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Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner

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2001 film by Zacharias Kunuk

Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner
Inuktitutᐊᑕᓈᕐᔪᐊᑦ
Directed byZacharias Kunuk
Written byPaul Apak Angilirq
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyNorman Cohn
Edited by
Music byChris Crilly
Distributed byOdeon Films
Release dates
  • 13 May 2001 (2001-05-13) (Cannes premiere)
  • 12 April 2002 (2002-04-12) (Canada)
Running time
172 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageInuktitut
BudgetCA$1.9 million
Box office$5.9 million
This article containsCanadian Aboriginal syllabic characters. Without properrendering support, you may seequestion marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of syllabics.

Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner (Inuktitut:ᐊᑕᓈᕐᔪᐊᑦ) is a 2001 Canadianepic film directed byInuk filmmakerZacharias Kunuk and produced by his companyIsuma Igloolik Productions. It was the first feature film ever to be written, directed and acted entirely in theInuktitut language.

Set in the ancient past, the film retells anInuit legend passed down through centuries oforal tradition. It revolves around the title character, whose marriage with his two wives earns him the animosity of the son of the band leader, who kills Atanarjuat's brother and forces Atanarjuat to flee by foot.

The film premiered at the54th Cannes Film Festival in May 2001, and was released in Canada on 12 April 2002. A major critical success,Atanarjuat won theCaméra d'Or (Golden Camera) at Cannes, and sixGenie Awards, includingBest Motion Picture.Atanarjuat was also a commercial success, becoming Canada's top-grossing release of 2002, outperforming the mainstream comedyMen with Brooms. It grossed more than US$5 million worldwide. In 2015, a poll of filmmakers and critics in theToronto International Film Festival named it thegreatest Canadian film of all time. It also topped the CBC's 2023 list ofThe 50 Greatest Films Directed by Canadians.[1] The film was selected as the Canadian entry for theBest Foreign Language Film at the74th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.

Plot

[edit]

AtIgloolik ("place of houses") in the Eastern Arctic wilderness at the dawn of the first millennium, Qulitalik bids goodbye to his sister Panikpak, wife of Kumaglak, promising to come if she calls for help in her heart. She gives him her husband'srabbit's foot for spiritual power.

In a flashback, the community is visited by the strangeshaman Tungajuaq. During a spiritual duel with the visitor, the camp leader Kumaglak dies. The visitor removes thewalrus-tooth necklace from Kumaglak's body, and puts the necklace around the neck of Kumaglak's son Sauri, who thus becomes camp leader. Much later, the shaman's magic has poisoned the community with hatred. Tulimaq, the laughing stock of the camp, is having bad luck hunting and can barely feed his family. However, Panikpak brings meat for Tulimaq's children, Atanarjuat and Amaqjuaq, hoping that one day they will make things right.

Atanarjuat grows up to be a fast runner, Amaqjuaq is strong, and they are rivals with Sauri and his son Oki. During a game of "wolftag", Atanarjuat pursues the beautiful Atuat, provoking jealousy in Oki, to whom she was betrothed. Oki's sister Puja also shows interest in Atanarjuat. In a punching duel with Oki, Atanarjuat wins the right to marry Atuat. Later, Atanarjuat leaves his wife Atuat at a camp to hunt caribou. However, he stops at Sauri's camp, where he is persuaded to take Puja on the hunt. Camping by a lake, Atanarjuat and Puja sing, flirt, and have sex.

Later, Atanarjuat is in an unhappy marriage with Atuat and Puja. He catches his brother having sex with Puja and strikes Puja. She runs to Sauri's camp and tells them that Atanarjuat tried to kill her, so Sauri and Oki decide to kill Atanarjuat; Panikpak, however, remains skeptical of Puja's accusations. Puja returns to Atanarjuat's camp apologizing, and is accepted back. One day the women decide to go find eggs, but first Puja places a boot outside the tent where the men are resting. Oki and two henchmen sneak up and plunge their spears through the tent wall. Amaqjuaq is killed, but Oki is startled by a vision of his grandfather Kumaglak, and Atanarjuat, naked and barefoot, bursts out of the tent and runs for miles across the ice, pursued by Oki's gang. Atanarjuat escapes by following a vision of Qulitalik and jumping a wide open crack in the ice. Eventually he collapses in exhaustion with bloody feet. He is rescued by Qulitalik and his family, who conceal him when Oki arrives in pursuit.

