Vancouver Film Critics Circle awards Haida-language ‘Edge of the Knife’
VANCOUVER — The Vancouver Film Critics Circle has named the Haida-language drama “Edge of the Knife” best Canadian feature.
The 19th-century mystery-thriller, from Indigenous directors Gwaai Edenshaw and Helen Haig-Brown, is billed as the first feature-length film made in the endangered Haida language.
“Edge of the Knife” took a total of four prizes from the VFCC’s Canadian awards ceremony on Monday, including best director, best B.C. film, and an acting trophy for Tyler York.
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“Roads in February” star Arlen Aguayo Stewart also won an acting award, while the film’s director, Katherine Jerkovic, won a prize for an emerging Canadian filmmaker.
Other winners included actors Aaron Read and Kayla Lorette for “When the Storm Fades.”
Keith Behrman won best screenplay for a Canadian film for “Giant Little Ones.”
And “Anthropocene: The Human Epoch,” directed by Jennifer Baichwal, Nicholas de Pencier and Edward Burtynsky, won best Canadian documentary.
Last month the VFCC, which comprises Vancouver-based writers and critics, named its international award winners.
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Alfonso Cuaron’s black-and-white drama “Roma” took best picture and best foreign language film.
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The Canadian Press