A moving film about divided loyalties
Now
Club Native
The Film
Club Native is a candid and deeply moving look at the pain, confusion and frustration suffered by many First Nations people as they struggle for the most important right of all: the right to belong.
On the Mohawk reserve of Kahnawake, located just outside the city of Montreal, Canada, there are two firm but unspoken rules drummed into every member of the community: Do not marry a white person and do not have a child with a white person. The potential consequences of ignoring these rules-loss of membership on the reserve, for yourself and your child-are clear, and for those who incur them, devastating. Break the rules, and you also risk being perceived as having betrayed the Mohawk Nation by diluting the "purity" of the bloodline.
In Club Native, filmmaker Tracey Deer uses Kahnawake, her hometown, as a lens to probe deeply into the history and contemporary reality of Aboriginal identity. Following the stories of four women, she reveals the exclusionary attitudes that divide the community and many others like it across Canada. Deer traces the roots of the problem, from the advent of the highly discriminatory Indian Act through the controversy of Bill C31, up to the present day, where membership on the reserve is determined by a council of Mohawk elders, whose rulings often appear inconsistent. And with her own home as a poignant case study, she raises a difficult question faced by people of many ethnicities across the world: What roles do bloodline and culture play in determining identity?
Tracey Deer, Director
Mohawk filmmaker Tracey Deer is rapidly gaining a reputation as one of Canada's finest chroniclers of modern Aboriginal life. She co-directed the feature-length documentary One More River (Rezolution Pictures) about the 2003 agreement between the Cree and Quebec. In 2004, she made Mohawk Girls (Rezolution Pictures/The National Film Board of Canada), a moving portrait of three teenage girls coming of age on her home reserve of Kahnawake, just outside of Montreal.
Tracey graduated in film studies at Dartmouth College in 2000 where she shot, directed and edited three short films before receiving the 25th Anniversary Film and Television Award for overall achievement in film studies. Her films have been broadcast and screened across Canada.
Adam Symansky, Producer (NFB)
Quebec Centre producer Adam Symansky has an interest in projects that address the ongoing "national debate" as in his productions A License to Remember: Je me souviens, a quirky look at the many meanings behind Quebec's motto; and Traitor or Patriot, Jacques Godbout's look at his great uncle, a former Quebec premier whose achievements have been largely ignored by nationalists.
Adam's recent credits also include Discordia, an inside look at a controversy between pro-Palestinian and pro-Israeli students at a Montreal campus. He was NFB producer on Alter Egos, exploring the lives of two acclaimed film animators on very different career paths.
In his 22 years at the NFB, Adam has produced films by some of Canada's most talented documentary directors. He's an Academy Award® winner for Flamenco at 5:15 and produced such landmark series as The Valour and the Horror, The King Chronicles and Part Three of The Champions.
Click here to see complete credits
Writer
Tracey Deer
Executive producer
Ernest Webb
Catherine Bainbridge
Ravida Din
Sound
Lynne Trépanier
Jessica Landry
Jacob Kent
Editor
Carl Freed
Animation
Jesse Bochner
Original music
Mona Laviolette
Linda Ludwick
Producer assistant
Camila Blos
Post-production assistant
Jacob Kent
Insurance
B.F. Lorenzetti
Lucie Trottier
Director
Tracey Deer
Director of photography
Jeff Dom
Additional sound
Steve Bonspiel
Additional editing
Tracey Deer
On-line editor
Tony Manolikakis
Sound edit
Mona Laviolette
Accountant
Linda Ludwick
Production assistant
Jake Kent
Travel arrangements
Beesum Communications
Audit
Rapp Hecht Heft
Producers
Linda Ludwick
Christina Fon
Adam Symansky
Additional camera
Tracey Deer
Narration
Tracey Deer
Logging
Krissa Paul
Sound mix
PRIM Centre d'arts médiatiques
Bruno Bélanger
Mona Laviolette
Bookkeeper
Anne-Marie Belhadj
Post-production coordinator
Camila Blos
Unit photographer
Liam Maloney
Legal
Bélanger - Sauvé
Danielle Dicaire
© 2007 National Film Board of Canada
Buy the DVD
Available soon on our online store.
DOXA
Collin Low Award for
Best Canadian Documentary
HOT DOCS
Official Selection
First People's Festival (Land Insights)
Kodak-Vision Globe Award for
Best Canadian Film
Contact
Press
Jennifer Humphries
(416) 952-8960
j.humphries@nfb.ca
Festivals
Madeleine Belisle
(514) 283-9805
m.belisle@nfb.ca
Marketing
Moira Keigher
(514) 283-9414
m.keigher@nfb.ca
Distribution
1-800-267-7710
webmaster@nfb.ca




