Notre collection
In the Shadow of Gold Mountain
Résumé
Karen Cho, a fifth-generation Canadian of mixed heritage, discovered that half
her family wasn't welcome in the country they called home. While Canada
encouraged and rewarded immigration from Europe, it imposed laws that singled
out the Chinese as unwanted and unwelcome.
Cho's film, In the Shadow of Gold Mountain,
takes her from Montreal to Vancouver to uncover stories from the last living
survivors of the Chinese Head Tax and Exclusion Act. This dark chapter in our
history, from 1885 until 1947, plunged the Chinese community in Canada into
decades of debt and family separation.
At the centre of the film are personal accounts of extraordinary Chinese
Canadians who survived an era that threatened to eradicate their entire
community. Through a rich melding of history, poetry and raw emotion, this
documentary sheds light on an era that shaped the identity of generations,
with deeply moving testimonials, it reveals the profound ways this history
still casts its shadow.
In the Shadow of Gold Mountain was produced as
part of the Reel Diversity Competition for emerging filmmakers of colour. Reel
Diversity is a National Film Board of Canada initiative in partnership with
CBC Newsworld.
2004, 43 min 04 s
Prix et mentions
Mention honorifique - catégorie: Humanitaire
Festival international du film et de la vidéo
Du 9 au 13 novembre 2005, Columbus - États-Unis
Prix Gerbe d'Or - catégorie: Meilleur documentaire multiculturel
Festival de film de Yorkton
Du 26 au 29 mai 2005, Yorkton - Canada
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