Accueil / My Mother's Village - DVD
Numéro de catalogue: NFB528264
Producteur: National Film Board Of Canada
Producteurs: Joe MacDonald, Graydon McCrea
Réalisateurs: John Paskievich
Agences de production: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal)
Sujet: Diversité culturelle, Documentaire, Études sociales, Faits de société canadienne, Histoire du Canada, Histoire mondiale, Problèmes sociaux
Langue: Anglais
Pays d'origine: Canada
Année du droit d’auteur: 2001
Durée: 141:04
Sous-titrage: Oui
Cliquez ici pour les prix
My Mother's Village - DVD
Numéro de catalogue: NFB528264
Producteur: National Film Board Of Canada
Producteurs: Joe MacDonald, Graydon McCrea
Réalisateurs: John Paskievich
Agences de production: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal)
Sujet: Diversité culturelle, Documentaire, Études sociales, Faits de société canadienne, Histoire du Canada, Histoire mondiale, Problèmes sociaux
Langue: Anglais
Pays d'origine: Canada
Année du droit d’auteur: 2001
Durée: 141:04
Sous-titrage: Oui
Cliquez ici pour les prix
In a documentary that spans two continents and several generations, acclaimed director John Paskievich delves into the experience of exile and its impact on the human spirit.
Almost fifty years after his family fled Ukraine for freedom in Canada, the filmmaker visits his parents' homeland. It's a place both familiar and foreign. Drawing on his years growing up in Winnipeg, Paskievich explores how children of refugees and immigrants are caught between two worlds. While they struggle to put down roots in a new country, they must also preserve traditions of a distant land they have never known.
Paskievich's journey through Ukraine is interwoven with stories of displacement from other prominent Ukrainian Canadians--authors George Melnyk and Fran Ponomarenko, filmmaker Bohdana Bashuk, director Halya Kuchmij and dancer Lecia Polujan. A rich tapestry of memory and history, My Mother's Village brings to light the humour, anger, joy and complexity of living between borders.
Almost fifty years after his family fled Ukraine for freedom in Canada, the filmmaker visits his parents' homeland. It's a place both familiar and foreign. Drawing on his years growing up in Winnipeg, Paskievich explores how children of refugees and immigrants are caught between two worlds. While they struggle to put down roots in a new country, they must also preserve traditions of a distant land they have never known.
Paskievich's journey through Ukraine is interwoven with stories of displacement from other prominent Ukrainian Canadians--authors George Melnyk and Fran Ponomarenko, filmmaker Bohdana Bashuk, director Halya Kuchmij and dancer Lecia Polujan. A rich tapestry of memory and history, My Mother's Village brings to light the humour, anger, joy and complexity of living between borders.