SGAAWAAY KUUNA ( EDGE OF THE KNIFE) Trailer, Canadas Top Ten 2019
Arriving more than a century after British Columbia s firstever feature film, In the Land of the Head Hunters Edward S. Curtis controversial but undeniably fascinating portrait of the Kwakwaka wakw people of northern Vancouver Island Edge of the Knife is the first feature to tell a story about the Kwakwaka wakw s neighbours the Haida. Part drama, part historical reclamation, First Nations filmmakers Gwaai Edenshaw and Helen HaigBrown s film is set during the 19th century and performed entirely in the Haida language (a tongue so endangered, with less than 20 fluent speakers, that a dialect coach was needed). Whereas Curtis remained an outside observer, transfixed by the Kwakwaka wakw s masks and regalia, Edge of the Knife has a genuine Indigenous eye akin not only to other films by distributor Isuma (Zacharias Kunuk has an executive producer credit) but also from supernatural neorealist fables from African and Latin American filmmakers. Inspired by the Gaagiixiid, Gaagiid wildman of Haida mythology, the
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