The Georgia Straight

A quick and dirty guide to doxa 2024

- By V.S. Wells

Every year, DOXA—Western Canada’s largest documentar­y festival—assembles a dynamic lineup of new releases. For the 2024 edition, all the festival’s special presentati­ons are by local and/ or Canadian talent, making it easier than ever to support homegrown documentar­ies that tell touching, tough truths.

There’s a lot to see. Here’s a slate of Canadian films to start.

May 3 @ VIFF

The Anarchist Lunch:

Centre

Everyone’s dad has weird hobbies—even local filmmaker Rachel Epstein’s. Over the past 35 years, weekly meetings—taking place in the same Chinese restaurant in Fairview—have bonded a group of activists, including her father. Filmed over several years, this doc explores aging and activism, and the solidarity forged from a shared drive to change the world.

May 4 @ The Cinematheq­ue

Cake and Death:

With a name referencin­g one of Suzy Izzard’s most viral comedy bits—“Cake or death? Uh, cake please”—this mid-length doc asks the question: why not both? The world premiere from local filmmaker William Brown, Cake and Death examines consumptio­n, capitalism, and coercion through a sticky lens. An intricate collage of movie scenes depicting cake morphs to explore how that cake came to be—and the bitter human cost of the global sugar trade.

Tea Creek: May 4 @ VIFF Centre; May 9 @ Djavad Mowafaghia­n Cinema

Head northwest far enough on Highway 16 and you’ll find yourself in Kitwanga, Gitxan territory. Here, Dzap’l Gye’a̱win Skiik Jacob Beaton, confronted by the sharp edge of Indigenous food sovereignt­y, has turned his family farm into Tea Creek: a training centre dedicated to strengthen­ing Indigenous communitie­s

and economies with land-based food programs. Exploring the vibrant legacy of Indigenous agricultur­e, this film examines different ways of growing knowledge— and what decolonize­d food systems could look like.

Between Pictures: The Lens of Tamio Wakayama: May 5 @ The Cinematheq­ue; May 9 @ Djavad Mowafaghia­n Cinema Part of DOXA’s Rated Y for Youth slate, this stirring portrait follows the life of photograph­er Tamio Wakayama. Directed (and partially animated) by celebrated local artist Cindy Mochizuki, the film explores the power of Wakayama’s images in the context of anti-Asian racism and the immigrant diaspora. From civil rights to cultural celebratio­ns, Wakayama captures the joy of seeking self-determinat­ion. It’s preceded by the short film Here and There: a glimpse into the lives of three children from immigrant families trying to connect with their cultural legacies. Standing in conversati­on, the two films honour heritage, history, and home.

Yintah: May 7 @ VIFF Centre; May 9 @ Djavad Mowafaghia­n Cinema Yintah—meaning “land”—tells the story of defying resource extraction. Since Coastal GasLink’s decision to build a pipeline through ancestral territory in

Northern BC, Tsakë ze’ Howilhkat Freda Huson (Unist’ot’en of the Wet’suwet’en C’ilhts’ëkhyu clan) and Tsakë ze’ Sleydo’ Molly Wickham (Cas Yikh of the Gidimt’en clan) have been at the forefront of the resistance to the pipeline—and have been met with state-sanctioned violence for their actions. Filmed over the course of 10 years, Yintah dives deep into the lives of two land defenders facing government, corporatio­ns, and law enforcemen­t.

A Man Imagined: May 8 @ The Cinematheq­ue

Brian M. Cassidy and Melanie Shatzky (The Patron Saints) favour unorthodox filmmaking: shaping the visuals to match the story. In A Man Imagined, Lloyd, an unhoused man with hallucinat­ory schizophre­nia, sees the world as starkly different to the urban jungle he has survived in for decades. At a time when mental illness and visible poverty are increasing­ly wielded as cudgels to justify law-and-order violence, this intimate portrait shows Lloyd as he is—and the world as he sees it, in all its strange and terrifying and beautiful glory.

Plastic People: May 10 @ Djavad Mowafaghia­n Cinema

DOXA hosts the Canadian premiere of this buzzy SXSW doc that’s part science

fact and part science horror, which sees author and presenter Ziya Tong diving deep into the world of microplast­ics and their impact on human health. Almost every bit of plastic ever produced has broken down into microplast­ics—and, as Tong meets with experts, performs experiment­s, and undergoes personal tests, she unravels just how deep this pollution penetrates. It’s an eye-openingly urgent look at an invisible, invasive health hazard that threatens every level of life on earth.

Any Other Way: The Jackie Shane Story: May 11 @ Djavad Mowafaghia­n Cinema DOXA always closes with a banger. Michael Mabbott (The Life and Hard Times of Guy Terrifico) and Lucah Rosenberg-Lee co-direct a portrait of one of Toronto’s most elusive icons, trans soul singer Jackie Shane. Born in Nashville in the 1940s, Shane fled to Canada as a teenager; in 1971, she completely vanished for 40 years, eventually resurfacin­g and restarting her music career. This documentar­y mixes classic talking heads with audio from calls between Mabbott and Shane before she died in 2019. Elliot Page serves as an executive producer on this story that unravels the musician’s enigmatic life.

DOXA takes place at various venues from May 2 to 12.

 ?? ?? Still from Yintah, about Indigenous resistance to resource extraction.
Still from Yintah, about Indigenous resistance to resource extraction.
 ?? ?? Still from Tea Creek, about food sovereignt­y.
Still from Tea Creek, about food sovereignt­y.

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