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abril 2005
Filmmaker
Loretta Todd (Métis/Cree) meshes
expressionistic footage with more traditional nonfiction storytelling
elements to create original documentaries. Her first feature-length
documentary, The Learning Path, won a Silver Hugo from
the Chicago International Film Festival. Forgotten Warriors
won Best Documentary at the American Indian Film Festival,
Best History Award at Hot Docs, and was nominated for a Genie
Award. Todd received a Special Honouring and Screening Retrospective
at the 2000 ImagineNATIVE Media Arts Festival. In 1998 she won
the Taos Mountain Award for lifetime achievement from the Taos
Talking Picture Festival. She was instrumental in establishing
the Aboriginal Arts Program at the Banff Centre in Banff, Alberta,
and teaches critical and technical courses on cinema for organizations
such as the Chief Dan George Foundation. Todd is has participated
in the Sundance Screenwriter's Lab, and in 1996 received a fellowship
from New York University's Center for Media, Culture, and History,
funded by the Rockefeller Foundation. Todd studied film at Simon
Fraser University in British Columbia. She was born in Edmonton,
Alberta.
"I think Native Indian people are rich in many gifts, including
gifts of drama, humor, storytelling, and image making. That's
what I try to express in my films."


Presentado por NMAI

Créditos
Fotográficos: Loretta
Todd - gentileza del realizador
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