Present Revolutions šļøš¤
- The Polygon Gallery 101 Carrie Cates Court North Vancouver, BC, V7M 3J4 Canada (map)

clip of The Steppers visit South Africa by Hugh Durnford-Dionne & The Montreal Steppers (Canada) YOUTH
Present Revolutions
Thursday November 20 | 6:00-9:00PM PST
Presented in Collaboration with The Polygon Gallery
Live Talkback facilitated by Brandon Wint
Location: The Polygon Gallery
Doors: 5:30PM PST
Ahead of this screening, The Montreal Steppers will host a beginner-friendly, high-energy Stepping workshop and demo accompanying The Steppers Visit South Africa! Stepping or step is the art form of creating music with one's body through claps and stomps. Participants will explore the basics of step choreographyāclaps, stomps, and chantsāand discover the origins of step as a black art form.
Present Revolutions is a collection of films that respond to social issues of our time. Reflecting young peoplesā experiences growing up in a politically dynamic and polarized society, these works crystallise moments in time where we question our current reality.
A movement can begin within an individual, garnering momentum until it exists beyond oneself. Through its sheer urgency this action accumulates to a point when it cannot be ignored. When we create films that creatively interrogate our social reality, we liberate ourselves and our communities. It is in this way that filmmaking is an act of everyday resistance.
To learn more about our support offerings during screenings visit our FAQ.
Schedule:
6:00-6:45PM: 1, 2 Step Workshop with The Montreal Steppers
7:00-8:00PM: Screening
8:00-8:45 PM: Live Talkback facilitated by Brandon Wint
Films Screening:
Beny Kristia (Indonesia) YOUTH
Vancouver Premiere
Duration: 12:40
Content warning: violence
A young man narrated the details of his dream from last night to his father about the celebration of demonstration, anger, and graduation.
Director: Beny Kristia
Writers: Beny Kristia, Gabriela Vanesa Karolus, Bhisma Wardhana
Producer: Fathur Syahnuron
Cinematographer: Nufail S.
Sydnie Baynes (Canada) EMERGING
Vancouver Premiere
Duration: 2:41
Content warning: coarse language, use of the N word, flashing lights
African American Express serves as an evocative abstract animation delving into the intricate theme of materiality within Black consumerism, critiquing the implications of consumer culture within the Black community. Drawing inspiration from the rich narrative of the 1998 novel "Desegregating the Dollar: African American Consumerism in the Twentieth Century" by Robert E. Weems, the short film weaves together insightful quotes to illuminate the complex dynamics at play.
Director: Sydnie Baynes
Writer: Sydnie Baynes, Robert E. Weems (Desegregating the Dollar: African American Consumerism in the Twentieth Century - 1998)
Music: Olivier Soudin
Sound Mix: Vid Cousins
Recording Technician: Tyler Rauman
Supervised: Shira Avni
Voiced by: Brigitte āBriā Bobbey, Magassy āMagsā Mābow, Chelsea Cuffy
Hugh Durnford-Dionne & The Montreal Steppers (Canada) YOUTH
Canadian Premiere
Duration: 10:05
Back in May, the Montreal Steppers visited South Africa for a cultural and artistic exchange to learn from elders and youth. Connecting to the roots of Gumboots, Pantsula and Stepping changed their lives and the work that they do. It fueled a deeper commitment to sharing the history and honoring the art forms that paved the way for resistance, power and legacy. With this knowledge, they enter into spaces with a heightened appreciation and understanding that this dance form is indeed their āancestral inheritance.ā
Filmmaker: Hugh Durnford-Dionne
Producer: The Montreal Steppers
Members of The Montreal Steppers: Kayin Queeley, Saryka Pierre, Natasha Clery
Maddi Crease & Aaron Shrimpton (England) YOUTH
Vancouver Premiere
Duration: 3:48
Autistic Joy is a micro short poetry film exploring the side of autism that often goes unspoken and under-explored: the joyful. From happy stimming to sensory delight, Autistic Joy delivers an insight into the positives within our autistic experience. "Our experiences stand together. We are learning our place by the day. The world is so bright with us in it."
Autistic Joy was co-produced in collaboration with autistic peers, project managed by an autistic woman, and produced with a primarily neuodivergent cast and crew.
