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'Angry Inuk' wins audience award and $25K prize at Hot Docs festival

The film Angry Inuk, which looks at Inuit and the sealing industry, received the most viewer ballots to take home the Vimeo on Demand Audience Award and a $25,000 prize at Toronto's Hot Docs Festival.

'I am in total shock and really, really excited for the whole team,' says director Alethea Arnaquq-Baril

Alethea Arnaquq-Baril says it was amazing to see audiences at the Hot Docs Festival give her film Angry Inuk a standing ovation in every screening. (Kieran Oudshoorn/CBC)

Angry Inuk, a film about Inuit and the sealing industry,received the most viewer ballots to take home theVimeo on Demand Audience Award and a $25,000 cash prize at the Hot Docs Festival in Toronto.

Directed by Alethea Arnaquq-Baril, the feature-length documentary follows Aaju Peter, the titular 'angry Inuk,' who has spent decades fighting the negative portrayal of the sealing industry perpetuated by animal rights activists.

The Vimeo On Demand award is determined by audience ballot.For getting the highest rating for an independent Canadian filmin the audience poll, the film alsowon the firstCanadian Documentary Promotion Award, a $25,000 cash prize fromTelefilm Canadato support the marketing and promotion of the film.

"I expected at least some blowback from animal rights activists," saidArnaquq-Baril."I thought maybe we'd get some protesters or people arguing that they're still against sealing."

The reality was quite the opposite.

"It's so rewarding to have rooms of hundreds of people standing up and thanking us and understanding how we see the world," said Arnaquq-Baril."I never thought I'd be able to be in the South in a room full of non-Inuit and be able to feel understood."

'Notaloneanymore'

All three of the Hot Docs screenings ended in standing ovations, she said. Audience reactions varied widely from cringing when seals were butchered to cooingat images of Arnaquq-Baril'sbaby eating bites of fresh seal to crying at some of the more emotional moments.

Alethea Arnaquq-Baril, is at the centre of Angry Inuk, a documentary about Inuit and their relationship with the sealing industry. (Angry Inuk film)

"One woman, as she was walking by me, reached out and touched my arm and said, 'you're not alone anymore,'" she said."To me, that said it all."

The film, which was completed mere days before its first Hot Docs screening, has never been shown in Nunavut.

Arnaquq-Baril hopes it will be "sooner, rather than later," but first she wants it to get a wide audience at national and international festivals.

"Larger, more prestigious prefer to screen films that haven't been seen very much elsewhere," she explains. "So, in order to make the most impact and to change the minds of Europeans and Americans who effect our sealskin prices, I want to screen it at the most major festivals that I can."

Changing minds

Arnaquq-Baril says it's been "amazing" and "powerful" to see such a positive response in Toronto audiences.

For some, she's even noticed the effect outside of thetheatre.

"I spend a lot of time on Twitter and Facebook talking to anti-sealers. It's been something I've been doing for years now and I'm so used to saying the same thing over and over again, clearing up misinformation over and over again."

The last time, she didn't have to:"I got a really nasty comment from an anti-sealer and someone else a non-Inuk who has never been North stepped in."

Arnaquq-Baril says this film could never have happened without the support of all the strong Inuit leaders who have advocated on this issue.

"We speak out all the time on this, but Inuit tend to be very polite when we speak out against things. So, I don't think the world really realizes how upsetting these anti-seal campaigns are."

While she couldn't say which festivals have shown interest in Angry Inuk so far, Arnaquq-Baril says she has already heard from about a dozen different groups.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story incorrectly said Angry Inuk had won the $25,000 Vimeo On Demand Audience Award. In fact, the film won the Vimeo On Demand Audience Award and the $25,000 Canadian Documentary Promotion prize.
    May 10, 2016 9:51 AM CT