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Celebrating 10 Years of Community Filmmakers
At this year’s Gimli International Film Festival, one of the most powerful showcases wasn’t just about cinema—it was about community, representation, and the growing influence of Winnipeg’s Indigenous Filmmakers Collective.
For over a decade, the collective has served as a creative home for Indigenous storytellers, providing mentorship, technical training, and a safe space for experimentation. Founded to address the lack of representation in mainstream media, it has grown into a vibrant hub where seasoned professionals and emerging voices collaborate, learn, and celebrate their cultures.
This year, Winnipeg-based filmmaker Oliver King, originally from James Smith Cree Nation in Saskatchewan, premiered Confluence, a 16mm experimental film co-directed with Charlene Moore. The piece emerged from conversations about what indigeneity means within the context of Winnipeg and how filmmakers can weave their heritage into innovative, boundary-pushing art.
The social “plus-value” is clear: the collective is not just making films; it is revitalizing Indigenous languages, reclaiming cultural narratives, and ensuring Winnipeg audiences hear authentic voices rarely seen on commercial screens. Projects like A Cree Love Story combine traditional language preservation with contemporary queer storytelling, showing that Indigenous cinema can hold space for intersectionality, truth, and artistic innovation.
For the Winnipeg community, the benefits extend far beyond the screen. The collective fosters cross-cultural dialogue by pairing Indigenous creators with artists from varied backgrounds, breaking down stereotypes, and building relationships rooted in respect and reciprocity. As King notes, “It takes all kinds” to steward community—and the collective embodies that principle through mentorship programs and public screenings that invite all Winnipeggers to engage.
In an era where mass-produced digital content and AI-generated scripts risk diluting authenticity, audiences are craving genuine, lived-experience storytelling. Winnipeg’s Indigenous Filmmakers Collective meets that demand by offering films that are artist-driven, culturally grounded, and deeply connected to place. This work strengthens the city’s cultural fabric, nurtures homegrown talent, and positions Winnipeg as a leader in inclusive, community-centred filmmaking.
For newcomers to the craft, the path is open. The collective welcomes emerging storytellers through social media outreach, workshops, and collaborative projects, ensuring the next generation of filmmakers has the skills—and the confidence—to tell their own stories.
The message is clear: when Winnipeg invests in diverse local storytelling, it doesn’t just enrich its cultural scene—it preserves heritage, inspires future creators, and builds a stronger, more connected community.
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