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The 33rd Annual
American Indian Film Festival
November 7 - 15, 2008
Searchable List of Films

search title, director, and synopsis:


 

The American Carver

Ancestor Eyes

At Land's End - ITI HUMMA

Before Tomorrow

The Box of Wisdom Totem Pole

By the Rapids

Byron Chief-Moon: Grey Horse Rider

Chance

Club Native

Coloring the Media

The Creation

Darkness Calls in Gitxsan

Deb-we-win Ge-am-aan, Our Place in the Circle

The Eighth Fire:
One Earth, One Whole Circle, Again


The Exiles

Frozen River

Fry Bread Babes

A Future Past Voice

Gathering Devah:
An Ancient Pine Nut Harvest Tradition


Hope on the Rez

In a World Created by a Drunken God

In Laman’s Terms

In This World

It Had To Be Done

Kitohcikew - One Who Makes Music

L'Amendement

Little Caughnawaga: To Brooklyn and Back

Magic on the Water

Mato Paha: Rally to Protect Bear Butte

Mino Bimaadiziwin: Touching the Sky

Moccasin Flats: Redemption

Modern Day Warriors

My Big Fat Diet

Native Wind

Niigaanibatowaad: FrontRunners

Older Than America

One Drum

Our Spirits Don’t Speak English:
Indian Boarding School


Out in the Cold

Poison Wind

Power Paths

Reservation Soldiers

A Return Home

A Return to Wellness

River of Renewal

Second Stories: Honour Thy Father

Seminole Wind

Shadow of the Salmon

A Shout into the Wind

Sikumi

Sparkling Igloo

Spirit Warriors

Stories of the Cherokees

Summer Sun Winter Moon

This Is My Life

Tkaronto

Totem: Return and Renewal

Travels Across the Medicine Line

Triptych

Two Spirits, One Journey

Ua Uitumupan

Weaving Worlds

Where Are You Grandpa?

Yes Is Better Than No

Yocha-de-werrtis (Return to Springtime)

You Can Let Go


Byron Chief-Moon: Grey Horse Rider

Byron Chief-Moon: Grey Horse Rider
Director: Philip Szporer and Marlene Millar
48 Minutes • Canada • Documentary Short

2008 AIFF Winner, Best Documentary Short

Father of three, successful TV actor and artist and proud member of the First Nations two-spirited gay community, Byron Chief-Moon is a fascinating mesh of dynamic personae. But when he dances alone in the forest, the complexity of the real world washes away, and we can see his spiritual self take hold. By melding the history and art of his Canadian Blackfoot Confederacy tribe with issues of contemporary life, Chief-Moon’s work makes profound statements about identity and tradition.

Saturday, Nov. 8, 12 Noon
Landmark Embarcadero Center Cinema

$5 general / $5 students and seniors



© 2008 American Indian Film Institute. All rights reserved.