126: Run Woman Run: An Indigenous coming of age after 30 film - a podcast by Seventh Row

from 2022-04-06T13:00:10

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On this episode we dig into how Run Woman Run explores coming of age in your thirties through an Indigenous perspective. This episode features  Editor-in-Chief Alex Heeney, Executive Editor Orla Smith, and Contributing Editor Lindsay Pugh. On this episode:

  • Coming of age in their 30s episodes (1:42)
  • Run Woman Run (5:16)
  • How the film depicts trauma (13:43)
  • Asivak Koostachin as the spirit of Tom Longboat (19:00)
  • The anti-romcom (24:02)
  • Land depiction (34:37)
  • Health and "tough love" (37:06)
  • Why Run Woman Run should have been longer (1:00:13)
  • What settler critics often miss (1:15:34)
  • Conclusion (1:18:16)

Show Notes

  • Read Alex's review of Run Woman Run
  • Read Orla's interview with Kímmapiiyipitssini: The Meaning of Empathy director Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers
  • Read Laura Anne Harris' interview with The Road Forward director Marie Clements
  • Read Alex's interview with Monkey Beach director Loretta Todd
  • Read Alex's interview with Blood Quantum director Jeff Barnaby
  • Read our list of the best Canadian films of 2021, including Night Raiders, Bootlegger, Red Snow, and Kímmapiiyipitssini
  • Pre-order Existential detours: Joachim Trier's cinema of indecisions and revisions, the first book to ever be published on Joachim Trier.
  • Stay tuned for Orla's interview with director Zoe Leigh Hopkins

Related episodes

  • Ep. 89: Spinster and The Forty-Year-Old Version: Coming of age at forty
  • Ep. 63: Indigenous YA, part 2
  • Ep. 62: Indigenous YA, part 1
  • Ep. 54: I Used to Go Here and Unexpected: Kris Rey’s thirtysomethings

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