
International Indigenous Film Festival
Join us for the Tacoma International Indigenous Film Festival at the Grand Cinema November 7th, 8th, and 9th, as we celebrate and share indigenous stories from local indigenous peoples as well as those from all over the world.
1-Day passes are $20 3-Day passes are $50
Get your tickets now on Eventbrite !! Click here to buy your tickets Films for Each Day
TUESDAY NOVEMBER 7
4:30 pm: Theater 1 TITLE: IN THE LAND OF THE HEADHUNTERS
DIRECTOR: Edward Curtis & George Hunt (1914) TIME: 65 mins – In 1911, photographer Edward S. Curtis traveled to British Columbia and visited the Kwakwaka’wakw, an indigenous tribe belonging to the Pacific Northwest Coast. Hard up for cash and loaded with a year’s worth of footage, Curtis decided the best way to capture life and ceremonies of the Kwakwaka’wakw was to make a feature length motion picture – one of the first of its kind. FOLLOWED BY : PEOPLE OF THE WATER DIRECTOR: Mark Celletti An 18 minute film that tells the Story of the Canoe Journey to Squaxin Island.
4:30 pm: Theater 2 TITLE: SAMI BLOOD
SISTER CITY: Ålesund, Norway DIRECTOR: Amanda Kerndel (2016) TIME: 110 min – Elle Maria, 14, is a reindeer-herding Sami girl. Exposed to the racism of the 1930’s and race biology examinations at her boarding school she starts dreaming of another life. To achieve this other life she has to become someone else and break all ties with her family and culture.
4:30 pm: Theater 3 TITLE: CRAZYWISE
DIRECTOR: Philip Borges, Local Filmmaker (2012) TIME: 82 minutes – What can we learn from those who have turned their psychological crisis into a positive transformative experience? CRAZYWISE follows two young Americans diagnosed with “mental illness.” Adam, 27, suffers devastating side effects from medications before embracing meditation in hopes of recovery. Ekhaya, 32, survives childhood molestation and several suicide attempts before spiritual training to become a traditional South African healer gives her suffering meaning and brings a deeper purpose to her life. CRAZYWISE adds a voice to the growing conversation that believes a psychological crisis can be an opportunity for growth and potentially transformational, not a disease with no cure. Discussion following the film with Philip Borges, film maker.
7:00 pm: Theater 1 TITLE: EVER DEADLY (Canada)
BY: Tanya Tagaq and Chelsea McMullan (2022) TIME: 90 mins – Throughout her ground-breaking career, Inuk throat singer Tanya Tagaq has always had an intimate relationship with the Nuna—the Land—a living, breathing organism present in her improvised performances. Hers is a voice that, according to the New York Times, “demands full attention, whether she’s whispering in her softest register or howling at the sky.” Ever Deadly weaves together intimate concert footage of Tagaq alongside moving personal reflections, stunning sequences filmed in Nunavut, and hand-drawn animation by Inuk artist Shuvinai Ashoona to seamlessly bridge history, landscapes, stories, and songs with pain, anger, and triumph—all through the expressions of one of the most innovative musical performers of our time.
7:00 pm: Theater 2 TITLE: THE HEALING HEART OF LUSHOOTSEED
DIRECTOR: Jill LaPointe (2023) TIME: 40 minutes – Feeling heartbroken by the tragic events of September 11th, 2001, Vi Hilbert, an 83-year-old elder from the Upper Skagit Indian tribe in the Pacific Northwest, asked the spirit, “What can one person do to heal a sick world?” The Healing Heart of Lushootseed tells the extraordinary story of how a diminutive great-grandmother tenaciously gathered support from unlikely corners for her most ambitious project yet, to heal the heart of the world through music.
7:00 pm: Theater 3 TITLE: THE CANOE WAY: A HISTORY OF THE CANOE JOURNEY 1989-2012
DIRECTOR: Mark Celletti Since 1989, tribal communities have held Canoe Journeys to heal intergenerational trauma, reclaim Coast Salish traditions, reduce drug-use, and pass on teachings to future generations. Hear the stories in their own words. 9:15 IMPACTATHON with Neetal Parekh in Lower Lobby
WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 8
4:30 pm: Theater 1 TITLE: HOUSE IN THE WORLD
DIRECTOR: Tala Hadid (2017) SISTER CITY: El Jadida, Morocco TIME: 86 minutes – A loving portrait of an Amazigh community high in the Atlas Mountains, with beautiful images of nature. Centered around two sisters, Fatima prepares to marry a man she hardly knows, while Khadija dreams of becoming a lawyer. This ambition is contrary to the traditional beliefs of this remote mountain village.
4:30 pm: Theater 2 TITLE: EVER DEADLY (REPEAT)
BY: Tanya Tagaq and Chelsea McMullan (2022) TIME: 90 mins – Throughout her ground-breaking career, Inuk throat singer Tanya Tagaq has always had an intimate relationship with the Nuna—the Land—a living, breathing organism present in her improvised performances. Hers is a voice that, according to the New York Times, “demands full attention, whether she’s whispering in her softest register or howling at the sky.” Ever Deadly weaves together intimate concert footage of Tagaq alongside moving personal reflections, stunning sequences filmed in Nunavut, and hand-drawn animation by Inuk artist Shuvinai Ashoona to seamlessly bridge history, landscapes, stories, and songs with pain, anger, and triumph—all through the expressions of one of the most innovative musical performers of our time.
