FR

Yintah

Jennifer Wickham, Brenda Michell, Michael Toledano

2024

YINTAH, meaning “land” in the Wet’suwet’en language, tells the story of an Indigenous nation’s fight for sovereignty as they resist the construction of multiple oil and fracked-gas pipelines across their territory. Over the period of a decade, the film follows Tsakë ze’ Howilhkat Freda Huson, Tsakë ze’ Sleydo’ Molly Wickham, and their fellow land defenders as they reoccupy their traditional territory and galvanize their nation in a fight against several of the largest fossil fuel companies on earth. YINTAH is about an anti-colonial resurgence—a fierce and ongoing fight for Indigenous and human rights. The film reveals the hypocrisy of the Canadian government’s espousal of reconciliation, as Indigenous land is still being seized at gunpoint for the purpose of resource extraction. The Hereditary Chiefs’ claim to jurisdiction over the territory is supported by a 1997 Supreme Court of Canada decision. When a lower court effectively sidesteps this decision, granting pipeline companies access to Wet’suwet’en land, Wet’suwet’en leaders put their bodies on the line, building barricades to keep the companies out. Ultimately, YINTAH is the story of the Indigenous right to stewardship and sovereignty over their territories. Freda, Molly, and the land defenders are part of a centuries-long fight to protect their children, culture, and land from colonial violence. For the Wet’suwet’en, their very future is at stake.

Movie Still
Movie Still
Movie Still
Movie Still
Movie Still
Movie Still
Movie Still
Movie Still
Movie Still

CREDITS

Featuring
Tsakë ze’ Howilhkat Freda Huson, Tsakë ze’ Sleydo’ Molly Wickham
Directors
Jennifer Wickham, Brenda Michell, Michael Toledano
Producers
Jennifer Wickham, Brenda Michell, Michael Toledano, Bob Moore
Executive Producers
Sam Vinal, Doris Rosso, Daniel Cross, Mila Aung-Thwin
Co-Producer
Katie McKay, Valerie Shamash, Franklin López
Editor
Ryan Mullins
Director of Photography
Michael Toledano
Camera
Melissa Cox, Dan Loan, Jesse Freeston, Sam Vinal, Keir Knight, Grace Burke, Alexandra Kotcheff
Music
Olivier Alary
Additional Music
Johannes Malfatti
Sound Design
Benoît Dame, Catherine Van Der Donckt
Produced with the Participation of
Canada Media Fund
Produced in Association with
Ford Foundation
Produced with the Participation of
Telefilm, Rogers Doc Fund, Indigenous Screen Office, International Documentary Association, Québec Production Services Tax Credit, Creative BC, The Canadian Film or Video Tax Credit
Produced in Association with
CBC Docs
Impact Partners
Story Money Impact, Doc Society, Chicken & Egg
AWARDS

Hot Docs Rogers Audience Award for Best Canadian Feature

Hot Docs Audience Award

Best International Documentary Feature Red Nation Film Festival

Impact Grand Prix award FIPADOCS

Human Rights Human Wrongs award at Human International Doc FF

Special Jury Mention for Elevate Award DOXA

Special Jury Mention for Colin Low Award for Best Canadian Director DOXA

Finalist Social Justice Award Lane Doc Fest

Nominee for Cinema for Peace Dove International Green Film Award

Nominee Best Feature Length Documentary Canadian Screen Awards

Nominee Best Cinematography in a Feature Length Documentary Canadian Screen Awards

Nominee Best Documentary Toronto Film Critics Association

Nominee Best Original Music in a Feature Length Documentary Canadian Screen Awards

Nominee Best Sound Design in a Feature Length Documentary Canadian Screen Awards

PRESS

The gorgeous sweeping vistas documented by this film’s enrapturing cinematography gives way to hellish images of strewn, chewed up land marked by apparent and invisible broken barriers ... Yintah vigorously paints a resiliency that will never surrender.

— Roger Ebert

... an assured, gripping communiqué of whose histories we inhabit on and off screen, and how to ensure their preservation.

— Screen Slate

Much like its subjects, Yintah is a film that knows its purpose, and serves it defiantly.

— FIlm Comment

Yintah had by far the sharpest viewpoint of any film I saw at the (True/False) festival. It’s a documentation and a witness to the hard work of moral clarity, of refusing to lose dignity for an easy way out, of the ongoing fight to preserve the land and traditions of the people who belong to it against bad odds.

— Bright Wall/Dark Room

A poignant, powerful film unlike almost anything else you’ll see.

— The Grind

an incendiary feat of filmmaking ... an urgent, eye-opening call to action.

— POV

The fight for the future of the earth could not be more dramatically captured.

— The Tyee

Yintah is a visceral, necessary, brilliantly executed film...a gripping and enduringly impactful experience deserving attention and recognition from all.

— Film Fest Report

While an incredibly difficult film for Canadian settlers to watch, this is still a very powerful look at the fight for First Nations sovereignty.

— Sean Kelly On Movies

Yintah is another stark condemnation of the failure of reconciliation.

— Capital Daily