Back at Igloolik, Sauri refuses to let Oki have Atuat, but Oki rapes Atuat, who is comforted by Panikpak. During a hunt, Oki stabs Sauri and claims it was an accident, and takes over as camp leader. In her heart, Panikpak summons her brother Qulitalik to come, as they agreed years ago. Qulitalik feels her call and makes magic with the rabbit foot: at Igloolik Oki catches a rabbit with his bare hands, eats it, and falls under a spell that makes him forget his grievances. Qulitalik and the family make the long sled journey back to Igloolik with Atanarjuat, who has healed. Atanarjuat is joyfully reunited with Atuat but rejects Puja. The spell-happy Oki just wants to have a feast. But Atanarjuat prepares an ice floor in an igloo and invites Oki and his brothers inside. He slips antlers on his feet to grip the ice and subdues them, declaring that the killing is over. It is now time to confront the evil that has plagued the community for so long. With everyone gathered together, Qulitalik calls forth the spirits, and the evil shaman Tungajuaq appears, grunting like apolar bear. Qulitalik confronts the shaman with the powerful spirit of the walrus and magic soil, Panikpak shakes the walrus tooth necklace, and the shaman is destroyed and vanishes. Panikpak tells the group it is time for forgiveness: Oki, Puja and their friends are forgiven for their evil deeds, but are exiled from Igloolik forever.

Cast

[edit]

Atanarjuat's family

[edit]
  • Natar Ungalaaq as Atanarjuat, "the fast runner"
  • Pakak Innuksuk as Amaqjuaq, "the strong one", Atanarjuat's older brother
  • Neeve Irngaut as Uluriaq, wife of Amaqjuaq
  • Felix Alaralak as Tulimaq, Atanarjuat's father
    • Stephen Qrunnut as Young Tulimaq
  • Kumaglaq, the young son of Atanarjuat and Atuat; namesake of the old camp leader.

Oki's family

[edit]
  • Peter-Henry Arnatsiaq as Oki, Atanarjuat's rival
  • Lucy Tulugarjuk as Puja, Oki's spoiled sister
  • Apayata Kotierk as Kumaglak, the old camp leader
  • Madeline Ivalu as Panikpak, wife of Kumaglak, mother of Sauri, grandmother of Oki and Puja, and sister of Qulitalik
    • Mary Angutautuk as Young Panikpak
  • Pauloosie Qulitalik as Qulitalik, brother of Panikpak
    • Charlie Qulitalik as Young Qulitalik
  • Mary Qulitalik as Niriuniq, wife of Qulitalik
  • Eugene Ipkarnak as Sauri, camp leader
    • Eric Nutarariaq as Young Sauri

Others

[edit]
  • Sylvia Ivalu as Atuat, sought as a wife by Atanarjuat and Oki
  • Abraham Ulayuruluk as Tungajuaq, the evil shaman
  • Luke Taqqaugaq as Pittiulak, Oki's sidekick
  • Alex Uttak as Pakak, Oki's sidekick

Production

[edit]

Development

[edit]

The film is set inIgloolik ("place of houses") in the Eastern Arctic wilderness at the dawn of the first millennium.[2] The names of Atanarjuat and his brother first appeared in writing in the journals of the explorer CaptainGeorge Lyon, who took part in a British expedition to search for theNorthwest Passage in 1821–23.[3] The Inuit believe the story of Atanarjuat to be more than five centuries old.[4] This agrees withgeomorphological estimates that Qikiqtaarjuk (Herschel Island), Inuktitut forlittle island and now a peninsula ofIgloolik Island,[5] on which much of the action occurs, became a peninsula about 500 years ago due toisostatic rebound.[3][6][7] The main elements of the original story are that two brothers are betrayed by their wives and help set up a sneak attack. Rivals plunge their spears through the walls of the brothers' tent, but the fast runner makes an escape across the ice, naked and barefoot. After being rescued and healing, the fast runner sets up his own ambush and succeeds in killing his rivals.[3] It was the firstInuktitut-language screenplay,[8] and the project became the first feature film in Inuktitut.[9]

