Event Schedule

Join us to celebrate the milestone 25th anniversary imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival taking place June 3-8, 2025 (Toronto) and June 9-15, 2025 (online).
 

Join us to celebrate the milestone 25th anniversary imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival taking place June 3-8, 2025 (Toronto) and June 9-15, 2025 (online).

Please visit individual events on this page to purchase or book in-person single screening tickets, online single tickets, and special event tickets when available. For ticket packages, passes, key dates, and more ticketing information, please visit our Box Office page.

Online Festival works will be available to access until June 15, 2025 at 11:59 PM ET. Please note: This cutoff applies to all forms of access, including online single tickets purchased after June 12, 2025 (which is the last day to purchase for a guaranteed 72-hour access window).

Jun 3 '25 (Virtual)
An Anishinaabe XR artwork that pays homage to each of the 13 Moons, sharing the teachings on the turtle’s back.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
imagineNATIVE Originals are imagineNATIVE’s year-round film commissions from emerging to mid-level filmmakers across Canada, sharing a world premiere during the Festival! Thank you to LIFT, CSV, CSIF, and Capilano University for your continued partnership!
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
A man is beckoned by the spirit of the earth in a plea to reconnect with his own spirit.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
#skoden tells the story of Pernell Bad Arm, the Blackfoot man behind the infamous “Skoden” meme. What started out as a social media post to bond Indigenous people across Turtle Island over rez slang and relatable uncle material opened our eyes to something much more: a man whose life on the streets became a mockery to some and a figure of Indigenous empowerment to others but was most beloved by those who knew him personally.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
Each year the Gunadule people come together to honour their sovereignty by reenacting the 1925 Dule Revolution, their resistance to the Panamanian government’s suppression of their people through racist laws set to erase their identities. In an effort to keep the resistance alive for generations to come, this history is instilled in vivid detail so their people never lose sight of the sacrifices that were made to preserve their lands and cultural heritage.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
Fox Maxy’s Guts & Glitz is a vibrant, experimental exploration of trauma and healing, a film that defies easy categorization. It's a deeply personal work, yet one that resonates with universal themes of resilience and connection. Guts & Glitz, grappling with the aftermath of abuse, navigates a world where the lines between the physical and spiritual blur. The film's visual poetry is striking, weaving together intimate portraits of human relationships with the raw beauty of the natural world, all drawn from over a decade of Maxy’s personal archive. The film pulsates with a raw energy, capturing the messy, often contradictory nature of the human experience. It’s a bold, uncompromising debut, marking Maxy as a vital new voice in Indigenous Cinema.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
In March 2008, imagineNATIVE formed the Embargo Collective, an international group of seven Indigenous artists who collaborated and challenged one another to create seven new films. Each of the artists has an impressive body of work, demonstrating exceptional talent and vision with a different focus in media arts — documentary, fictional narrative, and experimental work — and each representing diversity of Indigenous Nations. These artists were chosen for their enthusiasm for collaboration and their willingness to be open to a challenge. Inspired by filmmaker Lars Von Trier's documentary The Five Obstructions, imagineNATIVE encouraged the members of the Embargo Collective to push their creative boundaries by asking them to construct a set of limitations for one another. While the initial goal was to demonstrate how essential the collaborative process is to film, a far more profound and intimate result materialized over 20 months: As the filmmakers shared their experiences, inspired one another, and created work together, a collective spirit was born. What you are about to see are the fruits of the collaboration, a true testament to what film can be when artists come together to create. Most of the descriptions for this program are republished from the 2009 imagineNATIVE Catalogue.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
Commissioned in celebration of imagineNATIVE's 15th anniversary, the Festival is thrilled to present the Embargo Collective II, five short films created by five distinguished artists. Executive produced by Danis Goulet, these shorts push the creative boundaries of the participating filmmakers and invite viewers into new Indigenous cinematic landscapes. Based on Lars von Trier's The Five Obstructions, the first Embargo Collective — presented in celebration of imagineNATIVE's 10th anniversary in 2008 — was a landmark project in Indigenous Cinema and was celebrated and screened internationally. The 2014 Embargo Collective II works, each created by a female Indigenous Canadian filmmaker, cross genres and themes as they collectively explore the spirit of filmmaking. Most of the descriptions for this program are republished from the 2014 imagineNATIVE Catalogue.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
