Barbados rolled out the red carpet for Canadian cinema on Wednesday evening, marking the 10th anniversary of National Canadian Film Day with a special screening of the award-winning film Riceboy Sleeps.

The movie night at the Barbados Museum’s Walled Garden Theatre was a collaborative cultural exchange between the Canadian High Commission, the Barbados Independent Film Festival (BIFF), and the Barbados Museum and Historical Society (BMHS).

The drama, selected by BIFF, offered audiences a glimpse into the diverse storytelling of Canadian filmmakers. Riceboy Sleeps explores the challenges faced by a Korean immigrant family in Canada, deftly tackling themes of racism, misogyny, grief, cultural assimilation, and self-identity with a blend of humour and emotional depth.

“Tonight’s film embodies Canadian filmmaking excellence and the industry’s promising future,” said Lilian Chatterjee, Canada’s High Commissioner to Barbados.

As she celebrated Canada’s vast and increasingly inclusive film landscape, she noted it is “shaping its own distinct and diverse identity” by creating platforms for underrepresented creatives to share their stories.

Highlighting the transformative power of cinema, the Canadian envoy said cinema “can be a powerful agent of change in our society, highlighting global challenges and compelling us to reflect upon our complex histories… weaving together imagination and storytelling to produce a visual narrative that resonates with audiences”. She praised film’s ability to connect cultures and provide windows into different worlds.

BIFF co-founder Trevor Carmichael hailed the “grand and effective” opportunity to jointly commemorate National Canadian Film Day while hosting the global Filmmakers Incubator Workshop: “Tonight is a special one, bearing in mind that in a small island with limited resources of one kind we are able in such a grand and effective manner to celebrate Canada’s Film Day.”

The incubator, sponsored by the University of the West Indies, has drawn producers and industry leaders from the UK, Canadá, Africa, and the Caribbean for a “first of its kind gathering” to further develop the region’s creative industries. Under the direction of UWI’s Dr Andrew Millington, the forum’s other collaborators include Imagine Media International led by Lisa Wickham, and Frances-Anne Solomon from the Canada-based Caribbean Tales Media Group.

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