[Indigenous Film Series] Qallunaat! Why White People are Funny
2018 Weekly Indigenous Film Series
Thursday, January 11, 4-6 pm, Education Building, Room 233
Qallunaat! Why White People are Funny, (2006) NFB 52 min
This documentary is a tongue-in-cheek investigation into the ways Inuit people have been treated as “exotic” documentary subjects by turning the lens onto the strange behaviours of Qallunaat (the Inuit word for white people). The term refers less to skin colour than to a certain state of mind. The doc explores how the Qallunaat greet each other with inane salutations, repress natural bodily functions, complain about being cold, and want to dominate the world.
The film is a collaboration between filmmaker Mark Sandiford and Inuit writer and satirist Zebedee Nungak, Qallunaat! brings the documentary form to an unexpected place in which oppression, history, and comedy collide.
This film is part of the NFB series:
McGill's Faculty of Education and present the 2018 season of the Weekly Indigenous Film Series, facilitated by Lori Beavis and supported by McGill's Department of Integrated Studies in Education and the Institute for Human Development and Well-Being (IHDW).