Writer Paul Apak Angilirq, directorZacharias Kunuk, and many others on the production team had heard the Atanarjuat legend when they were young.[10] Over the course of five years, Angilirq interviewed seven elders for their versions of the story and combined them into onetreatment.[11][1] The final script was developed by the team of Angilirq, Norman Cohn (producer and cinematographer), Kunuk, Herve Paniaq (tribal elder), and Pauloosie Qulitalik. Angilirq died due to cancer during film production in 1998.[12][13]

Despite the emphasis on accuracy, the film takes liberties with the original Inuit myth: "At the film's core is a crucial lie", wroteJustin Shubow inThe American Prospect,[14] which is that the original legend ended in a revenge killing, whereas in the film Atanarjuat stops short of shedding blood.[1] Kunuk felt this was "A message more fitting for our times", and agreed that it "probably" reflected the influence of Christianity andits concept of forgiveness on contemporary Inuit.[14]

After Isuma applied toTelefilm Canada in spring 1998 for financial support, plans were made to begin filming inIgloolik,Nunavut in April. The month was important because April is typically the only time of year in Northern Canada when camera equipment could film winter scenes without malfunctioning due to cold.[15] Kunuk found there was a lack of funding available from Telefilm and the Canadian government, which prioritized English and French-language productions over the languages ofAboriginal Peoples in Canada, and would not provide more than $100,000 for a film in an Aboriginal language, which would makeAtanarjuat impossible.[10][16] Kunuk regarded this asracial discrimination.[17]

Due to difficulty with funding, Isuma instead successfully appealed for support of theNational Film Board of Canada. Although the NFB had abandoned fiction, Isuma argued that in documenting Inuit mythology,Atanarjuat was similar to adocumentary film.[18] The budget was approved at $1.96 million.[10]

Filming

[edit]
Filming took place inIgloolik,Nunavut.

Achieving historical accuracy was paramount to the production. According to anthropologistBernard Saladin d'Anglure the biggest challenge was resurrecting the beliefs and practice ofshamanism, "the major frame of reference for Inuit life".[3] Research into historical sources—often the journals of European explorers[3]—provided the basis for the reconstruction of clothes and customs. Elders were consulted. In an interview, Paul Apak Angilirq said:

We go to the elders and ask information about the old ways, about religion, about things that a lot of people have no remembrance of now... They are helping us write down what people would have said and acted in the past, and what the dialogue would have been like ... We speak 'baby talk' compared to the elders. But forAtanarjuat, we want people speaking real Inuktitut ... When we are writing the script, they might jump in and say, 'Oh, we wouldn't say such a word to our in-law! We wouldn't say anything to our brother's wives! It was against the law!'"[19]

The filming crew was 90% Inuit.[8] Filming began in 1999, stretching from 3 p.m. to 3 a.m., given the sun was always up.[18] Cohn used natural light in shooting with hisSony DVW 700 digital camera, avoiding switches from the automatic camera settings.[20] The film production pumped more than $1.5 million into the local economy of Igloolik and employed about 60 people.[21] Given the small population, everyone in Igloolik knew at least one crew member.[16]

Kunuk explained how the crew set out:

Everything was different—the way we traveled, the way we camped. It was just like when we go out today, spring camping, putting up canvas tents and moving from here to there. We would go fifty miles out into the country where there were no roads, nothing. Like the land was from the time it was created. There would be fifteen tents and eighty people, all the kids running around, just waiting for a perfect day. When we had a perfect day, the actors put on their make-up and costumes, and we went onto the site where we wanted to shoot.[11]

The crew would costume the actors and applymake-up, only for the production to stall for four hours for ideal weather, which Kunuk said required the patience found in Inuit hunting.[11]

Release

[edit]
TheCannes Film Festival in May 2001.

The film premiered at theCannes Film Festival in May 2001.[22] It was also screened at theToronto International Film Festival in September 2001.[23]

Its commercial release in Canada came on 12 April 2002, with the only bidder for distribution rights beingAlliance Atlantis and its affiliate,Odeon Films.[23] It had already been playing in France for seven weeks, and was on 83 screens.[23] The film opened inNew York City on 7 June 2002.[24]

Reception

[edit]

Box office

[edit]

In theGreater Toronto Area, the film competed with the Canadian comedyMen with Brooms, which set box office records amongEnglish Canadian cinema.Atanarjuat became more enduring in the box office and became one of the highest-grossing Canadian films to date.[25]