A tight-knit village on the outskirts of Oaxaca called La Raya is a place where everyone leaves for work in the North. It’s also home to Sotera Santos, a young girl whose parents have promised to return for her. Sotera and her friend Eric discover a mysterious fridge and, after trying to sell it around the village, they discover it has magical properties. This bright dramedy combines the realities of migration for those left behind, found families, and a dash of magic realism to depict a charming community that has plenty of heart.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
Indigenous women’s contributions to the growth of Indigenous Cinema were never easy. From the early days of Abenaki filmmaker Alanis Obomsawin’s career to today’s emerging Iskwewak storytellers, Dr. Jules Arita Koostachin meets with Indigenous female filmmakers to share their stories and struggles of breaking into the industry and what it takes to uplift the next generation.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
Over six years, Ninan Auassat: We, The Children embeds itself among three groups of youth that live on the Atikamekw, Eeyou Cree, and Innu Nations. Told entirely from the point of view of the children and teens, the level of trust and caring that filmmaker Kim O’Bomsawin has put into these relationships is evident by the candidness of what the youth share. In between sweeping cinematography, they talk about what life is like in a fly-in community, the complications of being in school with Innu being their first language, and how their lives are different from non-Indigenous kids their age. Apart from the differences, this film also shows how similar children are, no matter where they’re from.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
Paige Bethmann’s debut Remaining Native is a vital, unflinching documentary that follows runner Kutoven Stevens, who goes by Ku, on his journey from small-town Nevada to an out-of-state university. Through a masterful use of voiceover and interview, Bethmann explores the meaning behind Ku’s choice to honour his ancestors’ survival of boarding school through his dedication to running and the path that it sets him on. It’s not a film that offers easy answers, but rather a deeply human portrait of Indigenous individuals navigating the complexities of their heritage in a world that often seeks to erase them. It’s a powerful testament to the enduring strength of community and the ongoing fight to preserve cultural identity and to find healing. Most recently awarded SXSW’s Audience Award and Special Jury Award for Best Documentary, Remaining Native is a necessary film and offers a crucial perspective on the lived realities of Indigenous people today.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
Celebrating the voices of our Elders we see the footprints they leave behind for us to follow, the wisdom of their teachings, and how their teachings echo through our lives
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
Strengthening our family makes our culture strong. These films celebrate birth, children, mothers, fathers, and our Elders to show us we are all journeying together and that no one is left behind because our voices matter and because family matters.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
Woven together by language, whispers, hair, and sacrifice, KIN TIES explores our relationships to the ancestors and to the land.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
Healing through laughter is often a way our communities use play to engage with serious issues. These filmmakers will make you look at things with a smirk, a chuckle, or even a downright knee slap, rejoicing in the resilience of our people.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
Coming of age, marriage, commitment to family and to love. A pastiche of themes, LIVING IN TWO WORLDS creates an intersection that allows audiences to better understand the duality of humanity vs nature, identity vs blood quantum, authenticity vs celebrity — a self discovery through film.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
Films that reflect the ways in which love transcends the physical body to manifest itself anew, changing us forever. It lives on through our memories, keeps watch, keeps us company, and waits to return to us again one day.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
This next generation of storytellers have something to say when it comes to grounding oneself in homeland and community. These stories of return and reconnection, fulfilling our gifts to the community, healing through a crisis and picking up traditional knowledge of the land will leave you hopeful for the future.
Jun 9 '25 (Virtual)
Stories of queer joy and beauty, self-love and healing, curiosity, exploration, discovery, transitioning into strange times, and… post-apocalyptic love and intergalactic break-ups? A celebration of the many colourful facets of our resilient 2SLGBTQIA+ kin who have always been and will continue to be.