Project Manager, Writer, Producer: Maddi Crease
Director, Camera Operator, Editor: Aaron Shrimpton
Sound Designer: Steve Pretty
Movement Director: Hollie Dee
Actors: Liberty Bliss, Abigail Deehan, Rupert Vaughan
Supported using public funding from the National Lottery through Arts Council England
Developed with the help of a Metal residency
With thanks to Andrea Walter and SAFE Essex, Essex Film Collective
With thanks to: Maggie B, Cee Kros, Paul Southeward, Tom Randell, Caroline T, Colin Newton, Ande CQ, Ricci Read, Nichola B, & 1 other focus group member for their contributions.
Ā© Maddi Crease and New Waverley Studios Limited
Priyanka Tope (Canada) EMERGING
Vancouver Premiere
Duration: 12:03
Content warning: coarse language, mention of violence and genocide
History moves in cycles, like a pendulum that swings but never settles. Societies rise and fall, repeating mistakes under new names. Though we claim progress, we often ignore the lessons etched in time. Wars return, injustices resurface, and ignorance persists. Perhaps comfort in the familiar or fear of change. Yet, hope still flickers. Awareness grows, voices rise, and movements push boundaries once thought immovable. Breaking the cycle demands more than remembranceāit requires courage, and choice. This dance film explores contemporary stories while rooting in the ancient dance form of Kathak.
Director: Priyanka Tope
Creative Director/Cinematographer: Stefan Sago
Writer: Priyanka Tope
Dancer: Priyanka Tope
Music composer: Saskia Rao de Has
Musicians: Sasika Rao de Has, Tejas Tope, Priyanka Tope
Commissioned by: Hamilton Arts Council
Kaili Che (Canada) EMERGING
Vancouver Premiere
Duration: 10:25
STITCHING CHANGE is a dance short film that unravels the intricate systems of overconsumption and environmental impact within the textile industry. It invites audiences to reflect on the choices that shape our world and envision new ways of coexisting with the land and each other.
Director & Producer: Kaili Che
Production Assistant: Brianne Chan
Movement Artist & Performers: Juolin Lee, Tin Gamboa, Sarah U, Sierra Megas, & Kaili Che
Cinematographers: Carla AlcƔntara & danielle Mackenzie Long
Costumes: Nellie Gossen & Kaili Che in collaboration with Movement Artists & Performers
Soundscape Artists & Composers: Ariane Custodio & Elijah Payne
Boom Operator: danielle Mackenzie Long & Ariane Custodio
Production & Installation Designer: Nellie Gossen
Crew Members: Makaila Che, Krystal Che, Jon Kwok, Michael Yu
Editors: Carla AlcƔntara & Kaili Che
Colourist: Brenda Kent Colina
Creative Description: Andrea Cownden
Mentor: Sophia Wolfe
Outside Eye: Kelly McInnes
Accessibility Consultant: Adrienne Wong
Climate Dramaturgy: Chaprece Henry
Sara Wylie (Canada) EMERGING
Duration: 4:58
Content warning: discussion of illness and disability
A meditation on crip time and resistance by a chronically ill filmmaker, shot on Super 8 and (mostly) eco-processed by hand. The short film addresses conventional narratives around the nature of illness and instead posits disability and crip time as natural sites of resistance against capitalism.
Director/Producer/Editor: Sara Wylie
Meet the Facilitators:
Montreal Steppers is a performance collective and non-profit organization committed to the art form of step ā a black diasporic dance that uses the body as an instrument to create rhythms and beats, through stomps, claps, and chants. The collectiveās praxis centers the lives and aspirations of those most marginalized and to create space and initiatives and foster collaboration across communities to support each other and thrive together. Founded in 2019, the collective has used stepping to influence dialogue around the importance of black art, black lives, and black history in Canada, by way of workshops and performances. Montreal Steppers have offered educational workshops to over 20,000 participants in over 50 institutions and organizations across the province of Quebec.
Brandon Wint is an Ontario-born poet, spoken word artist, educator and filmmaker based in western Canada. For more than a decade, Brandon has been a sought-after touring performance poet, having shared his work all over Canada, and internationally at festivals and showcases in the United States, Australia, Jamaica, Latvia and Lithuania. Brandon is ever-grateful for the power of poetry as a spiritual technology and social force. He is devoted to using poetry as a tool for refining his sense of justice, love, and intimacy. Brandon Wint's poems and essays have been published in The Ex Puritan, Event Magazine, Arc Poetry Magazine, and Black Writers Matter, among other places. Divine Animal (Write Bloody North, 2020) is his debut collection of poetry. In recent years, his films have screened at DOXA documentary film festival and Reelworld Film Festival and Vancouver International Film Festival Centre.
Photo by Divya Nanray