|
|
Cree Hunters of Mistassini
Filmmaker Name:
|
Boyce Richardson, Tony Ianzelo
|
Film Length:
|
59 min
|
Film Year:
|
1974
|
Duration:
|
46-75 min
|
Decade:
|
1970s
|
Secondary Creator:
|
a National Film Board of Canada production
|
Color:
|
color
|
Subject:
|
Indigenous Peoples
|
|
For thousands of years, the Cree Indians of James Bay inhabited the northern Quebec forests - originally gathering wild rice, and later hunting, fishing, and trapping. Traditionally, small groups of families spent the winter months together in the bush, subsisting on moose, beaver, deer, wild geese and caribou. In 1973 a film crew joined three families in their annual move to the north. In this film we come to know the Blacksmiths, the Jollys, and the Voyageurs: building a one-room lodge floored with pine boughs, hunting, trapping, preparing food and skins, and living together in the bush.
Disclaimer on Naming:Please be aware that this documentary may include outdated or potentially offensive language. Such terms are not endorsed by DER but are presented in their original context to promote awareness, education, and discussion. Learn more about DER’s efforts to use reparative language and honor the preferred names of Indigenous communities by clicking here.
|
|
|
The
Shopping Cart
is currently empty
|