Jeff Barnaby, acclaimed Mi’kmaq filmmaker, dies at 46

Pop Culture

Mi’kmaw filmmaker Jeff Barnaby, considered a visionary of modern Indigenous cinema, has died.

The director’s representatives say he died after a yearlong battle with cancer. He was 46.

Raised on the Listuguj Reserve in Quebec, Barnaby helmed many short films, including the Jutra Award-nominated The Colony and the Genie-nominated File Under Miscellaneous.

The writer-director who was based in Montreal gained acclaim for his 2013 debut feature Rhymes for Young Ghouls. The film criticized Canada’s residential school system in a way that hadn’t been widely done in cinema. Set in the 1970s, it also reminded audiences that the events it depicted were not ancient history.

Read more:

Sarain Fox talks short doc ‘Inendi,’ COVID-19 in Indigenous communities and listening to elders

He followed that up with the 2019 zombie horror film Blood Quantum, which swept the Canadian Screen Awards, winning six out of its 10 nominations — the most of any film at the awards that year. It featured a cast that was nearly all Indigenous and took Barnaby more than 13 years to complete.

Story continues below advertisement

Barnaby is survived by his wife, Sarah Del Seronde, and son, Miles.

&copy 2022 The Canadian Press

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Denzel Washington says his same-sex kiss was cut from ‘Gladiator II’
Netflix Shares Vinicius Junior, ‘Senna’ & ‘100 Years Of Solitude’ Pics
The Pains of Being Pure at Heart Announce New Rarities Album Perfect Right Now
When Sessue Hayakawa Took Hollywood by Smoldering Storm
Russia passes bill to outlaw adoption by people from countries where gender-affirming care is legal