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Jeff Barnaby
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Jeff Barnaby (1976 – 13 October 2022) was a Mi'kmaq and Canadian film director, writer, composer, and film editor. He is known for his films Rhymes for Young Ghouls and Blood Quantum.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Barnaby was born on a Mi'kmaq reserve in Listuguj, Quebec, in 1976.[1][2] He graduated from both the Dawson College and Concordia University film programs.[3]
Career
[edit]Barnaby began his career directing short films. Barnaby's short film From Cherry English won two Golden Sheaf Awards: Best Aboriginal and Best Videography in the 2004 Yorkton Film Festival.[4][5] His 2010 short film File Under Miscellaneous was nominated for a Genie Award for Best Live Action Short Drama.[6]
Rhymes for Young Ghouls marked Barnaby's feature film debut. The film premiered in the Discovery section of the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival. It was given an independent release in Canada by its production company, Prospector Films in 2014.[7] In July 2014, Monterey Media acquired the film for U.S. distribution.[8] For his direction Barnaby was named Best Director of a Canadian Film by the Vancouver Film Critics Circle,[9] best Actor (Glen Gould) and Director at the American Indian Film Festival (2014), and Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role (Devery Jacobs) at the Canadian Screen Awards (2014).[2]
In 2015, Barnaby was invited by the National Film Board of Canada to participate in Souvenir, a collective made up of four First Nations filmmakers invited to use their archival material in order to create a short documentary. Barnaby's contribution was the short film Etlinisigu'niet (Bleed Down).[10]
Barnaby premiered his sophomore feature Blood Quantum at the 2019 Toronto International Film Festival, as the opener for the festival's Midnight Madness section.[11] The film was named the second runner-up for the festival's Grolsch People's Choice Midnight Madness Award.[12] The film has been acquired for U.S. and international distribution on the Shudder streaming service, with Canadian streaming rights to be held by Crave.[13]
At the 9th Canadian Screen Awards in 2021, Barnaby was nominated for Best Original Screenplay,[14] and won the award for Best Editing, for Blood Quantum.[15]
Personal life
[edit]Barnaby was Mi'kmaq. He was married to Navajo filmmaker Sarah Del Seronde and had one son.[16] Barnaby died in Montreal after a year of battling cancer on 13 October 2022.[17][18]
Following his death, the imagineNATIVE Film and Media Arts Festival and Netflix launched the Jeff Barnaby Grant, a program to support new works by emerging indigenous filmmakers.[19] He was also named as a posthumous recipient of the Board of Directors Tribute Award at the 12th Canadian Screen Awards in 2024.[20]
Filmography
[edit]- From Cherry English - 2004[21]
- The Colony - 2007[21][22]
- File Under Miscellaneous - 2010[22]
- Rhymes for Young Ghouls - 2013[21][22]
- Etlinisigu'niet (Bleed Down) - 2015[23]
- Blood Quantum - 2019[21][22]
References
[edit]- ^ "Blood Quantum". TIFF. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
- ^ a b DaCosta, Jamaias (1 February 2014). "INTERVIEW WITH FILMMAKER JEFF BARNABY ON RHYMES FOR YOUNG GHOULS". Muskrat Magazine. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
- ^ "JEFF BARNABY". Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
- ^ "Canada's Golden Sheaf Award Winners 2004" (PDF). Yorkton Film Festival. Yorkton, Saskatchewan, Canada. 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 August 2019. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
- ^ Threlfall, John (22 September 2016). "Mi'gmaq filmmaker Jeff Barnaby kicks off Indigeneity & the Arts series". University of Victoria. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
- ^ Brown, Todd. "Watch Jeff Barnaby's Award Winning FILE UNDER MISCELLANEOUS". Archived from the original on 30 January 2014. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
- ^ "RHYMES FOR YOUNG GHOULS OPENS ACROSS CANADA". Retrieved 17 December 2015.
- ^ Latham, Brandon (9 July 2014). "Monterey Media Picks Up Canadian Aboriginal Revenge Film 'Rhymes for Young Ghouls' for U.S. Distribution". IndieWire. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
- ^ Vancouverfilm (8 January 2014). "And the Winners Are..." Retrieved 17 December 2015.
- ^ "Indigenous New Wave: NFB at the Pan Am Games". National Film Board of Canada. 10 July 2015. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
- ^ Harvey, Dennis (9 September 2019). "Toronto Film Review: 'Blood Quantum'". Variety.
