Sundance Winner SUGARCANE to Debut in US & Canadian Theatres--New York & Toronto Aug 9-Los Angeles Aug 16th
Press release from Pender PR
National Geographic Documentary Films released the official trailer and key art for its forthcoming film SUGARCANE, from first-time director and TIME100 Next honoree Julian Brave NoiseCat and Emmy®- and Peabody-nominated investigative journalist, director, producer, and cinematographer Emily Kassie. SUGARCANE will be released by Variance Films in the U.S. and by Films We Like in Canada on Aug. 9 and will stream later this year on Hulu and Disney+.
“Enlightening and infuriating” (Variety), SUGARCANE is an epic, nuanced, and sensitive cinematic portrait of a community during a moment of international reckoning. Amidst the groundbreaking investigation into abuse and deaths at an Indian residential school in Canada, the film’s courageous participants break cycles of intergenerational trauma by facing painful, long-ignored truths and rebuilding broken family bonds.
Messages, some dating back a century, were written by children on the walls of a barn on the site of the former St. Joseph's Mission Indian residential school. (Credit: Christopher LaMarca/Sugarcane Film LLC)
SUGARCANE has been celebrated by critics, calling it “the product of humane and insightful filmmakers who are determined to never let anyone forget” (Variety) and “as much a piece of art about the sins of the past as it is about living with the memory of those sins in the present” (IndieWire).
Investigator and survivor Charlene Belleau calls on Julian Brave NoiseCat to help document the search at St. Joseph's Mission Indian Residential School. (Credit: Christopher LaMarca/Sugarcane Film LLC)
St. Joseph's Mission Indian Residential School in summer. (Credit: Sugarcane Film LLC)
New York – Film Forum – An exclusive engagement begins Aug. 9
Toronto – TIFF Lightbox – An exclusive engagement begins Aug. 9
Los Angeles – Laemmle Royal – An exclusive engagement begins Aug. 16
Additional U.S. and Canadian cities and theaters will open beginning Aug. 9th.
Films We Like presents SUGARCANE, from filmmakers Julian Brave Noisecat and Emily Kassie, across Canada this summer. Canadian locations include Toronto, Sudbury, Saskatoon, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Winnipeg, Edmonton and more to be announced.
Director Emily Kassie films investigators Charlene Belleau and Whitney Spearing searching for evidence of abuse at St.Joseph's Mission. (Credit: Julian Brave NoiseCat/Sugarcane Film LLC)
SUGARCANE Director Julian Brave NoiseCat. (Photo by Emily Kassie)
About Julian Brave Noisecat — Director
Julian Brave NoiseCat is a writer, filmmaker and student of Salish art and history. His first documentary, Sugarcane, directed alongside Emily Kassie, follows an investigation into abuse and missing children at the Indian residential school NoiseCat’s family was sent to near Williams Lake, British Columbia. Sugarcane premiered at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival where NoiseCat and Kassie won the Directing Award in the U.S. Documentary Competition. A proud member of the Canim Lake Band Tsescen and descendant of the LilWat Nation of Mount Currie, he is concurrently finishing his first book, We Survived the Night, which will be published by Alfred A. Knopf in North America, Profile Books in the United Kingdom and Commonwealth, Albin Michel in France and Aufbau Verlag in Germany.
NoiseCat’s journalism has appeared in dozens of publications including The New York Times, The Washington Post and The New Yorker and has been recognized with many awards including the 2022 American Mosaic Journalism Prize, which honors excellence in long-form, narrative or deep reporting on stories about underrepresented and/or misrepresented groups in the present American landscape. In 2021, NoiseCat was named to the TIME100 Next list of emerging leaders alongside the starting point guard of his fantasy basketball team, Luka Doncic.
SUGARCANE Director Emily Kassie. (Photo by James K. Lowe)
Emily Kassie is an Emmy® and Peabody®-nominated investigative journalist and filmmaker. Kassie shoots, directs and reports stories on geopolitical conflict, humanitarian crises, corruption and the people caught in the crossfire. Her work for The New York Times, PBS Frontline, Netflix, and others ranges from drug and weapons trafficking in the Saharan desert, to immigrant detention in the United States. In 2021, she smuggled into Taliban territory with PBS Newshour correspondent Jane Ferguson to report on their imminent siege of Kabul and targeted killing of female leaders. Her work has been honored with multiple Edward R. Murrow, World Press Photo and National Press Photographers awards. Her multimedia feature on the economic exploitation of the Syrian and West African refugee crises won the Overseas Press Club Award and made her the youngest person to win a National Magazine award. She previously oversaw visual journalism at Highline, Huffington Post’s investigative magazine, and at The Marshall Project. Kassie was named to Forbes 30 under 30 in 2020 and is a 2023 New America fellow. Her first documentary, I Married My Family’s Killer, following couples in post-genocide Rwanda, won a Student Academy Award in 2015.
Investigator and residential school survivor Charlene Belleau searches through newly released records to identify deaths and abuses of children at St. Joseph's Mission. (Credit: Emily Kassie/Sugarcane Film LLC)
National Geographic Documentary Films, part of a joint venture between The Walt Disney Company and the National Geographic Society, is committed to bringing the world premium, feature documentaries that cover timely, provocative and globally relevant stories from the very best documentary filmmakers. Its award-winning and critically acclaimed films reach 300 million people worldwide in 180 countries and 33 languages across the global National Geographic channels and direct-to-consumer platforms Disney+ and Hulu. Recent films include Oscar® nominated Bobi Wine: The People’s President, Oscar®- and BAFTA nominated Fire of Love, three-time Emmy-award winner The First Wave, two-time Sundance-award winner The Territory, BAFTA nominees The Rescue and Becoming Cousteau, and Oscar®- and BAFTA winner Free Solo. For more information visit films.nationalgeographic.com, or find us on Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.
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