Bones of Crows
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Trish Dolman
Sam Grana
Christine Haebler
| Bones of Crows | |
|---|---|
Film poster | |
| Directed by | Marie Clements |
| Written by | Marie Clements |
| Produced by | Marie Clements Trish Dolman Sam Grana Christine Haebler |
| Starring | Grace Dove |
| Cinematography | Vince Arvidson |
| Edited by | Maxime Lahaie |
| Music by | Wayne Lavallee Jesse Zubot |
Production companies | Ayasew Ooskana Pictures Marie Clements Media Screen Siren Pictures Grana Productions |
| Distributed by | Elevation Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 127 minutes |
| Country | Canada |
| Languages | English Cree ʔayʔajuθəm Italian French |
Bones of Crows is a 2022 Canadian drama film, written, produced, and directed by Marie Clements and starring Grace Dove.[1]
The film's cast also includes Summer Testawich and Carla-Rae as Aline Spears in childhood and older age, as well as Phillip Lewitski, Rémy Girard, Karine Vanasse, Michelle Thrush, Glen Gould, Gail Maurice, Cara Gee, Joshua Odjick, Jonathan Whitesell, Jules Arita Koostachin and Alanis Obomsawin in supporting roles.
The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 10, 2022,[2] before going into commercial release on June 2, 2023.[3]
A Cree woman survives the Indian residential school system to become a code talker for the Canadian Air Force during World War II.
Cast
- Grace Dove as Aline Spears
- Phillip Lewitski as Adam Whallach
- Rémy Girard as Father Jacobs
- Karine Vanasse as Sister Ruth
- Alyssa Wapanatahk as Perseverance Spears
- Michelle Thrush as January Spears
- Glen Gould as Matthew Spears
- Gail Maurice as Older Taylor Whallach
- Carla-Rae as Older Aline Spears
- Cara Gee as Percy Whallach
- Jonathan Whitesell as Thomas Miller
- Patrick Garrow as Archbishop Thomas Miller
- Summer Testawich as Young Aline Spears
- Sierra Rose McRae as Young Perseverance Spears
- Ethan Evans as Preteen Johnnie
- Payne Merasty as Young Tye Spears
- Alanis Obomsawin as TRC Film Director
- Joshua Odjick as Jake Whallach
Production
The film was shot partially at the Kamloops Indian Residential School. Although the revelation of 215 unmarked gravesites at the school took place just one week before shooting was to start, the Tkʼemlúps te Secwépemc nation encouraged production to proceed because of the importance of getting residential school stories publicized and told.[4]
Television series
In 2021, CBC Television announced a five-hour limited series, which delves more deeply into Spears' extended family history over 100 years.[5]
The television version premiered on September 20, 2023, on both CBC[6] and APTN, with a Cree language version also airing on APTN beginning September 25.[7]