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Demon Mineral

Maple Leaf Cet article est seulement disponible pour les commandes canadiennes.

Numéro de catalogue:  TVP117
Producteur:  Video Project, Inc.
Producteurs:  Austin, Hadley
Réalisateurs:  Austin, Hadley
Agences de production:  Formidable Entitles Production
Sujet:  Documentaire, Droit criminel, Étude des premières nations, Études de l'environnement, Études mondiales canadiennes, Histoire, Histoire américaine, Peuples autochtones, Politique, Problèmes sociaux, Questions autochtones, Santé et Médecine, Science, Sciences sociales
Langue:  Anglais
Niveau scolaire:  9 - 12, Post-secondaire, Adulte
Pays d'origine:  United States
Année du droit d’auteur:  2023
Durée:  89:11


Demande de pré-visionnement

Demon Mineral can be considered an anti-Western, flipping the classical cinematic paradigm by centering the voices and experiences of the Diné community to explore the legacy of uranium mining in Diné Bikeyah, the sacred homelands of the Navajo where over 500 unremediated mines are scattered across an area the size of West Virginia.

In the span of just four generations entire ways of living have been lost or severely compromised, as mining has contaminated the air, water, livestock, and land upon which the community relies for its existence. The film also celebrates the actions the Diné community is taking to fight against new mines and improve life in an irradiated ecosystem which has resulted in a sharp rise in cancer, kidney failure, and other diseases.
 
The film overlaps with the labor of Dr. Tommy Rock, a Navajo scientist whose life's work is uranium contamination cleanup. Walking through the desert with geiger counter in hand, he traces the invisible trails of uranium that crisscross his childhood home in the iconic Western landscape of Monument Valley. Through him, we meet other Diné activists and elders who have survived everything from genetic damage to nuclear disaster.  Eventually, Tommy finds himself representing his community before Congress, who have been continually pushing to reopen the uranium mines and declare uranium a "critical mineral" for American stability.
In keeping with Diné relations with the earth, the land itself is also a central character whose history, purpose, and power is explored. Through community elders, a valuable oral history is shared that expands the scale from the profit-drive short term of mining companies to the cosmic timeline upon which Uranium exists and breaks down. Some Diné adhere to the tenets of an origin story wherein a demon contentedly lives in the earth. The demon will bother no-one unless disturbed, having been laid there by a formidable warrior. Uranium, for millions of years to come, is perhaps this demon made real.

** Streaming Rights Not Available for Post Secondary Institutions **

WINNER - Slamdance Film Festival, Audience Award, Best Documentary Feature
OFFICIAL SELECTION:

Mill Valley Film Festival
Big Sky Documentary Film Festival
Slamdance Film Festival
Munich International Documentary Festival
International First Peoples Festival
Osnabrück Film Festival



 

"I lived on the edge of the Navajo Nation for many years. In that time, I made connections to the community and saw first hand the challenges of living in contaminated areas. They cannot water their crops with their local water sources; water has to be trucked in. The same goes for the water they feed their livestock. They cannot eat their sheep or goats, as their parents and grandparents did, not even for ceremonies, as the livestock is as contaminated as the land. Many elders grew up in homes literally built of uranium rock that had been blasted out of the mines.

Demon Mineral was made to amplify the voices of those who are often not heard, and to celebrate the generations of hard work and activism in the multi-lifetime project that is nuclear clean-up."
— Hadley Austin

 


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