By 7 November 2002,Atanarjuat grossed $1.1 million in Canada,[26] withOdeon Films spokesman Mark Slone declaring this "an unqualified hit".[24] In the U.S., it grossed $1.75 million by 11 July 2002.[24] In France, it drew 200,000 admissions before the commercial Canadian release in April 2002.[23] Its gross was higher than any Canadian film of 2002.[16] The film finished its run on 30 January 2003 having grossed $3,789,952 in North America and $1,398,337 in other territories, for a worldwide total of $5,188,289.[27]

Critical reception

[edit]

Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner was praised by critics.[23] OnRotten Tomatoes, the film has a positive 93% rating based on 133 reviews, with an average rating of 8.1/10. The site's consensus reads, "Compelling human drama and stunning cinematography makeThe Fast Runner an absorbing experience".[28] OnMetacritic the film has a score of 91 out of 100 based on 29 critics.[29]

Brian D. Johnson ofMaclean's hailed it as a masterpiece and a landmark in international film, writing, "This movie doesn't just transport you to another world; it creates its own sense of time and space."[13] In theToronto Star, Peter Howell wrote the film overcame the stereotypes of the 1922 filmNanook of the North and "defines an epic in every way".[30]

Roger Ebert fromChicago Sun-Times awarded it four out of four, praising the film's acting, fleshed out characters, and direction, calling it "passion, filtered through ritual and memory".[31]Peter Bradshaw fromThe Guardian praised the performances and cinematography, calling it "a remarkable world first".[32] Tom Dawson fromBBC called the film "an impressively vivid and detailed depiction of a particular way of life", hailing the cinematography as "extraordinary".[33] A. O. Scott fromThe New York Times praised the film, stating "Mr. Kunuk has accomplished the remarkable feat of endowing characters from an old folk tale with complicated psychological motives and responses. The combination of dramatic realism and archaic grandeur is irresistibly powerful".[34] Marjorie Baumgarten fromThe Austin Chronicle complimented the film's script, cinematography, and visual style as being unique and refreshing.[35]Leonard Maltin awarded the film four stars, calling it "A privileged peek into Inuit culture and a stirring, deeply personal drama".[36]

The goals of the film were first to show how for thousands of years Inuit communities had survived and thrived in the Arctic, and second to introduce the new storytelling medium of film to help Inuit communities survive long into the future.[3] Doug Alexander wrote in the Canadian historical magazineThe Beaver thatAtanarjuat "is an important step for an indigenous people who have, until recently, seen their culture recorded by outsiders".[37] Jennifer L. Gauthier ofCineAction wrote "Atanarjuat was made primarily for Inuit audiences so that they could see positive and accurate images of themselves on the screen". Director Kunuk put it a little more bluntly: "Four thousand years of oral history silenced by fifty years of priests, schools, and cable TV". He explained, "I first heard the story of Atanarjuat from my mother".[38] "Kids all overNunavut are playing Atanarjuat in the streets," said producer Norman Cohn in a 2002 interview.[39] At one point the production company was considering making Atanarjuat action figures.[39]

In 2004, critics and filmmakers in theToronto International Film Festival named the film fifth in theTop 10 Canadian Films of All Time.[40] In the next update in 2015, it was placed first, promptingSteve Gravestock to comment, "This is likely the first time that a film by an indigenous filmmaker has topped a poll of national cinema."[40]The Nunatsiaq News heralded the choice as a signAtanarjuat: The Fast Runner "has stood the test of time".[41] However, Eric Moreault, writing forLa Presse, dismissedAtanarjuat's first-place finish as nonsensical, notingMon oncle Antoine topped all previous versions.[42]

Accolades

[edit]

The film won theCaméra d'Or at Cannes, the first time a Canadian film won the honour.[22][1] Canadian historianGeorge Melnyk interpreted this as a sign that "Canadian cinema has come of global age", also pointing toThe Barbarian Invasions winning theAcademy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.[43] At the22nd Genie Awards, Krista Uttak accepted theAward for Best Screenplay on behalf of her deceased fatherPaul Apak Angilirq.[44]

Canada submittedAtanarjuat for consideration for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. It was one of the rare Canadian films not inFrench submitted for consideration, withThe Necessities of Life in 2008 also containing a substantial amount of Inuktitut.[45]Atanarjuat was not nominated.

