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Ever Deadly

Directed by Chelsea McMullan and Tanya Tagaq
Canada, 2022 (documentary, 90 minutes, colour / black and white, English / Inuktitut)
Also known as "Chasseuse de son"
Ever Deadly
Image: © National Film Board of Canada
Video (National Film Board of Canada)

Film Description:
"Musician (Polaris Music Prize for her album Anima), author (of the autobiographical novel Split Tooth) and outspoken activist, the multi-talented Inuit artist Tanya Tagaq is also an electric performer, plunging her audiences into a trance state through her experimental, highly physical form of throat singing. Filmmaker Chelsea McMullan sets out to capture this visceral experience by teaming up with the singer in a feverish, immersive, multisensory documentary project that intersperses thrilling concert footage with sequences filmed in Nunavut. Portrait of an engaged and engaging woman who's fiercely protective of her family, and an artist whose relationship to music is as powerful as her connection to nuna, the land."
-- Festival du nouveau cinéma de Montréal (source)

Film Description:
"From the first extended shot, a close-up of throat singing performed by the Polaris Music Prize- and Juno Award-winning artist Tanya Tagaq and performance artist Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory on location in Nunavut, Ever Deadly focuses on what is important to Tagaq: nuna (land) and music. The feature documentary, a collaboration between Tagaq and award-winning director Chelsea McMullan, offers a slice of life and performance from the experimental Inuk throat singer. Thrilling concert footage of Tagaq's performances are interspersed with personal moments, like the singer traversing over shale—the sound of her steps noted for their musicality—with her kids and discussing how her parents shaped her. Notedly outspoken in favour of the seal hunt, the singer also reflects on how vital hunting is in the North, and how perilous it is just to survive there. The visceral experience continues with illustrations by Inuk artist Shuvinai Ashoona, which animate and capture Tagaq's words spoken from her novel, Split Tooth. Off-stage, not in performance mode, Tagaq is private, soft-spoken, and very funny. She is allowing viewers into her world—this is the first film she has agreed to—and what she reveals makes one sit up and take notice. She invites viewers into the painful story of her family, and Inuit and Canadian history. In Inuktitut, Tagaq's mother talks about the forced relocation of their family, with empty promises and the harsh reality that greeted her. Tagaq also puts a spotlight on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, in particular the death of an Inuk girl named Loretta Saunders, and invoking the names of other women and girls as her music turns into a painful wail. Moments peeking behind the curtain of the ferocious singer feel special, and taken as a whole with her electric performances, Ever Deadly is indeed deadly."
-- Kelly Boutsalis (source)


Film Credits (partial):
Written by: Tanya Tagaq, Chelsea McMullan
Produced by: Lea Marin, Anita Lee, Kate Vollum
Participants: Tanya Tagaq, Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory, Mary Gillis, Inuuja Gillis, Lucas Kalluk
Cinematography: Alejandro Coronado
Animation: Glenn Gear, Fred Casia, Parissa Mohit
Film Editing: Avril Jacobson
Music: Jesse Zubot
Production Company: National Film Board of Canada / Office national du film du Canada
Additional Credits: Vocals / Voix : Tanya Tagaq
(sources)

Notes about Ever Deadly

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