 42 Regarding Vancouver............................................. 27 Remnants................................................................... 6 Reservation Soldiers................................................ 31 Return to Reichenbach........................................... 43 Revolving Doors...................................................... 37 The Sacred Seven..................................................... 39 SAMAQAN: Water Stories....................................... 28 www.movingimages.ca SAVAGE...................................................................... 9 School of Secrets..................................................... 21 Secrets in the Forest................................................ 34 The Sharing Farm.................................................... 26 Sheep....................................................................... 33 She’s a Boy I Knew................................................... 47 Shi-shi-etko.............................................................. 32 Sisters in Arms......................................................... 50 So Far and Soar........................................................ 23 “a spiritual land claim”........................................... 32 Standing Tall............................................................ 21 Stillwaters.................................................................. 6 Storytellers in motion: Series One, Two & Three.................................. 9 Streetcar from Zanzibar.......................................... 35 Street of Dreams..................................................... 10 STRONG COFFEE: The Story of Café Femenino........................................... 51 Tending Toward Silence.......................................... 23 This Time Last Winter.............................................. 36 Through True Eyes: the process of recovery from eating disorders...................... 38 Tiara......................................................................... 51 Time Apart: A History of Hope............................... 43 Time Being............................................................... 24 Tora......................................................................... 46 Travelling Medicine Show....................................... 23 Tree for Two.............................................................. 6 Trolls......................................................................... 21 Turn Me Loose - Astrid............................................ 12 Uganda Rising......................................................... 49 Under One Sky......................................................... 51 Urban Goddess: Jane Jacobs Reconsidered........... 27 THE U.S. AND US..................................................... 49 We Are One With the Land / ‘NAMEGAN’S OM DLU’WANS AWINAGWISEX ..... 32 “What Are You Anyways?”...................................... 6 What to make of it all? The life and poetry of John Newlove.......................... 24 Where Credit Is Due................................................ 49 Who Killed the Goldfish?........................................ 35 Who the Jew Are You?........................................... 35 Working to Help My Mom...................................... 48 Yabai: Asian North American Art Culture............. 12 Yellow Sticky Notes................................................... 6 Your Mother Should Know..................................... 36 FALL 2011 53