Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Highway of Tears (film)

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Directed by
  
Matthew Smiley

Written by
  
Matthew Smiley

Running time
  
79 minutes

Director
  
Matthew Smiley

Screenplay
  
Matthew Smiley

8/10
IMDb

Produced by
  
Carly Pope

Edited by
  
Brandon Lott

Initial release
  
6 March 2015 (Canada)

Narrated by
  
Nathan Fillion

Highway of Tears (film) wwwhighwayoftearsfilmcomimagesposterfbjpg

Release date
  
March 6, 2015 (2015-03-06)

Cast
  
Nathan Fillion, Steven Felker, Bertha Cardinal

Music director
  
Chin Injeti, Danny Tannenbaum

Similar
  
Finding Dawn, Kamataki, Relative Happiness, Young People Fucking, Margarita - with a Straw

Highway of Tears is a 2015 Canadian documentary film directed by Matthew Smiley and narrated by Nathan Fillion. The film concerns the notorious Highway of Tears murders on British Columbia Highway 16 between 1969 and 2011.

Contents

Searchers highway of tears


Subject

The Highway of Tears case consists of numerous unsolved murders and disappearances of women on Highway 16, with a majority of the victims being Aboriginal.

The documentary explores the possible effects of systemic racism on the investigation, beginning with the Canadian Indian residential school system and including the popularity of the song "Squaws Along the Yukon" by Hank Thompson in the 1950s. The film covers the Robert Pickton murders and examines the possible roles killers Bobby Jack Fowler and Cody Legebokoff played in the Highway of Tears. It also references an earlier 2006 documentary Finding Dawn. The film ends with a note that then-Prime Minister Stephen Harper did not support an inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women in Canada.

Production

Matthew Smiley, an artist and filmmaker, conceived of the documentary after touring Prince George, which he felt had an ideal landscape to make a film. While he was there, his brother-in-law mentioned the case of Nicole Hoar, who went missing on Highway 16. Smiley subsequently carried out interviews with community leaders and victims' families before taking his film crew to northern British Columbia to shoot the film. He credited Barb Ward-Burkitt, the executive director of the Prince George Native Friendship Centre, with supporting the project and being among the first to share her story.

Smiley's purpose in screening the film was to advance efforts to calling a national inquiry. Producer Carly Pope stated that "I believe the central message we’re hoping to convey is that this is something occurring in our backyards that we can no longer remain ignorant to." The film received funding from Carrier Sekani Family Services, with Mary Teegee, its director of child and family services, credited as an executive producer.

Release and reception

Highway of Tears debuted at the Human Rights Watch Film Festival in spring 2014, with the Toronto International Film Festival calling it a "hard-hitting documentary." Neil Godbout, writing for the Times Colonist, calls it "a beautiful and tragic film, showcasing strength and perseverance, as well as grief and loss."

The film won the Best Documentary award at the Malibu Film Festival in December 2014. It received another award for best documentary from the Women in Film + Television Festival in Vancouver.

References

Highway of Tears (film) Wikipedia