- ^ "Announcing the TIFF '19 Award Winners". TIFF. 15 September 2019.
- ^ Wiseman, Andreas (26 June 2019). "AMC Streamer Shudder Picks Up Zombie Thriller 'Blood Quantum' For US, UK & Australia; XYZ Strikes Int'l Pacts". Deadline.
- ^ Brent Furdyk, "Canadian Screen Awards Announces 2021 Film Nominations". ET Canada, 30 March 2021.
- ^ Naman Ramachandran, "'Schitt's Creek,' 'Blood Quantum' Triumph at Canadian Screen Awards". Variety, 21 May 2021.
- ^ DaCosta, Jamaias (February 2014). "INTERVIEW WITH FILMMAKER JEFF BARNABY ON RHYMES FOR YOUNG GHOULS". Retrieved 17 December 2015.
- ^ "Acclaimed Mi'kmaq filmmaker Jeff Barnaby dies at 46, representatives say". The Hamilton Spectator. 13 October 2022. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
- ^ Vlessing, Etan (13 October 2022). "Jeff Barnaby, Canadian Indigenous Director of 'Rhymes for Young Ghouls', Dies at 46". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
- ^ Noel Ransome, "New grant for Indigenous filmmakers launched in honour of Jeff Barnaby". Toronto Star, January 26, 2022.
- ^ Connie Thiessen, "Marilyn Denis, John Brunton among Canadian Academy ‘Special Award’ recipients". Broadcast Dialogue, March 19, 2024.
- ^ a b c d "Jeff Barnaby List of Movies and TV Shows". TV Guide. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
- ^ a b c d "Jeff Barnaby". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
- ^ "Etlinisigu'niet (Bleed Down)". National Film Board of Canada. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
External links
[edit]- Jeff Barnaby on Twitter
- Jeff Barnaby at IMDb
Jeff Barnaby
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Education
Upbringing and Family Background
Jeff Barnaby was born on August 2, 1976, in Listuguj Mi'gmaq First Nation Territory, Quebec, Canada, and raised on the rural reserve, where he was immersed in Mi'gmaq community life and cultural revival efforts during a period when the area was still known as Restigouche.[7][8] His upbringing reflected the pride and linguistic traditions of the Mi'gmaq, influencing his early understanding of community dynamics, dark humor, and local speech patterns.[8] Barnaby's family maintained strong Mi'gmaq ties, with his maternal relatives originating from a reservation in Maine; his grandfather from that side appeared as an extra in the 1989 horror film Pet Sematary, which featured a Mi'gmaq burial ground setting resonant with family heritage.[9] He grew up with brothers, one of whom later served as a Listuguj council member, and shared childhood experiences that included proximity to a local movie theater.[9] From an early age, Barnaby's passion for film emerged through watching horror and science fiction movies with his brothers, including titles like Night of the Living Dead, The Exorcist, Rabid, Blade Runner, and Predator.[9][10] These viewings, amid the reserve's historical tensions—such as the 1981 Quebec Provincial Police raid on Listuguj—fostered his genre interests and shaped perspectives on Indigenous experiences.[9]Formal Education and Early Influences
Barnaby completed his pre-university studies in cinema and communications at Dawson College in Montreal, Quebec. He then enrolled at Concordia University's Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema, graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in film production. These programs provided foundational training in directing, writing, and editing, equipping him for his subsequent short films and music videos. Barnaby's early artistic influences stemmed from popular genre media encountered during adolescence. He described becoming immersed in comic books, including heroes like Batman and Conan the Barbarian, which informed themes of orphanhood, vengeance, and fatalism in his character development. Horror literature, particularly Stephen King's novels, hooked him as a teenager and contributed to his affinity for genre storytelling as a means to process trauma. Cinematic influences included David Cronenberg's Rabid (1977), which resonated with his interest in body horror and societal critique, alongside action and sci-fi films such as Conan the Barbarian (1982), Blade Runner (1982), Predator (1987), and the Quebecois drama Léolo (1992). Literary works like Dashiell Hammett's Red Harvest (1929) shaped his protagonists' cunning manipulation of adversaries, while Chuck Palahniuk's Fight Club (1996) influenced narrative voice, pacing, and irreverent humor. Graphic novels, notably Scott Hampton's The Upturned Stone (1993), provided visual and thematic templates for elements of loss and retribution. Personal experiences on the Listuguj Mi'kmaq reserve underpinned these external influences, fostering a commitment to authentic Indigenous perspectives over stereotypical portrayals.Filmmaking Career
Short Films and Early Recognition
