Latest posts from National Screen Institute - Canada (NSI)


NSI Features First screenplay Cherries from Amelia Wasserman, Matt Sadowski makes Slamdance quarterfinals

Posted: 20 Sep 2019 08:13 AM PDT

Amelia Wasserman, Matt Sadowski

NSI Features First-developed project Cherries (previously known as She Smiles Back), from producer Amelia Wasserman and writer Matt Sadowski, has been named a quarterfinalist in the 2019 Slamdance Screenplay Competition.

Cherries follows an anxious and cynical young woman who gets caught up in a high-stakes misadventure on her 16th birthday when her flighty and reckless Irish-twin sister befriends a pretty boy delinquent.

The Slamdance Screenplay Competition is dedicated to discovering and nurturing emerging writing talent, welcoming screenplays in every genre, on any topic, from anywhere in the world.

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NSI Features First provides development training for writer/producer teams looking to produce their first or second feature film with strong commercial appeal. Over 20 feature films developed through the program have been produced since 1997.

NSI Features First is funded by Presenting Sponsor Telefilm Canada; Supporting Sponsors CBC Gem, Super Channel, Corus Entertainment and Breakthrough Entertainment; Provincial Sponsor Creative BC through the Daryl Duke and William Vince Scholarship Fund; and Industry Supporters William F. White and Deluxe. NSI Core Funders are Manitoba Sport, Culture & Heritage and the City of Winnipeg through the Winnipeg Arts Council.

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Prairie Boy Productions’ 6 Tons of Steel: Building Bloody Saturday airs on CBC Manitoba

Posted: 20 Sep 2019 08:07 AM PDT

6 Tons of Steel: Building Bloody Saturday | Link to CBC

Documentary 6 Tons of Steel: Building Bloody Saturday from Orlando Braun’s (NSI Business For Producers) company Prairie Boy Productions airs on CBC Manitoba Saturday, September 21.

In the doc, ironworkers construct a steel monument of a life-size replica of the streetcar tipped and torched at the height of the Winnipeg General Strike in 1919. 6 Tons of Steel tracks the streetcar’s creation, while exploring stories of labourers then and now and the origins of one of the largest workers’ strikes ever.

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Announcing the inaugural NSI New Northern Voices participants

Posted: 19 Sep 2019 11:36 AM PDT

Tricia Bland, Rochelle Dyrkacz, Hubert Lathlin, Steven Bignell; Bottom, from left: Gabriel Constant, Stuart Matheson, Andy Kematch, Cherie Burns, Abraham Beardy
Top, from left: Tricia Bland, Rochelle Dyrkacz, Hubert Lathlin, Steven Bignell; Bottom, from left: Gabriel Constant, Stuart Matheson, Andy Kematch, Cherie Burns, Abraham Beardy

Ten residents of northern Manitoba have been selected for a one-of-a-kind storytelling course in The Pas. NSI New Northern Voices, in association with University College of the North (UCN), is a full-time, four-week program run by the National Screen Institute – Canada (NSI), designed to develop students’ storytelling skills and provide unprecedented access to film, TV and digital media experts.

Through this media-based storytelling course, students will have the opportunity to create a short film based on stories developed during training. The program kicks off on Monday, September 23 and runs until October 18, 2019.

The 2019 NSI New Northern Voices students are:

  • Tricia Bland (Thompson)
  • Rochelle Dyrkacz (The Pas)
  • Hubert Lathlin (The Pas)
  • Balin Smeltzer (The Pas)
  • Steven Bignell (Opaskwayak Cree Nation)
  • Gabriel Constant (Opaskwayak Cree Nation)
  • Stuart Matheson (The Pas)
  • Andy Kematch (Mosakahiken First Nation)
  • Cherie Burns (Opaskwayak Cree Nation)
  • Abraham Beardy (Fox Lake Cree Nation)

Students will receive guidance and mentoring from award-winning content creators Jordan Wheeler (Arctic Air, North of 60), Kim Wheeler (ReVision Quest, Indian Summer, CBC’s Unreserved), Erica Daniels (Run as One: The Journey of the Front Runners) and Charlene Moore (When the Children Left, Moccasin Stories). Filmmaking 101, a segment of training covering production basics, is presented by the Directors Guild of Canada and will be led by DGC member and acclaimed director Shane Belcourt (Indictment: The Crimes of Shelly Chartier, Urban Native Girl).

“The National Screen Institute believes in the development of storytelling skills in northern Manitoba and empowering aspiring content creators in the region to tell their stories. Alongside our renowned associate faculty members, we are incredibly excited to launch the first year of NSI New Northern Voices and welcome these students to the NSI family,” said program manager Ursula Lawson.

“This course brings together participants from a range of communities, backgrounds and experience levels. It’s another great partnership that can help grow industry capacity in northern Manitoba,” said UCN president and vice chancellor Doug Lauvstad. “University College of the North is proud to be part of NSI New Northern Voices and to work with the National Screen Institute to develop students’ skills.”

NSI New Northern Voices will deliver a well-rounded understanding of storytelling and media production skills, create an environment for long-term growth and build capacity for the screen industry in the region. The program aims to develop content creators to write, direct and produce stories from a northern Manitoba perspective.

NSI New Northern Voices is led by program manager Ursula Lawson, associate program manager Kaya Wheeler and program assistant Sarah Simpson-Yellowquill.