4:30 pm: Theater 3 TITLE: THE WAY HOME
DIRECTOR: Lee Leone Hyannis SISTER CITY: Gunsan, South Korea TIME: 87 Minutes – Little Sang Woo doesn’t want to leave Seoul, South Korea, to live with his mute Grandmother in the Countryside but his mother compels him to go.
7:00 pm: Theater 1 TITLE: AINU MOSIR
SISTER CITY: Kitakyushu, Japan DIRECTOR: Takeshi Fukunaga (2020) TIME: 84 minutes – AINU MOSIR features a story about a young Ainu boy, Kanto. It deals with issues around the conflict between his personal thoughts, modern Japan, and the way of his traditional Ainu heritage. The movie was filmed on location in Hokkaido, Japan. The Ainu residents are bringing back a lost tradition called Iomante, a controversial ritual killing of a bear, which some of them agree with and others see as a practice that should be changed. Kanto finds videotapes of the Iomante rituals and watches them. He begins to discover more about his culture, including some of the more mystical elements, and eventually comes to appreciate some of the rituals.
7:00 pm: Theater 2 TITLE: SILENT NO MORE (USA Indigenous)
DIRECTOR: Erin Williams TIME: 90 minutes – “Silent No More” is a documentary that seeks to expose the epidemic of Missing and Murdered Indigenous women in the United States. It was filmed and edited by a 19-year-old student at Duke University who spent the summer as an intern for White Bison, Inc. The film includes heart wrenching interviews with the family members of Native women who have either been murdered or are still missing. Discussion Leader: Carolyn DeFord 9:15 pm IMPACTATHON with Neetal Parekh in Lower Lobby
THURSDAY NOVEMBER 9
4:30 pm: Theater 1 TITLE: TAINO REVISITED
SISTER CITY: Cienfuegos, Cuba Cuba’s Taino People: A flourishing culture, believed extinct. A commonly repeated belief says that Cuba’s Indigenous Taino people were extirpated shortly after the Spanish conquest in 1511. And yet, DNA evidence reveals that there at least 4,000 people remain in Cuba who are biologically more Taino than not. Committee Chair, Professor Marisel Fleites-Lear, will lead a discussion of the Taino.
4:30 Theater 2 TITLE: THE HEALING HEART OF LUSHOOTSEED (REPEAT)
DIRECTOR: Jill LaPointe (2023) TIME: 40 minutes – Feeling heartbroken by the tragic events of September 11th, 2001, Vi Hilbert, an 83-year-old elder from the Upper Skagit Indian tribe in the Pacific Northwest, asked the spirit, “What can one person do to heal a sick world?” The Healing Heart of Lushootseed tells the extraordinary story of how a diminutive great-grandmother tenaciously gathered support from unlikely corners for her most ambitious project yet, to heal the heart of the world through music.
5:40 pm: Theater 1 TITLE: THE CANOE WAY: A HISTORY OF THE CANOE JOURNEY 1989-2012 (REPEAT)
DIRECTOR: Mark Celletti Since 1989, tribal communities have held Canoe Journeys to heal intergenerational trauma, reclaim Coast Salish traditions, reduce drug-use, and pass on teachings to future generations. Hear the stories in their own words.
7:00 pm: Theater 1 TITLE: IXCANUL (Guatemala)
SISTER CITY: BOCA DEL RIO, MEXICO DIRECTOR: Jayro Bustamante (2015) TIME: 1 hour 33 mins – the film reveals the plight of many indigenous Mayans who suffer from unfathomable levels of exploitation. The actors are native speakers of Kaqchikel, one of many Mayan languages. IXCANUL is a painful reminder of the ease with which those who have power can prey on those who don’t. There is gorgeous photography in this film, especially of the volcano.
7:30 pm: Theater 2 TITLE: RUMBLE: THE INDIANS WHO ROCKED THE WORLD (Canada)
DIRECTORS: Catherine Bainbridge and Alfonso Maiorana (2017) TIME: 1 hour 43 mins – This revelatory Documentary brings to light the profound and overlooked influence of indigenous people on popular music in North America. Focusing on music icons like Link Wray, Jimi Hendrix, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Taboo (The Black Eyed Peas), Charley Patton, Mildred Bailey, Jesse Ed Davis, Robbie Robertson and Randy Castillo, RUMBLE: The Indians Who Rocked the World shows how these pioneering Native American musicians helped shape the soundtracks of our lives.
8:00 pm: Theater 3 TITLE: WE SPEAK FOR THE FOREST (Skokomish)
DIRECTOR: Zephyr Elise (2023) TIME: 66 mins – “We Speak for the Forests” is an inter-generational conversation with local Indigenous Skokomish tribal members and other community members in Mason County, WA. They speak of our forests’ importance–culturally, environmentally, and beyond–in this grassroots struggle to mitigate climate chaos and ensure an abundant world for all.
9:15 IMPACTATHON with Neetal Parekh in Lower Lobby