Barnaby's filmmaking career commenced with short films that addressed Indigenous experiences through experimental and narrative styles. His debut short, From Cherry English (2004), explored themes of language loss and cultural disconnection among Mi'kmaq youth, earning two Golden Sheaf Awards at the Yorkton Film Festival for Best Aboriginal Film and Best Videography, and screening at major festivals including Sundance and Tribeca.[11][12] In 2007, Barnaby directed The Colony, a stark depiction of residential school survivors confronting trauma, which received a nomination for Best Short Film at the Jutra Awards and won Best Short Film at the Munich International Film Festival.[13][12] These early works established his reputation for blending personal Mi'kmaq perspectives with broader critiques of colonialism, garnering attention from Canadian funding bodies like the National Film Board. Barnaby's 2010 short File Under Miscellaneous further showcased his self-reliant approach, as he wrote, directed, and edited the piece on Indigenous identity in urban settings, earning a Genie Award nomination for Best Live Action Short Drama.[14] This recognition, coupled with festival circuits, positioned him for feature-length projects, highlighting his innovative use of genre elements in shorts to challenge stereotypes of Indigenous storytelling.[15]Feature Films and Major Works
Barnaby's debut feature film, Rhymes for Young Ghouls (2013), depicts life on the fictional Red Crow Mi'kmaq reserve in 1976, where protagonist Aila, a teenage orphan, navigates poverty, addiction, and systemic abuse under the Canadian residential school system enforced by a corrupt Indian agent.[16] Aila, raised by her bootlegging uncle Burner, operates a marijuana distribution ring to cover the reserve's imposed "rent" payments that fund her father's jail time, while plotting revenge against the agent Popper, who kidnaps children for residential schools amid a backdrop of violence and cultural erasure.[17] The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 6, 2013, and was distributed by KinoSmith in the United States.[18] Barnaby's second feature, Blood Quantum (2019), reimagines a zombie apocalypse on the isolated Red Crow Mi'kmaq reserve, where Indigenous residents possess natural immunity to the plague due to their blood quantum, forcing them to quarantine desperate non-Indigenous survivors seeking refuge and igniting internal conflicts over sovereignty, revenge, and survival.[19] The story unfolds through sheriff Traylor, who battles the undead outbreak starting from reanimated animals and humans, while grappling with family estrangements, including his imprisoned son and pregnant daughter, as the reserve becomes a fortress amid ethical dilemmas about admitting outsiders.[20] Filmed in the Gaspé region of Quebec, it world premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 6, 2019, and received a limited theatrical release in Canada on October 1, 2021, via levelFILM.[21] Barnaby incorporated practical effects and gore-heavy horror tropes to allegorize colonial invasion and Indigenous resilience, drawing from his Mi'kmaq heritage.[22] No additional feature films were completed before Barnaby's death in 2022, though he had been developing projects like a third feature exploring similar themes.[23]Roles as Writer, Composer, and Editor
Barnaby wrote the screenplays for all his major films, drawing from personal and cultural experiences to craft narratives centered on Indigenous resilience and trauma.[24] In Rhymes for Young Ghouls (2013), his feature debut, he penned the script depicting life on a Mi'kmaq reserve under colonial oppression, incorporating autobiographical elements from his upbringing.[25] For Blood Quantum (2019), a zombie horror allegory of sovereignty and invasion, Barnaby authored the original screenplay, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 6, 2019.[26] As a composer, Barnaby scored most of his projects, blending electronic, punk, and traditional influences to underscore themes of alienation and resistance.[24] He co-composed the music for Rhymes for Young Ghouls alongside Joe Grass, using dissonant tones to evoke the film's gritty atmosphere.[27] In Blood Quantum, Barnaby fully handled the score, integrating pulsating synths and industrial sounds to heighten the apocalyptic tension without external collaborators.[27] Barnaby also edited many of his works, ensuring rhythmic pacing aligned with his directorial intent.[22] He co-edited Rhymes for Young Ghouls with Mathieu Bélanger, refining its 88-minute runtime to maintain raw intensity.[25] For Blood Quantum, he edited solo, shaping the 96-minute film to balance visceral action with symbolic depth during post-production.[27] Earlier shorts like The Colony (2007) and File Under Miscellaneous (2010) featured his editing credits, honing a style of abrupt cuts and montage to convey cultural dislocation.[28] This hands-on editing extended to other projects, such as Etlinisigu'niyet (Bleed Down) (2015), reinforcing his control over final form.[28]Artistic Themes and Approach
