New documentary traces Alberta filmmaker's 'comical' canoe trip with 70-year-old dad - Action News
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New documentary traces Alberta filmmaker's 'comical' canoe trip with 70-year-old dad

An award-winning Alberta filmmaker made a documentary all about a canoe trip with his father and it's described as a comedy full of errors.

The film will be featured at Calgary's 2021 Third Action Film Festival

Alberta filmmaker Niobe Thompson's latest film follows a two-week canoe trip he took with his father, which he calls a "comedy of errors." (aAron Munson)

An award-winning Alberta filmmaker made a documentary all about a canoe trip with his father and it's described as a comedy full of errors.

The film follows Niobe Thompsoncreator of filmsFast Horse,Vital Bonds and miniseriesEquus:Story of the Horseand his fatherJamie Thompson,celebratinghis70th birthday on ahomemadewooden canoe.

The documentary, titledThe Long Today,is being featured at Calgary's 2021 virtualThird Action Film Festival,which celebrates aging in the third act of life.

Thompson said it was a personal documentary, but the story itself started decades ago when his dad first started investing in canoes.

"My dad played a special role in keeping the canoe-building tradition alive," he told The Homestretchon Friday.

Jamie Thompson, a wood canoe builder, helped save the wood canvas canoe building tradition, his son said. (aAron Munson)

The filmmaker said that when all the great canoe-building companies started usingfiberglass insteadof wood, his father began building his own.

"He shipped moulds back to Alberta after apprenticing with all the old masters and started building wood canvas canoes," he said.

"For at least 15 years, he was the only one in Canada building these canoes."

Thompson was raised in the northern Cree community of Wabasca, Alta., and said he grew up paddling in wooden canoes with his dad.

"When I realized he was about to turn 70 and I was searching for a way to process that, you know, my dad's getting older, it just seemed natural that we should do it with a canoe trip and with a film," he said.

Thompson makes science, nature and adventure documentaries. He said making films helps him process different emotions he's going through.

The adventure

The filmmaker said that despite the canoe trip taking place in northern Saskatchewan, the river was similar to ones in the mountains.

"We chose a river that we've kind of been looking at with some fear and trepidation for a long time. It's called the Wathamanriver," he said.

He said to get there,you have to be flown to a very remote location.

Thompson said the film follows an adult son and his dad reflect on their own relationshipwhile canoeing through the wilderness. (aAron Munson)

From there, the filmmaker, his 70-year-old dad and a few others went on a two-week adventure all in an antique canoe built in 1976.

"You see us basically swimming and wading this canoe down a lot of the rapids because it was so fragile," he said.

"And these rapids were are just endlesssharp rock, low volume rapids that we couldn't run the canoe in a conventional way down."

He added that they actually weren't sure they were going to make it in their old canoe butit's still floating to this day.

Making the film

Thompson said The Long Todaywas a passion project in between big commercial projects.Rather than utilizinga big crew, it was just him and a cameraman.

"There's no better place really to be in the moment than on a wilderness trip so, you know, this is a personal project. I wanted to capture a moment in time and my relationship with my dad."

Thompson said his dad was quite the "unvarnished character" and perfect fora documentary to follow.

"He's just himself having a great time and, you know, dealing with the challenges andjoking and arguing," he said.

The film includes humour but also shows what peopleare capable of in their later years of life, said Thompson.

"It's also, you know, an honest portrayal of the limitations we face as we age," he said.

"I've noticed that audiences have really responded to that because that's a universal experience, whether you're a canoeist or not."

You can watch the documentary The Long TodayatCalgary's 2021 virtual Third Action Film Festival on Saturday.

  • Watch the trailer for The Long Today below:

With files fromThe Homestretch.