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Michelle Latimer among Canadians set for Sundance Film Festival
by Victoria Ahearn, The Canadian Press
Posted Dec 16, 2020 12:00 pm EDT
Last Updated Dec 16, 2020 at 12:12 pm EDT
TORONTO Writer-director Michelle Latimer and actors Lisa Cromarty and Michael Greyeyes are among several Canadians with projects in the upcoming Sundance Film Festival.
Latimer’s documentary “Inconvenient Indian,” which won two awards at September’s Toronto International Film Festival, will screen in Sundance’s World Cinema Documentary Competition.
“Inconvenient Indian” is based on Thomas King’s 2012 non-fiction book and takes viewers on “a critical journey through the colonial narratives of North America.”
When the National Film Board of Canada title won the $10,000 Amplify Voices Award at TIFF, the Toronto-based Latimer who is of Algonquin, Metis, and French heritage and the film’s other producers dispersed the money between five Indigenous artists.
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Victoria Ahearn
Toronto-based writer-director Michelle Latimer is photographed in Toronto, on Wednesday, August 19, 2020. Latimer and actors Lisa Cromarty and Michael Greyeyes are among several Canadians with projects in the upcoming Sundance Film Festival.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young December 16, 2020 - 9:00 AM
TORONTO - Writer-director Michelle Latimer and actors Lisa Cromarty and Michael Greyeyes are among several Canadians with projects in the upcoming Sundance Film Festival.
Latimer s documentary Inconvenient Indian, which won two awards at September s Toronto International Film Festival, will screen in Sundance s World Cinema Documentary Competition. Inconvenient Indian is based on Thomas King s 2012 non-fiction book and takes viewers on a critical journey through the colonial narratives of North America.
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United-states
Montreal
Quebec
Canada
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Toronto
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When the Sundance Film Festival kicks off on January 28, 2021, in Park City, Utah, there won’t be a long line of people standing outside the Eccles Theater, watching their breath catch in the cold winter air and Main Street surely won’t be packed with revelers and sponsor activations, either.
Instead, on account of the coronavirus pandemic, next year’s Sundance will actually expand amid the contraction of live events. Rather than relying solely on in-person experiences, the festival has plans that extend far beyond the theater: a digital platform where patrons around the world can watch this year’s lineup; drive-in screenings at venues around the country; in-person showings at independent art houses nationwide where indoor events can happen safely and in accordance with public health guidelines; and even a virtual reality space that includes live performances and a lobby where people can digitally congregate.
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