TORONTO - A documentary chronicling the Wet鈥檚uwet鈥檈n people's resistance to pipeline construction on their ancestral lands has won the $50,000 Rogers Audience Award for best Canadian documentary at the Hot Docs film festival.
"Yintah" won the prize as the 11-day festival in Toronto wrapped up on Sunday night.
The documentary, directed by Jennifer Wickham, Brenda Michell and Michael Toledano, outlines a decade of growing resistance to exploitations of Wet鈥檚uwet鈥檈n land that led to protests culminating in 2020 rail blockades in several provinces.
Other awards handed out in the last few days of the Hot Docs festival include the $5,000 DGC Special Jury Prize for Canadian feature documentary, which went to "Any Other Way: The Jackie Shane Story," about a Black transgender music performer in Toronto who vanished from the spotlight at the height of her fame.
The $10,000 Best Canadian Feature Documentary Award went to "The Soldier鈥檚 Lagoon," which retraces Simon Bolivar's journey across Colombia, while the $10,000 Best International Feature Documentary Award was given to "Farming the Revolution," about Indian farmers' unprecedented protests against their government's new laws.
Hot Docs says it has awarded a total of $172,000 in cash and prizes to filmmakers this year in various categories.
This report by 香港六合彩挂牌资料 was first published May 6, 2024.