Critique of Colonialism and Indigenous Experience
Barnaby's films frequently interrogate the enduring impacts of Canadian settler colonialism on Indigenous communities, drawing from his Mi'kmaq heritage and personal experiences on the Listuguj Reserve. In Rhymes for Young Ghouls (2013), set on the fictional Red Crow Mi'kmaq reserve in the 1970s, the narrative centers on protagonist Aila's resistance to the Indian agent Joseph Popper, a figure embodying colonial bureaucratic control and violence. The film depicts the intergenerational trauma of residential schools, including Aila's father's suicide stemming from abuse endured there, framing colonialism not as historical but as an active force perpetuating poverty, addiction, and familial dysfunction on reserves.[29][30] Barnaby employs revenge motifs over reconciliation, portraying Indigenous agency through violent reclamation rather than forgiveness, as Aila and her peers confront Popper's abuses in a cycle of vengeance that mirrors unresolved colonial harms. This approach challenges sanitized narratives of Canada's past, emphasizing the "oppressive nature" of state policies like residential schools, which Barnaby described as central to Indigenous subjugation.[30][29] Critics note the film's unflinching portrayal of reserve life—marked by bootlegging, truancy, and institutional predation—as a direct indictment of how colonialism disrupts Indigenous social structures, with over 150,000 children forcibly removed to such schools between the 1880s and 1996.[31] In Blood Quantum (2019), Barnaby inverts colonial dynamics through a zombie apocalypse originating in 1981 Listuguj, where only those with "Indian blood" possess immunity, transforming the reserve into a sovereign enclave amid settler chaos. This premise critiques blood quantum policies—used historically to quantify Indigenous identity and allocate resources under the Indian Act—as a literal survival mechanism, while zombies symbolize insatiable colonial expansion and historical epidemics like smallpox deliberately spread to Indigenous populations. Barnaby articulated this as "indigenizing zombies" to expose ongoing settler entitlement, with non-Indigenous characters pleading for entry based on ancestry, echoing real disputes over land and jurisdiction.[22][32] The film further explores Indigenous experiences of isolationism, trauma, and internal conflicts, such as familial betrayals and substance abuse, within the reserve's fortified walls, underscoring how colonialism fosters division even in resistance. Barnaby avoided didacticism, stating he preferred stories about colonialism that engage through genre rather than preach, allowing horror elements to visceralize themes like sovereignty and the "damage inflicted by colonialism." Filmed on his home reserve with a majority Indigenous cast, it highlights community resilience against existential threats, paralleling Mi'kmaq history of defending territory, as in the 1981 armed standoff with Quebec police over fishing rights.[33][22][34]Innovation in Genre Filmmaking
Barnaby distinguished himself in genre filmmaking by leveraging horror and science fiction conventions to reframe Indigenous experiences, particularly through allegorical inversions of colonial dynamics. In Blood Quantum (2019), he crafted a zombie apocalypse narrative set on the Mi'gmaq reserve of Gesgapegiag, where Indigenous residents possess natural immunity to the virus while non-Indigenous outsiders succumb and transform into undead aggressors, symbolizing a reversal of historical settler encroachment.[35][36] This setup drew on established zombie tropes from films like George A. Romero's Night of the Living Dead (1968) but innovated by centering Indigenous sovereignty and survival instincts, with visceral gore and survival mechanics underscoring cultural resilience rather than universal victimhood.[37] His deliberate use of genre aimed to broaden accessibility, as Barnaby stated his intent to instrumentalize horror's popularity to engage "younger and broader audiences" with Indigenous perspectives otherwise sidelined in mainstream drama.[35] By interweaving Mi'gmaq-specific elements—such as reserve quarantine protocols and interpersonal conflicts rooted in treaty rights—into fast-paced thriller structures, Barnaby avoided didacticism, instead embedding political critique within high-stakes action sequences that prioritized narrative momentum.[22] This fusion positioned Blood Quantum as a pioneering work in Indigenous dystopian horror, influencing subsequent genre explorations of decolonial futurism.