Strong presence for local talent at Edmonton International Film Fest
By
Brett McKay
The 36th Edmonton International Film Festival features 152 films from around the world, including a strong body of work from Edmontonians.
A few local films are still to be screened as part of the 10-day festival's Studio A track, which highlights Alberta filmmakers. Among them is Sara Campos-Silvius's second short film, Power Chord, as well as Kaden Peter Wilson's first film-fest entry, Hawk for a Handsaw, both of which are playing Sept. 29.
Nauzanin Knight is back at EIFF this year with two films: the animated short called Abu and Mo: Two Orphans and an "inversive romantic comedy" called ColorBlind, about a white supremacist who is temporarily blinded by laser-eye surgery and falls in love with a Black woman.
"I wanted to use humour to disarm audiences, in order to be able to engage in conversations about issues that I'm really passionate about," said Knight.
Previously, Knight has explored social issues through a documentary called Precarity, which addresses the experiences of temporary foreign workers in Alberta. Presenting the themes of ColorBlind in narrative form gave her a different way to get her point across.
"I think it really pushes audiences to get involved in the conversation and maybe puts them off guard a bit, in a way that that feels uncomfortable," Knight explained.