Nunavut filmmaker documents life in lockdown in her Igloolik home - Action News
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Nunavut filmmaker documents life in lockdown in her Igloolik home

Carol Kunnuk's short film shows an intimate clip of her life at home during a COVID-19 lockdown in Nunavut one child washing her hands and doing a craft, a baby being sung too, and most of it overlaid with audio ofCOVID-19 news announcements.

The short film airs tonight on Uvagut TV at 7 p.m. ET

Carol Kunnuk is the filmmaker behind the short filem 'Being Prepared,' which captures a sliver of life in Nunavut during COVID-19 lockdown. (Carol Kunnuk/National Film Board of Canada website)

A recent film by a Nunavut director is getting noticed.

As the global pandemic reached into the Arctic, an Inuk filmmaker in Nunavut made a documentary on how the unfamiliar new protocols affected her family and community.

Carol Kunnuk's 10-minute short film is a richly detailed and tender account of disruption and adjustment specifically within her Igloolikhome.

"This film is about the COVID situation we went through when we were first heard in Nunavut that COVID was now active and everyone had to isolate and follow health restrictions,"Kunnuk said.

"I wanted to show the kind of situation we were in, in a small community, where there's no hospital, where there's no emergency room, and how we had to deal with COVID 19."

The film shows an intimateclip of her family at home one child washing her hands and doing a craft, a baby being sung too, and most of it overlaid with audio ofCOVID-19 news announcements in both Inuktitut and English.

Kunnuk said at the time, children in the community could no longer attend school. She remembers that period as "a scary time for all of us."

"We couldn't visit our family anymore because of restrictions from the Health Department. Even though we were in the same community, I did not see my grand-kids for almost three months," she said.

"This was a film of me in a small house with two kids not able to go anywhere for about a couple months. And I had my daughters improvise, or to take the camera themselves,"she said.

Part of the film shows family out on the sea ice checking fish nets.

The film is called Being Prepared and is being broadcast Monday night on Uvagut TV at 7 p.m. ET.

"The title of the film is 'Being Prepared' because we were getting ready and how we were going to adapt to this COVID-19 and to be prepared for emergency situations when it comes into a small community," she said.

The film is alsofeatured on The National Film Board of Canada website.

"I am very honoured and pleased because I know National Film Board supports Aboriginal filmmakers."

Kunnuk is a filmmaker, director, editor, producer and actor. Sheproduces Inuit-style content releasedin Inuktitut.

"I like that they like what I have been producing or releasing in other projects."

With files from Toby Otak