ohpikihâkan awâsis (Cree Subtitled Version)

198743 min 5 secFilm: Documentary

Direction: Gil Cardinal

Production: Jerry KrepakevichTom RadfordGraydon McCrea

An important figure in the history of Canadian Indigenous filmmaking, Gil Cardinal was born to a Métis mother but raised by a non-Indigenous foster family, and with this auto-biographical documentary, he charts his efforts to find his biological mother and to understand why he was removed from her. Considered a milestone in documentary cinema, it addressed the country’s internal colonialism in a profoundly personal manner, winning a Special Jury Prize at Banff and multiple international awards. “Foster Child is one of the great docs to come out of Canada and nobody but Gil could have made it,” says Jesse Wente, Director of Canada’s Indigenous Screen Office. “Gil made it possible for us to think about putting our own stories on the screen, and that was something new and important.”

Availability


Subject categories


  • Families > Adoption and Foster Care
  • Indigenous Peoples in Canada (First Nations and Métis) > ChildrenCultural IdentityFamily LifeMétisPrairies
  • Social Issues > Family LifeIndigenous Peoples
  • Family Studies/Home Economics > Family Diversity and Challenges
  • Indigenous Studies > Identity/Society
  • Justice System & Indigenous People > Family Law, Child Welfare, Adoption
  • Indigenous Peoples: Canada > Métis People

Credits


director
Gil Cardinal
producer
Jerry Krepakevich
executive producer
Tom Radford
Graydon McCrea

Awards


  • Special Jury AwardAnnual Alberta Film and Television Awards
  • Special Jury Award - with a cash prize of 1,500$World Media Festival
  • Gemini Award for Best Direction in a Documentary (Gil Cardinal)Gemini Awards
  • NFB Kathleen Shannon Documentary Award - with a cash prize of 1,000$Yorkton Film Festival
  • Golden Sheaf Award - Category: Best Production of the FestivalYorkton Film Festival
  • Golden Sheaf Award - Category: Best Documentary over 30 minutesYorkton Film Festival
  • Certificate of Merit for Cinematography (James Jeffrey)Yorkton Film Festival
  • Best Documentary Short AwardAnnual American Indian Film Festival
  • Gold Apple Award - Category: Human Relations / Life Styles and Life PassagesNational Educational Media Network Competition
  • Red Ribbon Award - Category: Family RelationsItinerant - American Film and Video Festival
  • Honorable Mention - Category: Health and Medicine / Adoption International Film and Video Festival