3500+ Films - 2.5 million words – 1 million viewers! Founder and Curator Carmela selects some of our most entertaining, powerful and inspiring First Nations films at We Are Moving Stories. These include documentary and drama, shorts and features taking place in the USA, Canada, Australia, Mexico and Ecuador.
Total length of this section: 28 films.
<USA>
And Now We Rise: A Portrait of Samuel Johns - A young Athabaskan hip hop artist works to heal from his own traumatic childhood by leading a sober life encouraging cultural pride and helping homeless in Alaska with a Facebook group, Forget Me Not. Length: 56.40 minutes. Director/Producer Mary Rosanne Katzke:
Snqʷeyłmistn: the place where you do your best - The word given to the Salish people to call themselves is Sqelixʷ, which translates to “flesh and land.” When people lose their sense of “Place,” they lose their awareness of self and others in relation to the land and the legacy of their cultural traditions. Modern-day Salish strive to help children experience a respected and nurtured place in the community through programs, activities, and the building of an intentional community. Length: 7:12 minutes. Director Ivan MacDonald:
The Confluence - This short documentary focuses on the controversial Escalade Development, a proposal which would take a gondola to the bottom of the Grand Canyon where the Colorado and Little Colorado Rivers meet. As the film follows a group of Navajo activists fighting to protect this sacred site, we explore how places shape human identities in profound ways. Length: 16.9 minutes. Director Courtney Blackmer-Raynolds:
ᏗᏂᏠᎯ ᎤᏪᏯ (Meet Me at the Creek) - In order to revitalize cultural traditions, a Cherokee elder fights to restore the “irreversibly damaged” Tar Creek. Length: 9:10 minutes. Director/Producer Loren Waters:
<CANADA>
Two Soft Things, Two Hard Things - An exploration of LGBT identities in Canada’s northern Arctic territory. Length: 71 minutes. Director Mark Kenneth Woods:
The Road to Webequie - A mining company has promised to create opportunities for the remote Webequie First Nation. Through the eyes of three youths facing an uncertain future, this observational yet expansive documentary shows the struggles — and hopes — of a community confronting challenges that many Canadians will never experience. Filmmaker Ryan Noth:
The Black Wolf Drew Robinson was losing control of his life due to an alcohol addiction. After three near death experiences, he decides to get sober. Using May Thai Boxing and his Blackfoot culture, Drew discovers a way of coping with his drinking habits that keeps him close to his roots. Length: 8 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Trevor Solway:
Cree Code Talker An insightful story that brings a hidden history that haunts the Canadian landscape. As Canadian law criminalized indigenous languages, Cree was being used in World War II to save lives. A mixture of interviews, rare audio, archival documents, war footage, and a brother’s memories. Length: 14 minutes. Writer/Director Alexandra Lazarowich:
This Ink Runs Deep - All across Canada, Indigenous artists are reawakening both traditional and contemporary tattoo practices as a way to reclaim their cultures and identities. Length: 16.25 minutes. Director Asia Youngman:
Red Card World: The Tree - In the year 2167, Migizikwe learns of a new threat to the sovereign Michi Saagiig Territory and an ancient tree offers protection. Length: 5.00 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Cara Mumford:
Tiny - Tiny is a contemplative stop motion film which tells the story of ‘Nakwaxda’xw Elder Colleen Hemphill’s childhood. Length: 16:21 minutes. Director/Producer/Editor/Animator Ritchie Hemphill:
<AUSTRALIA>
Nan and a Whole Lot of Trouble - Nan, of Aboriginal and Irish descent, keeps a photo album of dead family members. Younger sister Min believes this morbid European tradition is culturally inappropriate. Length: 11 minutes. Producer Lois Randall:
Angels Gather Here - follows Jacki Trapman’s journey back to her hometown of Brewarrina to celebrate her parents, Bill and Barbara’s 60th Wedding Anniversary. Going home is never easy for Jacki. Amidst the family celebrations she reflects on her life; her story symbolising the strength, dignity and resilience of many Aboriginal people in the face of adversity. Length: 50 minutes. Writer/Director Ian Hamilton:
Walkatjurra: Our actions will never stop - It is the 70th anniversary of the first nuclear test in indigenous Australian territory and the Aboriginal communities call on activists from all over the world to carry out a 200 km anti-nuclear walk through the desert. Among them, the directors of this documentary join to record this walk, which seeks to end the extraction of uranium, the mineral with which atomic bombs are produced. What attitude will we take as humanity in the face of the possibility of creation and destruction? Length: 1 hour 11 minutes 32 seconds. Director Francisca Silva Bravo:
My Art, My Culture Webseries - A new series from Barkly Regional Arts, My Art, My Culture looks into the local artists of the Barkly region. Length: 2:12 minutes. Director/Editor William Thomson:
Wire In His Blood - An artist's story from the Central Australian Desert. Length: 6:56 minutes. Director Matt Deavin:
Clan - James Saunders is an Australian Aboriginal man who was told at boarding school he was not clever enough to go to University. He lived in the Aboriginal community where there is 'men's business' and 'women's business', James overcame doubts about coming out and joined the Convicts Rugby team, winning three Bingham Cups with them. James has become a role model for young, gay Aboriginal people. 'Clan' details the journey of James' remarkable life in his own words. Length: 7 minutes. Director Larissa Behrendt:
Brown Paper Bag follows young indigenous boy, Jayden, as he discovers the world of reading with the help of a cheeky principal and Australia’s most inspiring Storyteller – Boori Pryor. Length: 15 minutes. Also starring John Wood. Director Jon Staley:
Kuyata's Country - Audrey Kuyata Stewart is the last speaker of her language, Lower Southern Arrernte. Audrey's nephew, Richie Aitken, and his family travel from over 1000km away so that Audrey can pass on her knowledge of Country and language amidst the stunning and remote landscape of Oodnadatta. Length: 23:53 minutes. Writer Audrey 'Kuyata' Stewart:
Swallows - Set in Australia’s frontier past, Swallows follows a traumatised Indigenous boy as he begins work on an isolated sheep farm and forms a connection with the farmer’s daughter. Length: 17 minutes. Writer/Director Victoria Thompson:
<MEXICO>
The Allied King - Fernando Cruz is The Allied King, a prestigious role in an indigenous dance called The Feather Dance. Length: 8 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Jason Outenreath:
Time is out of Joint - Narco-capitalism has significantly modified the rural environment in Mexico. More than 40,000 acres of Indigenous forest in Michoacán have been appropriated by narco industries, turning it into a a composite site of cartel-drug crimes and state-sponsored violence. Blending performance with observational approaches and ethnography, this documentary provides a glimpse into Indigenous rural Mexico at the intersection between ecocide, narcolabour and enforced disappearance. Length: 25 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Victor Arroyo:
<ECUADOR>
Quimsacocha - This short documentary tells the story of two indigenous locals of Quimsacocha in Ecuador, struggling to protect their land from large corporate Canadian mining companies. Length: 8.13 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Émilie Martel:
<BRAZIL>
Timbó - Construction of dams by energy companies in the Brazilian Amazon would destroy the heart of the world's largest rainforest, and severely affect the community of the indigenous people in the area. If built, the dams would flood an area the size of London, Paris and Amsterdam combined. The flood would also cause a large amount of toxic plants to dissolve in the water, leading to severe poisoning or even death among the local tribes. These plants are commonly known as Timbó. Length: 9 minutes. Director Peiman Zekavat:
Kuyujani Envenenado (Poisoning Kuyujani) - Ecological mining does not exist. "To see things as they are, you must change your eyes" Ye'kwana Mythology. Length: 1 hour 28 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Alexandra Henao:
The River of the Kukamas (El Río de los Kukamas) - Being born from the Spirit of the river, Kukama people have a special connection with the water. The river shrinks and grows throughout the year, affecting the lives of its citizens. Filmed at its widest state at the end of the rain season, we learn the cosmology of this disappearing culture in Peru. Length: 7:16 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Nika Belianina:
<PERU>
Urpi: Her Last Wish - Urpi travels to the sacred valley of the Incas in the Peruvian Andes to fulfil a promise to her grandmother. She meets Sayri, an indigenous Quechua young man, who offers his motorcycle for a journey that will challenge her understanding of her identity. Length: 17:07 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer/Actor Sisa Quispe:
<MONGOLIA>
Baigal Nuur - Lake Baikal - The formation of Lake Baikal in Siberia was reimagined, featuring the voice of an Indigenous woman who can still recall some words in her endangered language. Length: 8:56 minutes. Director/Producer/Animator Alisi Telengut: