Lindsay McIntyre
略歴
Lindsay McIntyre is a film artist whose works are often processed-based, involve documentary and experimental techniques, and she even makes her own 16mm film with handmade silver gelatin emulsion. She applies her interest in film chemistry, analog technologies, and structure to make award-winning short 16mm films and expanded cinema performances.
Director
An Inuit mother and daughter, Kumaa’naaq and Marguerite, must negotiate the pressures of assimilation after relocating to a new life in the South in the 1930s. Based on a true story.
Director
A looping 16 mm performance exploring the framework of tree/human relationships on unceded Pacheedaht territory at Fairy Creek. A site of civil disobedience, it is also a place of recognition, passion and dedication for the more-than-human beings with whom we share the planet. High-contrast images are hand-processed, optically printed, contact printed and altered, creating a portrait of this landscape and its employ at the hands of humans.
First Assistant "B" Camera
1987: While the other students wonder if new kid Robin is a boy or a girl, Robin forges a complicated bond with the school bully, making increasingly dangerous choices to fit in.
Director of Photography
Renée arrives to her hometown of Ste. Anne after a long absence. Her brother and his wife are raising her daughter Athene as their own, and the return of the prodigal mother is a surprise to all involved. The tension between them grows as the questions that have been accumulating over the years await their answers.
Director of Photography
A close up look at director Lindsay McIntyre's great-grandmother’s amauti. But what is between what you can and cannot see?
Director of Photography
Under the care of manned mechanical beings, we sit and wait in suspension. Held in abeyance, one cannot help but be captivated by these beautiful, hopeful, watchful creatures.
Director of Photography
The studio workings behind door 11a in the Ortona Armoury. An ode to a practice and place that should not be forgotten.
Editor
The studio workings behind door 11a in the Ortona Armoury. An ode to a practice and place that should not be forgotten.
Director
The studio workings behind door 11a in the Ortona Armoury. An ode to a practice and place that should not be forgotten.
Director
Under the care of manned mechanical beings, we sit and wait in suspension. Held in abeyance, one cannot help but be captivated by these beautiful, hopeful, watchful creatures.
Editor
A close up look at director Lindsay McIntyre's great-grandmother’s amauti. But what is between what you can and cannot see?
Director
A close up look at director Lindsay McIntyre's great-grandmother’s amauti. But what is between what you can and cannot see?
Additional Photography
A young transgender Indigenous musician and his rock band bring mumble punk to the Interstellar Rodeo. A rock ‘n’ roll survival story of a different stripe.
Thanks
A documentary looking at the impact of humor and the stage on Jimmy and Gregory, two disabled friends.
Assistant Director of Photography
A filmmaker travels to South Korea to document the rising feminist movement responding to brutal patriarchal norms and a spy cam epidemic. Leading up to the protest of December 22, 2018 in Gwanghwamun Square in Seoul, the filmmaker journeys throughout rural and urban areas of the country, interviewing women of different generations and backgrounds: their private and public lives.
Director of Photography
Cree director Alexandra Lazarowich riffs off classic verité cinema to craft a contemporary portrait of Métis women net fishing in Northern Alberta.
Director
An in-camera visual exploration of a little girl, her garden, and all that pertains.
Director
Rendered in a dream-like pink hue, bernard gaspé uses layered in-camera juxtapositions to present a journey through the neglected architecture of the train tracks in Montréal’s Mile End.
Director
A single-subject portrait of a young Nunamiut athlete through the practice of his sport, which focuses on the materiality of film and its surface textures.
Writer
In 1936 an Inuk woman departs her homeland in the North forever. But why?
Director
In 1936 an Inuk woman departs her homeland in the North forever. But why?
Director
Barge Dirge is an experimental short that ponders death and industrial decay, a tense and mournful tone piece that imagines the rubble of humanity long forgotten. While Joyce Weiland’s iconic Sailboat bobbed freely on pale blue waters, McIntyre’s rusty barge rots trapped in frozen arctic permanence; heavy, unmoving, abandoned. As frozen mechanical flotsam flashes on screen we are left to wonder what, exactly, is being mourned? Perhaps community? A way of life? Our environment? Humanity itself? Barge Dirge challenges notions of legacy and memory by presenting us with only the ugliest remnants of humanity, preserved in a boundless frozen wasteland.
Director
Situated at the geographic centre of Canada, Baker Lake, Nunavut is the only inland settlement in the Canadian Arctic. Fixing its gaze on this stark landscape, McIntyre's haunting and sparse film uses hand-wrought black-and-white 16mm film in a meditation on place and personal histories.