AwardDate of ceremonyCategoryRecipient(s)ResultRef(s)
American Indian Film Festival2002Best FilmZacharias KunukWon[46]
Best DirectorWon
Best ActorNatar UngalaaqWon
Best ActressLucy TulugarjukWon[47]
Banff Mountain Film Festival2002Best Feature FilmZacharias KunukWon[46]
Cannes Film Festival14–25 May 2001Caméra d'OrWon[48]
Chicago Film Critics Association8 January 2003Best Foreign Language FilmNominated[46]
Most Promising DirectorNominated
Edinburgh International Film Festival2001New Director's AwardWon[a][49]
Festival International de Films de Montréal2001Prix du PublicWon[46]
2002Special Jury PrizeWon
Film Fest Gent2001Grand PrixWon[9]
FIPRESCI Prize - Special MentionWon
Genie Awards7 February 2002Best Motion PictureNorman Cohn,Paul Apak Angilirq, Zacharias Kunuk andGermaine WongWon[12][50]
Best DirectionZacharias KunukWon
Best ScreenplayPaul Apak AngilirqWon
Best EditingNorman Cohn, Zacharias Kunuk andMarie-Christine SardaWon
Best Original ScoreChris CrillyWon
Best SoundRichard Lavoie,Serge Boivin andJean Paul VialardNominated
Best Costume DesignAtuat AkkitirqNominated
Claude Jutra AwardZacharias KunukWon
Independent Spirit Awards22 March 2003Best Foreign FilmNominated[51]
San Diego Film Festival2002Best Feature FilmWon[52]
Santa Fe Film Festival2002Best FeatureWon[46]
Toronto Film Critics Association18 December 2002Best Canadian FilmWon[53]
Best First FeatureWon
Toronto International Film Festival6–15 September 2001Best Canadian FilmWon[54]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Shared withL.I.E.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcd"CBC Arts Presents: The 50 Greatest Films Directed By Canadians".CBC Arts. CBC. 1 July 2023. Retrieved1 July 2023.
  2. ^"The Legend Behind The Film". Igloolik Isuma Productions. Archived fromthe original on 19 May 2007. Retrieved20 May 2007.
  3. ^abcdefd'Anglure 2002.
  4. ^Evans 2010, p. 3.
  5. ^Aporta, Claudio (December 2003)."New Ways of Mapping: Using GPS Mapping Software to Plot Place Names and Trails in Igloolik (Nunavut)"(PDF).Arctic.56 (4): 325.doi:10.14430/arctic629.
  6. ^Eber 2008, p. 21.
  7. ^Kublu, Alexina."Interviewing Inuit Elders - Stories".Nunavut Arctic College. Archived fromthe original on 8 February 2012.
  8. ^abNesselson, Lisa (14 May 2001)."Review: 'Atanarjuat the Fast Runner'".Variety. Retrieved4 January 2017.
  9. ^abDillon, Mark (18 February 2002)."Atanarjuat steals the Genies show".Playback. Retrieved6 January 2017.
  10. ^abcChun 2002, p. 21.
  11. ^abcChun 2002, p. 22.
  12. ^abHowell, Peter (8 February 2002). "Inuit director sweeps Genies Zacharias Kunuk's unique Arctic tale takes Canadian 'Oscars' before it hits theatres".The Toronto Star. p. D01.
  13. ^abJohnson, Brian D. (15 April 2002). "An Arctic masterpiece".Maclean's. Vol. 115, no. 15. p. 53.
  14. ^abShubow, Jason (28 February 2003)."Cold Comfort: The misrepresentation at the center ofThe Fast Runner".The American Prospect. Archived fromthe original on 16 February 2008. Retrieved20 January 2013.
  15. ^Alioff 2001, p. 19.
  16. ^abcSeguin, Denis (29 August 2005). "Freeze frame".Canadian Business. Vol. 78, no. 17. pp. 42–46.
  17. ^Chun 2002, pp. 22–23.
  18. ^abAlioff 2001, p. 20.
  19. ^"Interview With Paul Apak Angilirq". Igloolik Isuma Productions. Archived fromthe original on 9 May 2008. Retrieved27 January 2008.
  20. ^Alioff 2001, p. 21.
  21. ^"Filmmaking Inuit-Style". Isuma Distribution International Inc. Archived fromthe original on 6 December 2006. Retrieved8 December 2006.
  22. ^abSemley, John (28 May 2015)."TIFF poll shows Canada's All-Time Top Ten films".The Globe and Mail. Retrieved5 January 2017.
