Passes
After experiencing a traumatic event in Igloolik (an Inuit hamlet in Foxe Basin, Qikiqtaaluk Region in Nunavut), Uyarak leaves her community and family in Nunavut to live in Montréal. When Covid-19 lockdowns close off the Canadian Arctic from the rest of the world, Uyarak is further separated from her closest friend, eldest sister, Saqpinak. This extreme situation blurs the lines of both the fictional lives of the sisters, and the non-fiction lives of the film’s directors, Lucy Tulugarjuk and Carol Kunnuk, who play the sisters.
The film becomes a series of vignettes of heartache and healing – both in the dramatic based- on-true-events narrative, and the lived reality of these characters and creators.
Uyarak doesn’t remember much about one terrible night of domestic violence, but Saqpinak does. Through Zoom calls, Uyarak talks about healing from years of trauma and abuse, and how the counselling sessions she goes to, and other cultural reconnections, are helping her heal.
At the same time, Saqpinak is raising a family and hosting live shows about her community. Things are difficult at home – Saqpinak herself is experiencing domestic abuse at home but is waiting to talk about this to Uyarak when she can get home.
When Covid-19 restrictions ease, Uyarak is finally able to travel home to Igloolik. At home, she embarks on a deeper healing journey visiting with family and elders, in town, and out on the land. Uyarak and Saqpinak share more stories and support one another in their short time together before Uyarak must return to Montréal.
“This unique blending of documentary and reality elements creates a very subtle storyline that contrasts the vast open landscape and the secrets or traumas that are hidden individuals that they have to keep held in. Highly recommended” – Zach McCann-Armitage, ALFF Programming member
In Inuktitut with English subtitles.
Content advisory: Sexual violence.
Genre: Drama
"Datrin: Raven" is a fictional story that imagines a world where only one fluent speaker of the Gwitch'n language remains. The Short depicts a morning in her life, her reality, and her hope for the future.
In Gwich'in with English subtitles.