Where the Spirit Lives | |
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Written by | Keith Ross Leckie |
Directed by | Bruce Pittman |
Starring | |
Music by | Buffy Sainte-Marie |
Country of origin | Canada |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producers | |
Cinematography | Rene Ohashi |
Editor | Michael Todd |
Running time | 96 minutes |
Production company | Screen Door |
Budget | $2.6 million[1] |
Original release | |
Network | CBC Television |
Release | October 29, 1989 |
Infobox instructions (only shown in preview) |
Where the Spirit Lives is a 1989 television film about Aboriginal children in Canada being taken from their tribes to attend residential schools for assimilation into majority culture. Written by Keith Ross Leckie and directed by Bruce Pittman, it aired on CBC Television on October 29, 1989.[2] It was also shown in the United States on PBS on June 6, 1990, as part of the American Playhouse series[3][4] and was screened at multiple film festivals in Canada and the United States.
The film stars Michelle St. John as Amelia, a young Kainai girl captured and confined to the residential school system of the 1930s. The system was an attempt to have aboriginal youth to assimilate into the majority European-Canadian culture. Amelia resists assimilation and plans her escape. The film's cast includes Ann-Marie MacDonald and David Hemblen as teachers at the school.