[38] Earlier, in Rhymes for Young Ghouls (2013), Barnaby incorporated gothic and revenge-fantasy elements into a period drama set on the fictional Red Crow reserve in 1976, evoking "Residential School Gothic" through haunting depictions of institutional abuse and cycles of violence that blur realism with spectral undertones of unresolved trauma.[39] These genre infusions rendered heavy historical themes more palatable and confrontational, using stylistic nods to horror—such as shadowed interiors and vengeful protagonists—to heighten emotional immediacy without diluting cultural specificity.[40] Across his oeuvre, Barnaby's interchangeable melding of horror, sci-fi, and thriller modes marked him as a vanguard figure in Indigenous genre cinema, prioritizing visceral storytelling to challenge stereotypes and amplify marginalized voices.[41]Rejection of Cultural Stereotypes
Barnaby's films consciously diverged from conventional depictions of Indigenous peoples, eschewing romanticized or mystical tropes such as connections to "ancient spirits or sacred trees" in favor of portraying characters with moral ambiguity, self-destructive tendencies, and assertive agency.[42] He explicitly addressed the challenge posed by over a century of cinematic misrepresentation, stating, "If you look at the history of cinema, you’re battling stereotypes of 100 years of Native misrepresentation," and emphasized that Indigenous perspectives often resist conforming to non-Indigenous narrative expectations.[42] In Rhymes for Young Ghouls (2013), Barnaby centered the story on Aila, a resilient and vengeful female protagonist navigating residential school trauma and reservation poverty, deliberately countering the dominance of male Native heroes in film. He explained this choice by noting, "All the cinematic Native heroes that I’ve encountered in my life up to this point have worn buckskin, have been men, and were more often [than] not, not actually Native. The real heroes I’ve encountered in my life, growing up on reserve, have been women and every inch of them Indian," drawing from his observations of Indigenous women's strength amid historical oppression.[43] This approach rejected both the absence of Native women in leading roles and their stereotypical marginalization, instead highlighting their centrality to real Indigenous experiences. Barnaby maintained that his intent was not to systematically dismantle stereotypes but to prioritize unfiltered storytelling for Indigenous audiences, asserting, "I'm not there to reinforce or dispel any of them," while avoiding sentimental "pity porn" that might elicit sympathy over authenticity.[44] Similarly, in Blood Quantum (2019), he inverted zombie genre conventions by rendering Mi'gmaq characters immune to the plague—positioning them as gatekeepers amid ethical conflicts—thus subverting passive victimhood narratives tied to colonial invasion and affirming Indigenous survivalist complexity over defeatist portrayals.[42] Through genre innovation, Barnaby's work thus privileged insider viewpoints that defied external expectations of Indigenous representation.Reception and Impact
Awards and Critical Acclaim
Barnaby's short film From Cherry English (2005) won two Golden Sheaf Awards at the Yorkton Film Festival: Best Aboriginal and Best Videography.[11] His later short File Under Miscellaneous (2010) received a Genie Award nomination for Best Live Action Short Drama. The Colony (2007), another short, earned a Jutra Award nomination.[4] For feature films, Rhymes for Young Ghouls (2013) secured five awards and ten nominations, including the American Indian Film Festival's Best Director and Best Actor (for Glen Gould), as well as the Tribeca Film Festival's Creative Promise Award for Narrative.[45] Barnaby's Blood Quantum (2019) led nominations with ten at the 9th Canadian Screen Awards, winning six to seven honors, among them Best Editing for Barnaby himself and Best Actor for Michael Greyeyes.[46] [47] Posthumously, Barnaby received special recognition at the Canadian Screen Awards in 2023 for his contributions to Indigenous cinema.[48]| Film | Award | Year | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| From Cherry English | Golden Sheaf Award - Best Aboriginal | 2005 | Yorkton Film Festival |
| From Cherry English | Golden Sheaf Award - Best Videography | 2005 | Yorkton Film Festival |
| File Under Miscellaneous | Genie Award Nomination - Best Live Action Short Drama | 2010 | - |
| Rhymes for Young Ghouls | American Indian Movie Award - Best Director | 2014 | - |
| Rhymes for Young Ghouls | Tribeca Creative Promise Award - Narrative | 2013 | - |
| Blood Quantum | Canadian Screen Award - Best Editing | 2021 | Won by Barnaby |
| Blood Quantum | Canadian Screen Award - Best Actor | 2021 | Michael Greyeyes |
