Education, documentaries, and commissioned video projects

Featured Work

2026 Indspire Awards

Filmed against the Arctic landscape of Ice Cove, Nunavut, North of North actresses Zorga Qaunaq and Jennifer Kilabuk host a historic broadcast celebrating 13 Indspire laureates, including a first-ever Music Award recipient. The film culminates in the Lifetime Achievement Award for Indigenous activism trailblazer Fred Kelly, before closing with a lit qulliq and one final question:

Where will your journey lead you?
Indigenous Geographic Educational Platform

Echoes of the Ice

This short documentary will be available exclusively on the Indigenous Geographic Educational Platform, launching early 2025.
Coming to Prime Video 2025

Beat of Two Cultures

We’re proud that our short documentary will be on Prime Video in 2025. In this video, we capture the crossroads between two cultures of music and the magic that happens when cultures embrace each other through music.
Coming to Prime Video 2025

Back to Batoche

A video where the past meets the present. We captured the largest celebration of Métis history and culture. Batoche is an annual pilgrimage for the Metis people, reminding them of their resilience and enduring history.
Li Kawnsayr

We Will Not Be Ignored

Cancer affects so many people and in this video, we document the challenges and struggles of those affected by it and how colonialism impacts the care some patients receive.
Indigenous Geographic Film

The Apology | Trailer

Residential schools left a lingering harm on the families of those affected. How is the world working towards reconciliation, and what work is left to be done? This film hopes to answer some of those questions, while others remain unanswered.
Indigenous Geographic Film

Waiting for Justice

This poignant, multi-award-winning short documentary delves deep into the harrowing journey of Survivors from the Île-à-la-Crosse Métis Residential School. This compelling film follows their relentless struggle for official recognition and compensation from the federal government, provincial government, and the Catholic Church. Through raw interviews and powerful storytelling, it lays bare the intergenerational harm inflicted upon them, their families, and their community while illuminating their unwavering quest for justice.

Echoes of the Ice

Echoes of the Ice follows Crystal Martin, an Inuk woman from Sanirajak, Nunavut, as she returns to Iqaluit to reconnect with her cultural roots through traditional Inuit hunting practices. Guided by her cousin Pakak, Crystal embarks on a treacherous journey to the floe edge, where the uncertainty of the thinning ice and shifting animal patterns due to climate change casts doubt on their hunt.

The Beat of Two Cultures

The Beat of Two Cultures is a short documentary that follows the musical journey of ten Métis fiddlers as they come together at the Tragically Hip’s Bath House studio in Kingston, ON. They collaborate to record a unique album that celebrates traditional Métis music.

Back to Batoche

Crystal Martin explores the Back to Batoche Days Festival, an annual celebration of Métis culture and history. Through interviews and personal insights, Crystal examines the festival’s importance as a gathering place for Métis people to connect with their heritage, honour their ancestors, and celebrate their vibrant traditions through music, dance, and storytelling.

The Lines She Carries: Trailer

The Lines She Carries follows Crystal Martin as she reaches a turning point in her life, the end of her childbearing years. In Oolootie’s home, she prepares to receive her traditional tunniit. A tunniit is a deeply sacred facial marking that marks not only their skin but their journey through womanhood, identity, and survival.

The Apology: Act 1

Matt LeMay and Crystal Martin gain exclusive access to the Indigenous delegation’s visit to the Vatican and Pope Francis’s historic apology for the Church’s role in residential schools. The film follows Survivors and communities across Canada during the Pope’s visit, capturing powerful moments of grief, hope, and resilience. This landmark documentary highlights Indigenous strength in the ongoing journey toward truth, justice, and healing.

Waiting for Justice

Through powerful firsthand accounts and personal reflections, this award-winning documentary shares the stories of Survivors of the Île-à-la-Crosse Residential School in northern Saskatchewan. The film invites viewers to learn about a painful chapter in Canadian history and the ongoing efforts of Survivors to seek recognition, accountability, and justice.

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10/10 Experience

Working with Indigenous Geographic is always a 10/10 experience. Their team of highly skilled professionals always deliver incredibly creative and captivating work. Having partnered with Indigenous Geographic on multiple projects, I would recommend them to anyone with full confidence.

Kelsey Scarfone
Acting Director of Economic
Development Senior Policy Advisor,
Conservation
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one of the most engaged teams

I've had the honour of working with Indigenous Geographic on a number of projects. The atmosphere they create is one of respect and support, for me as an interviewer and also for our guests. The crew is one of the most engaged teams I've ever worked with and they make it a joy. The saddest words I hear on set are "It's a wrap" because it means the shoot is over. It's always a deep pleasure. I'm honoured to work with Indigenous Geographic.

Shelagh Rogers
Broadcast-Journalist, CBC Radio
Honorary Witness, Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada
Chancellor, Queen's University