2018 PROGRAMMING


Saugeen First Nation


Friday July 20

9:15 > IT TAKES A COMMUNITY
Program by Adrian Kahgee with Saugeen Youth | Sauble Beach near the Red Road Café
With Shirley John, Elder
All ages

DRIVING FORWARD by Edmond Collin MALSEM by Jesse 

Martin MY FATHERS TOOLS by Heather Condo 

WHEN I WAS YOUNG by Dawnae Francois

DON’T BE AFRAID TO HIT THE ICE by Shayden Decoursay

INDIAN GIRLS by Equipe du Wapikoni Mobile

TRADITIONAL HEALING by Raymond Caplin

THE GIRL BEHIND THE CAMERA” by Sarah McPherson

SAUGEEN TAKES ON FILM by Saugeen First Nation Community Members

WALKING IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF OUR ANCESTORS by Sage & Sea Co.

Saturday July 21

6:30 > New Media Encounters Program by Caroline Klimek | James Mason Centre Free program.
All ages

Virtual Reality Projects

Blueberry Pie Under A Martian Sky by Scott Benesiinaabandan The Hunt by Danis Goulet Highway of Tears by Lisa Jackson A Tribe Called Red: Indian City 360 by Jon Riera Polarman by Ryan Oliver

Interactive Documentary
The World in Ten Blocks by Marc Serpa Franceour and Robinder Uppal




9:30pm > Where Does Art Begin?
Directed by Muriel Miguel. Produced by Aanmitaagzi, Co-Artistic directors: Penny Couchie and Sid Bobb | Saugeen Amphitheatre

Where Does Art Begin is a new production that springs forth from Serpent People, a multi-year project of gathering, dreaming and making. What is art and what is a way of life? Where does one end and the other begin? Engage with the installation and with the performance!

All ages


Durham


Thursday July 26

9:30pm > It’s 2018! (and other calendar years)
Program by Rebeka Tabobondung| Durham Conservation Area Activity Centre, Followed by Q and A.
All ages

GAA-ONDINANG DAKWAANOWED MAKWA/ How the Bear Got a Short Tail Directed by Elizabeth Day, written by Anna Gibbs, produced by Heid E. Erdrich for Wiigwaas Press/Birchbark House. Animated by Jonathan Thunder. 2015.

Babakiueria
An awesome satirical take on race relations in Australia from the 1980s.

The Ballad of Crowfoot by Willie Dunn
This short film examines the situation of Aboriginal people in North America through the figure of Crowfoot, the legendary 19th-century Blackfoot leader of the Plains.

Rooster Rock – The Story of Serpent River by Bonnie Devine and Rebecca Garrett

Totem by Travis Shilling



Friday July 27 & Saturday July 28

10pm-2pm New Media Encounters
Program by Caroline Klimek| West Grey Library, Durham

Virtual Reality Projects Blueberry Pie Under A Martian Sky by Scott Benesiinaabandan The Hunt by Danis Goulet Highway of Tears by Lisa Jackson A Tribe Called Red: Indian City 360 by Jon Riera Polarman by Ryan Oliver Interactive Documentary The World in Ten Blocks by Marc Serpa Franceour and Robinder Uppa



Saturday July 28

1pm > This is (Not) a True Story
Program by without a name (aka Jaclyn Quaresma and Elijah Lin)| Spruce Ridge Community School
All Ages

Big Mouth by Andrea Dorfman

Triange_Triade by Jerome Havre, Cauleen Smith, Camille Turner


How Dinosaurs Learned to Fly by Munro Ferguson


Three Thousand by Asinnajaq


The Visit by Lisa Jackson


Tracking Sasquatch (field report #1) and Tracking Sasquatch (field report #3) by Christina Battle


Resurgo! by Amanda Dawn


Do Good by Alison S.M Kobayashi


Git Gob by Philip Eddolls


Cave Small Cave Big by Joele Walinga

6:30pm > Words Before All Else, Part 2 Program by Skawennati | Durham Arena ** Premiere of Parts 2 and 3** Projection during with Dinner.
Licensed event

8pm > North, Program by Corinna Ghaznavi| Durham Arena Dinner and Projection. $5 Film only. $15 with Dinner.
Licensed event

Peter Clarkson, End of the Ice Age, 2017, documentary, NWT 

Michelle Latimer, Nuuca, 2017, documentary

Caroline Monnet, Creatura Dada, 2016, experimental

Lulu Keating, Snake Hips Lulu, 2017, documentary, Yukon

Terril Calder, Keewaydah (Lets Go Home), 2017, animation

Dan Sokolowski, Pond, 2018, live action and animation

Krista Davis, I Buck You Stack, 2017, experimental, Yukon

Karen Pinette Fontaine, Battles, 2017, drama

Peter Menzies, Jay Armitage, Dawg Gone Cold, 2017, animation, Yukon

Marty O’Brien, Camera Trap, 2017, documentary, Yukon


Sunday July

1pm > Motel
Program by Jesse McCracken | The Garafraxa Café. Co-presentation with the South Grey. Feature film by Grey Highlands resident, Jesse McCracken, in partnership with the South Grey Museum

As Niagara Falls transformed from honeymoon capital of the world to Las Vegas North, corporate hotel chains and casinos cast a long shadow over the independent motels that once populated the town. The Continental survived the transition by converting its rooms into affordable housing units, becoming a home for those with few places to go. The night manager, Brian, once a freelance photographer who survived the horrors of war in Vietnam, shares his duties with his colleague Linda. Together they manage both the Continental and the individual struggles of its tenants, providing more than a roof over the heads of those who live under their supervision. Bringing a fresh focus to one of the most photographed places on Earth, director and cinematographer Jesse McCracken develops an intimate and caring portrait of the residents of this modest micro-community set against the backdrop of neon-lit tourist attractions.



Location