71 min listen
Talking Pictures: PBS Premiere On a Knife Edge/Producer Eli Cane (Interview)
Talking Pictures: PBS Premiere On a Knife Edge/Producer Eli Cane (Interview)
ratings:
Length:
45 minutes
Released:
Nov 4, 2017
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Host Paul Booth Interviews Producer Eli Cane.
From director Jeremy Williams and producer Eli Cane, "On a Knife Edge" is a film five years in the making.
America ReFramed / PBS WORLD Channel
November 7, 2017
9pm ET/8PM CT
Check local listings to confirm broadcast time.
About the film
"On a Knife Edge" is a father-son story about Guy and George Dull Knife that unfolds over the course of George’s coming-of-age journey. Under his father’s guidance, George becomes an activist and organizer, and begins identifying with the role of traditional Lakota warrior, which he views as his family legacy. He commits himself to the fight for social justice, but struggles with adapting the old ways and his father’s expectations to the modern-day realities of growing up on the Pine Ridge Reservation. Told largely through George’s eyes, the film offers a privileged glimpse into the youngest generation of the American Indian Movement, as well as George’s own evolving notions of Native identity, manhood, and duty. His story is interwoven with animated sequences that depict five generations of family history, narrated by his father and based on paintings he has created to explore the continuum of their fight through the generations.
From director Jeremy Williams and producer Eli Cane, "On a Knife Edge" is a film five years in the making.
America ReFramed / PBS WORLD Channel
November 7, 2017
9pm ET/8PM CT
Check local listings to confirm broadcast time.
About the film
"On a Knife Edge" is a father-son story about Guy and George Dull Knife that unfolds over the course of George’s coming-of-age journey. Under his father’s guidance, George becomes an activist and organizer, and begins identifying with the role of traditional Lakota warrior, which he views as his family legacy. He commits himself to the fight for social justice, but struggles with adapting the old ways and his father’s expectations to the modern-day realities of growing up on the Pine Ridge Reservation. Told largely through George’s eyes, the film offers a privileged glimpse into the youngest generation of the American Indian Movement, as well as George’s own evolving notions of Native identity, manhood, and duty. His story is interwoven with animated sequences that depict five generations of family history, narrated by his father and based on paintings he has created to explore the continuum of their fight through the generations.
Released:
Nov 4, 2017
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Talking Pictures with John Beaton Hill/SDFF 2014 and 2015 by Talking Pictures with Paul Booth