
Independent Lens
Home Court
Home Court traces the ascent of Ashley Chea, a basketball prodigy whose life intensifies amid recruitment, injury, and triumph throughout her high school career.
We Arrive With Fire | Ne-kah Nuue'm Mehl Mech examines the past, present, and future of fire knowledge as Margo Robbins and her crew work to reunite fire and the land.
Roni Jo Draper, Ph.D. is a member of the Yurok tribe, from the village of Weitchpec on the Klamath River. Her experience as a queer Yurok woman has influenced her work as a teacher, scholar, and artist. Roni explores storytelling practices as a way to understand humanity. Her films include Scenes from the Glittering World and Fire Tender.
Marissa Lila is a multicultural documentarian and psychedelic healer who was raised in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Thailand. Their work as a director and producer for film and television centers marginalized perspectives that use storytelling to heal. Their award-winning projects include Fire Tender, Transmormon, Scavenger, and Boomtown.
Jenn Lee Smith is a queer filmmaker and supporter of underrepresented narrative and documentary films such as Mija (2022) and Pray Away (2021). She was a part of Re-Present Media's Re-Take Oakland program and is the founder of Bewilder Films, a production company dedicated to amplifying underrepresented voices.
Learn more about funding opportunities with ITVS.
Since time immemorial, the Yurok people have placed fire on the land. The goal is not to control fire, but to work in collaboration with it—inviting it in when the season is right, when the conditions are amenable, and when the land is ready. Fire cleanses, fire prepares the ground, and fire clears the forest of debris and fuel. Fire makes it possible for many plants to propagate and grow including the hazel and many forest trees. Fire has been used to warm people, cook meals, and purify the land.
Ongoing colonization has separated Yurok people from their cultural fire practices with dire consequences. Colonization has decimated earth-preserving traditions and severed Indigenous peoples from their land and ways of living. More than mere observers of nature, Indigenous peoples have actively sustained the ecosystem by placing fire on the land, gathering plants in sustainable ways, and harvesting.
Yurok grandmother and knowledge keeper Margo Robbins is leading a movement to reunite fire and land. In the village of Weitchpec, California, she established the Cultural Fire Management Council centering the fire knowledge of the Yurok tribe. She is constructing a cultural firehouse to organize and to educate people about “good fire.”
By integrating ancestral wisdom and future learning, fire can be transformed from a force of destruction to one of creation. We Arrive With Fire | Ne-kah Nuue'm Mehl Mech charts the ways in which Yurok people are working to ensure that people, land, and fire remain united now and into the future.
We’ll send you funding deadlines, events, and film news.
Connect with us now at itvs@itvs.org.