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A gripping immersion into the frontlines of the historic Fairy Creek blockade, where thousands of activists participate in a do-or-die protest to save the pristine Ada’itsx (Fairy Creek) valley from old-growth logging. But when forestry workers retaliate and police arrests begin, tensions rise on this record-breaking climate frontline.


The Fairy Creek (Ada’itsx) valley sprawls across Pacheedaht First Nation territory on southwestern Vancouver Island and its old-growth forest ecosystem thrives with lush foliage, ancient tree trunks, and a variety of wildlife. However, the decimating chainsaws and heavy machinery of the Teal Jones lumber corporation disrupt this equilibrium as they demolish an environmental haven for their road-building project. 


Amidst the tumult, Jen Muranetz’s Fairy Creek captures the vast collective protests against this destructive logging operation: a movement which has spawned both the largest demonstration of civil disobedience in Canadian history and the mass arrests of 1200 people.


The film offers visceral front-line footage of activists faced with an RCMP-enforced injunction, protesting from ground to sky as blockaders form barriers with their bodies and tree-sitters’ forest canopies are assailed by officers deployed from helicopters. Fairy Creek is an urgent portrait of resistance, documenting an assembly of protestors organizing together despite varying backgrounds, ideologies, and tactics. 


Muranetz highlights the rapture of a united eco-activist community—coinhabiting the earth, dancing together, and cherishing biodiversity. At the same time, this breathtaking documentary tremors with the challenges of political consciousness in an age of rampant extractive capitalism, where industries working with governments eviscerate everything in their path, including the last pristine ecosystems. Fairy Creek depicts a historic struggle to defend Canadian old-growth forests as an experience of absolute devotion, thrust between whiplashes of triumph and heartbreak.


Jen Muranetz (she/her) (Director, Producer) is an award-winning documentary filmmaker living on unceded Coast Salish territories in the place now known as Vancouver, BC. She is a director, producer, editor, and former video journalist. Her films are character-driven and impact-focused, centered around environmental justice and human resilience. Her previous works have screened in festivals such as DOXA, DOK Leipzig, and Planet in Focus. Her credits include Lost Nation Road and What About Our Future? which was a finalist at the Social Impact Media Awards and won the Nigel Moore Award for Youth Programming at DOXA 2021.


Sepehr Samimi (he/him) (Producer, Director of Photography) is an Iranian-Canadian documentary cinematographer and producer (BFA Film Production from SFU). He specializes in filming on the frontlines of urgent social and political movements across the world such as: If [I Was] To Retain You, shot in Hong Kong during the Umbrella movement, hit global climate movement film The Magnitude of All Things, and Constant Battles for TELUS originals featuring the Woman Life Freedom movement in Iran. Sepehr is a member of Internationall Cinematographers Guild (ICG669) and Canadian Society of Cinematographers, and alumni of HotDocs Doc Accelerator program. Samimi’s credits also include Light Through The Blindfold and Abundance.

  • Year
    2024
  • Runtime
    77 minutes
  • Language
    English
  • Country
    Canada
  • Premiere
    2024
  • Director
    Jen Muranetz
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