• • •

NSI New Northern Voices is funded by Presenting Sponsor University College of the North (UCN); Indigenous Training Programs Partner Directors Guild of Canada (DGC); Strategic Sponsor Telefilm Canada; Supporting Sponsors Stantec, RBC Emerging Artists Project, Corus Entertainment, Super Channel, CBC Gem; Provincial Sponsor Manitoba Film & Music; Industry Partner Directors Guild of Canada (DGC); Industry Supporters Native Communications Inc. and Final Draft; NSI Core Funders are Manitoba Sport, Culture & Heritage and the City of Winnipeg through the Winnipeg Arts Council.

NSI New Northern Voices, in association with University College of the North, is the direct result of the NSI feasibility study and framework for northern training, supported by Manitoba Sport, Culture and Heritage, The Winnipeg Foundation and Manitoba Film & Music.

About University College of the North (UCN)

University College of the North serves Northern communities and people with education, training, teaching, learning and research, while being inclusive and respectful of diverse Indigenous and Northern values. University College of the North is an institution devoted to community and northern development and reflects the Aboriginal reality and cultural diversity of northern Manitoba.

About the National Screen Institute – Canada (NSI)

The National Screen Institute – Canada (NSI) is a charitable, not-for-profit organization. Renowned for having given many content creators their first breaks, NSI provides customized training, mentorship and production support through courses like NSI Totally TelevisionCBC New Indigenous Voices presented by NSINSI Features First, NSI IndigiDocs, NSI New Northern Voices and TELUS STORYHIVE. NSI also showcases Canadian content through the NSI Online Short Film Festival.

All media enquiries

Laura Friesen, Manager, Communications & Alumni Relations
Tel: 204.957.2999 or email: laura.friesen@nsi-canada.ca

• • •

Meet the 2019 NSI New Northern Voices participants

Tricia Bland

Tricia Bland

Tricia is a Cree woman from York Factory First Nation. She grew up in Thompson and Winnipeg.

Tricia completed the Nu-Media training course in 2018. She has worked behind and in front of the camera. She hopes to raise awareness through storytelling and media.

Rochelle Dyrkacz

Rochelle Dyrkacz

Rochelle (also known as Rocki) was born and raised in Winnipeg, but has been living in The Pas for over 10 years.

An immense passion to create has motivated and guided her in experiencing the joys of acting, dancing, singing, stage managing and writing. In her spare time, she paints, bakes, crafts and experiments with video editing.

She likes to think of herself as a jack of all (arts) trades but a master of none. However, she is always eager to learn!

Hubert Lathlin

Hubert Lathlin

Hubert Lathlin has been interested in filmmaking and storytelling since he was a child.

His interest in taking this course is to expand his knowledge in digital media storytelling and, in doing so, he hopes to meet other people who share his same passion for filmmaking.

Balin Smeltzer

Balin Smeltzer is an Indigenous male living in Opaskwayak Cree Nation and The Pas. His creative passion is sharing and telling stories.

His first experience with short film was a project called Welcome to Isolation – he was part of an ensemble cast with his friend Shadow Colomb at the helm. Balin would love to learn about the technical nuts and bolts of filmmaking.

Steven Bignell

Steven Bignell

Steven Bignell is from the Opaskwayak Cree Nation in Manitoba and is a filmmaker and writer.

This past spring he shot a local horror film called Black Ice at the annual Storytellers Film Festival in The Pas. His acting credits include roles in Moccasin Flats, Beyond and as a extra in a couple of movies including Tideland and Just Friends

Steven looks forward to working with NSI and getting firsthand multimedia training.

Gabriel Constant

Gabriel Constant

Gabriel Constant has several years’ experience in news media and video production.

He believes this program will be both exciting and challenging for northerners since programming like this is not as easily available up north as it is in the south. Gabriel would like to see this program become a success by demonstrating what NSI’s training has done for him in the past. Ekosi.

Stuart Matheson

Stuart Matheson

Stuart Matheson was born in Prince George, British Columbia and raised in northern Manitoba. He has lived in Thomspon, Denare Beach, Snow Lake and The Pas.

Interested in film from a young age, he is the director and producer of the internet horror series Ashes To Ashes. He currently lives in The Pas and is creating an animated series, Punk.

Andy Kematch

Andy Kematch

Andy Kematch lives in Moose Lake, Manitoba (Mosakahiken First Nation). He’s originally from Pelican Rapids but has moved around a lot since high school and seen a lot of different lifestyles.

He’s interested in trying this course and sharing some of the stories he’s seen and heard. Andy is ready to learn more about communicating and storytelling from different perspectives.

Cherie Burns

Cherie Burns

Cherie Burns was born and raised in The Pas, Manitoba. She recently moved back home after pursuing her educational journey in Indigenous studies.

She has a profound connection to her people and the land. Cherie believes this is an exciting opportunity and her goal is to capture and share local traditional stories with the world.

Abraham Beardy

Abraham was born in Churchill and currently lives in Bird, Manitoba (Fox Lake Cree Nation, FLCN). Both of his parents are deceased but he has a strong connection with his family. He is a survivor of the residential school system and a product of the Sixties Scoop.

Abraham is currently doing resource management and land use plans for FLCN. His work has involved being part of a number of projects, including Keeyask Dam, Conawapa Dam, Bipole III, Nunavut Roundtable, Wapusk National Park, FLCN Resource Management Board, Centre for Indigenous Environmental Resources (CIER) and Morrison Hershfield environmental group.

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