
1988
The Displaced View traces a personal search for identity and pride, within the unique and suppressed history of the Japanese in Canada. Through an examination of the emotional and cultural links between the women of one family, the processes of the construction of memory and the re-construction of history, are revealed. Utilizing an innovative combination of experimental, dramatic and documentary forms, the film emerges as a deeply moving and compassionate love letter. Just as the official history of the Japanese Canadians has been thrown into question, so does the film’s fictionalized narrative, question documentary as truth.

Suno Yamazaki

Martha Onodera

Matsuye Mori

Midi Onodera

La balloune

Winnie

Somniloquies

Private Chronicles: Monologue

Clouds

Brise-glace : Bateau givre

Faces of Death III

Tenório

Chet Larson

Sermons and Sacred Pictures

The History of White People in America: Volume II

Man with a Movie Camera

Chinese Ping-Pong

The Red Bank. James Joyce: His Greek Notebooks

Let Us Persevere in What We Have Resolved Before We Forget

Impressions from the Upper Atmosphere

The first is farce

Being Rain: Representation and Will

Pictureman News

Wildgnorance 2: Time Paradox