  23. ^abcdeAdilman, Sid (6 April 2002). "Atanarjuat's story no match for its cinema saga Acclaimed Inuit movie finally comes home next Friday".The Toronto Star. p. J06.
  24. ^abcFox, Matthew (19 July 2002). "Inuit movie takes Manhattan: Atanarjuat (The Fast Runner) surprise hit on U.S. art house circuit".The Toronto Star. p. F01.
  25. ^Wise 2003, p. 50.
  26. ^Wise 2003, p. 51.
  27. ^"The Fast Runner (Atanarjuat)".Box Office Mojo. Retrieved4 January 2017.
  28. ^"Atanarjuat (2002)".Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved8 November 2023.
  29. ^"Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner".Metacritic. Retrieved22 February 2016.
  30. ^Howell, Peter (12 April 2002). "Atanarjuat exorcises the ghost of Nanook Innovative Inuit movie thrills, chills and uplifts".The Toronto Star. p. F03.
  31. ^Ebert, Roger."The Fast Runner Movie Review & Film Summary (2002)".RogerEbert.com. Retrieved22 February 2016.
  32. ^Bradshaw, Peter (21 July 2008)."Atanarjuat".The Guardian. Retrieved22 February 2016.
  33. ^Dawson, Tom."BBC - Films - review - Atanarjuat - the Fast Runner".BBC. Retrieved22 February 2016.
  34. ^Scott, A.O. (7 June 2002)."An Inuit Epic in Shades of White".The New York Times. Retrieved22 February 2016.
  35. ^Baumgarten, Marjorie."The Fast Runner (Atanarjuat) – Film Calendar".The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved22 February 2016.
  36. ^Maltin 2014, pp. 448–449.
  37. ^Alexander, Doug (April–May 2002). "An Arctic Allegory".The Beaver. Vol. 82, no. 2. p. 48(2).
  38. ^Kunuk 2002.
  39. ^ab"Action figures next step for Atanarjuat".Nunatsiaq News. Archived fromthe original on 14 November 2006. Retrieved7 December 2006.
  40. ^abGravestock, Steve (26 June 2015)."Essay".Toronto International Film Festival. Retrieved28 August 2016.
  41. ^"Atanarjuat best Canadian film ever, TIFF poll finds".The Nunatsiaq News. 27 April 2015. Retrieved28 August 2016.[permanent dead link]
  42. ^Moreault, Eric (27 April 2015)."Les dix meilleurs films: un palmarès très "canadian"".La Presse. Retrieved28 August 2016.
  43. ^Melnyk 2007, p. xi.
  44. ^Johnson, Brian D. (18 February 2002). "A Sledful of Genies for an epic on ice".Maclean's. Vol. 115, no. 7. p. 54.
  45. ^Wong, Jessica (23 September 2016)."Xavier Dolan's It's Only the End of the World to be Canada's Oscar foreign-language film submission".CBC News. Retrieved3 January 2017.
  46. ^abcde"Atanarjuat/The Fast Runner".National Museum of the American Indian. Archived fromthe original on 6 March 2017. Retrieved3 January 2017.
  47. ^"OSU to host conference on Native American Language".Oregon State University. 1 May 2003. Retrieved4 January 2017.
  48. ^"Festival de Cannes: Atanarjuat".festival-cannes.com. Archived fromthe original on 9 October 2012. Retrieved19 October 2009.
  49. ^Brochure: Edinburgh International Film Festival: 16–27 June 2010, Standard Life, p. 11.
  50. ^"Inuit film earns top honours at Genie Awards".CBC News. 8 February 2002. Retrieved3 January 2017.
  51. ^Munoz, Lorenza (22 April 2003)."Award-Winning Inuit Filmmaker To Speak On Tradition, Storytelling, And The Digital Age May 7 In Ucsd Price Center".Los Angeles Times. Retrieved4 January 2017.
  52. ^"Women star in IFP film nominations".University of California, San Diego. 22 April 2003. Retrieved4 January 2017.
  53. ^"PAST AWARD WINNERS".Toronto Film Critics Association. 29 May 2014. Retrieved3 January 2017.
  54. ^"Past Award Winners".Toronto International Film Festival. Retrieved3 January 2017.

Bibliography

[edit]

External links

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