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Kanesatake: 270 Years of ResistanceBasic InformationSynopsis: On a hot July day in 1990, an historic confrontation propelled Native issues in Kanehsatake and the village of Oka, Québec, into the international spotlight and into the Canadian conscience. Director Alanis Obomsawin endured 78 nerve-wracking days and nights filming the armed stand-off between the Mohawks, the Québec police and the Canadian army. A powerful feature-documentary emerges that takes you right into the action of an age-old aboriginal struggle. The result is a portrait of the people behind the barricades, providing insight into the Mohawks' unyelding determination to protect their land. Film Type: FeatureRelease Year: 1993![]()
Film DetailsDirector: Alanis Obomsawin
Writer: Alanis Obomsawin
Editor: Yurij Luhovy
Cinematographer / DOP: Andre-Luc Dupont
Composer: Claude Vendette
Producer: Wolf Koenig
Executive Producer: Colin Neale
Festivals Film was shown in: Awards: Publicity Blurbs: "The film transports the viewer to the barricades and camps,achieving a powerful immediacy and devastating logic" - Toronto Globe and Mail "Mohawk historical narratives can be re-articulated and Native struggles for self-determination can be legitimized"-Zuzana Pick "..gaze of the Mohawk Other that reads colonialism as white state-sponsored terrorism" -Christopher E. Gittings ClipsKanesatake: 270 Years of Resistance |