Realizing Futures

Sat Jun 17 2023 at 07:30 pm to 09:30 pm

Billy Wilder Theater at the Hammer Museum | Los Angeles

UCLA Film & Television Archive
Publisher/HostUCLA Film & Television Archive
Realizing Futures
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UCLA Film & Television Archive presents free screenings at the Billy Wilder Theater at the Hammer Museum.
About this Event

From the reclamation of traditional matriarchal ceremony to the activism of poetic expression and depictions of eternal love, this program of short films showcases world-building narratives of Indigenous existence and resistance. Centering joy, gratitude and resilience acts as a powerful reminder of the potentials of narrative change in storytelling practice, and in the creation of Indigenous futurisms. Together, these films offer a non-linear approach that reflect how these Indigenous filmmakers see themselves, and the past-present-futures of their communities, and stories.


Shadow holding shape to experience the energy of the sun (Muscle, Bone & Sinew)

U.S., 2021

Two futuristic creatures perform a dogmatic monologue focusing beyond colonialism—“We must practice maintenance rather than preservation.”

DCP, color, 5 min. Director: Cannupa Hanska Luger.


Chaac & Yum

U.S., 2022

Queer joy transcends time and space in this love story rooted in Chaac, the Mayan deity of Rain, and Yum, the Mayan deity of corn.

DCP, color, 12 min. Director: Roberto Fatal.


Gently, Jennifer

U.S., 2019

Jennifer unexpectedly experiences an awakening and her first kiss within the pages of a magazine.

DCP, color, 9 min. Director: Doane Tulugaq Avery.


Long Line of Ladies

U.S., 2022

A Karuk community reclaims their matriarchal tradition of celebrating a girl’s transition to womanhood.

DCP, color, 22 min. Director: Rayka Zehtabchi, Shaandiin Tome.


They Told Me "Apikaan" Means Braid

U.S., 2013

Originally an 8mm installation conceived as a loop, They Told Me "Apikaan" Means Braid serves as a reminder of the cyclical nature of language and tradition.

DCP, color, 3 min. Director: Eve-Lauryn LaFountain.


This is the Way We Rise

U.S., 2020

For Jamaica Heolimeleikalani Osorio, poetry is an act of resistance and an empowering tool for advocacy.

DCP, color, 12 min. Director: Ciara Lacy.


Diiyeghan naii Taii Tr’eedaa (We Will Walk the Trail of our Ancestors)

U.S., 2021

Gwich’in cultural identity is intermeshed with the caribou. In this intergenerational story, an elder teaches his granddaughter about the reciprocal relationship.

DCP, color, 6 min. Director: Princess Daazhraii Johnson, Alisha Carlson.


I Am Home

U.S., 2023

Grandma Betty Slim reflects on Diné identity and resilience—though we are all different, we are all made of the earth, and remain strong throughout time.

DCP, color, 3 min. Director: Kymon Greyhorse.

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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

Billy Wilder Theater at the Hammer Museum, 10899 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, United States

Tickets

USD 0.00

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