Native American Public Telecommunications (NAPT) is
teaming up with Media for Health and the National Society for American
Indian Elderly in a call for scripts to be considered for production
through the Native Radio Theatre Project. The goal is to produce a
series of short audio dramas that would be entertaining and educational.… Read more
The Weeneebeg Aboriginal Film and Video Festival is a grassroots community festival that celebrates film and video that addresses the land, language, culture, its people and way of life which is special and uniqe to the James Bay area.… Read more
The NSI-Canada with headquarters in Winnipeg, is a film and television training school. Training is based around the philosophy that the best way to learn is by doing.
The Cowichan International Aboriginal Festival of Film and Art is an annual intercultural event that is organized through the CIFFA Society (Cowichan Intercultural Festival of Film & Art Society) and co-hosted by Film Cowichan and the Cowichan Theatre in Duncan, the heart of the Cowichan region.
"Albuquerque welcomes the Talking Stick Film Festival to our city," said Mayor Martin Chávez. "Albuquerque is recognized as the Indian Capital of the United States, and we are thrilled to be the host for this all Native festival."
When the first Dene filmmaker returned home to Canada’s Northwest Territories, his people had no words for his new art. They called it "Dreamtalking". When you make films a Dene elder said, you are speaking your dreams.
Tyendinaga is a Mohawk community located on the shore of the Bay of Quinte between Toronto and Montreal, in eastern Ontario. The Mohawk Nation is one of the five original nations of the Iroquois Confederacy.
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