WILDHOOD Q&A | TIFF 2021

preview_player
Показать описание
The team behind WILDHOOD in conversation with TIFF in advance of its premiere at the 2021 Toronto International Film Festival. Link and his brother flee their abusive father and embark on a journey where Link discovers his sexuality and rediscovers his Mi’kmaw heritage.

Two-spirit Mi’kmaw teenager Link (Phillip Lewitski) is just discovering — and asserting — his sexuality when his already volatile home life goes off the rails. His abusive father Arvin explodes after the cops bust Link and his half-brother Travis (Avery Winters-Anthony) for stealing scrap metal. When he finds out that his supposedly dead mother Sarah may be alive, Link sets fire to Arvin’s truck and flees with Travis. Sparks fly in a chance encounter with teen drifter Pasmay (Joshua Odjick), who shares Link’s Indigenous roots and offers to help find Sarah — but will Link’s (well-founded) mistrust of people ruin his potential new relationship and the group’s mission?

Riffing off the road-movie genre, director Bretten Hannam charts Link’s growing self-awareness, which is deeply connected to the (re)discovery of his heritage. It’s been a while since a movie has fully relished in the bucolic Eastern Canada countryside. The landscape (Annapolis Valley in traditional Mi’kmaq territory) offers succour to Link and Travis — and opens them up to a very different world.

WILDHOOD will elicit comparisons to recent Canadian titles like FIRECRACKERS and SLEEPING GIANT, but the protagonists in those films were constrained by their age and limited choices. While Link and Travis aren’t free from danger, heartbreak, or disappointment, their lives are increasingly defined by possibility. This is an accomplished film driven by Hannam’s direction and writing, fine craft (cinematographer Guy Godfrey stands out especially), skilled veterans like Michael Greyeyes (in a brief but pivotal role), and some amazing young performers — and its equation of the road with the possibility of freedom couldn’t have come at a better time.

Bretten Hannam is a two-spirit L’nu filmmaker living in Kespukwitk, Mi’kma’ki (Nova Scotia) where they were raised. They co-wrote the short Champagne (10), which played the Festival, and wrote and directed the short films New Skin (08), Puppy (10), Deep End (11), and Elmiteskuatl (19), and the feature film North Mountain (15). Wildhood (21) is their latest film.
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

I adored this film! It is my favourite this year, so far. It is so wholesome and beautifully written, acted and shot. Soulful and complex characters that are brought to life by brilliant actors. Loved it so much!

mariajosegarcia
Автор

It's a really beautiful movie. Soft and gentle and so precious. I love how the characters were presented, even the ones that are not really in the main roles have really fun and interesting personalities I'd love to see them interact with each other more honestly. I can see that the people involved in the making of this movie have put so much thought and love in it. I'm so glad I've seen it <3

Fosifar