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Crude Conversations

Chatter Marks EP 53 A liver transplant and directing a horror movie starring an Inuit cast with Nyla Innuksuk

Crude Conversations

crudemag

Society & Culture

5884 Ratings

🗓️ 31 December 2022

⏱️ 91 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Nyla Innuksuk is an Indigenous director from Canada and she recently released Slash/Back, a horror / sci-fi movie about a group of Inuit girls who save their remote arctic community from an alien invasion. She says that the horror genre has always been a big part of her life. Her mom — being a fan as well — introduced it to her, actually. One day when Nyla and a friend were having a sleep over, her mom rented Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds for them. They were 8 years old. That was the same year that Nyla and another friend would ride their bikes to the graveyard, they’d sit there and they’d write ghost stories. That’s how she spent most of her days until she was about 13 or 14. She lived in a town that was predominently Christian and realized that her love of witches and magic was probably not appropriate. But by then, she had moved onto writing scripts anyway. Making Slash/Back was important to Nyla for a couple reasons. For one, she was able to film the script she’d been working on for years. It also helped her recover from a liver transplant. When she got the news about needing the tranplant, she was told that she had a 50/50 chance of surviving the month. It was a grim and scary situation, but she made it through the month and received a transplant in May of 2017. That September, she went to Nunavut and shot the proof of concept for the movie. She wasn’t wasting any time. Facing her mortality brought things intro focus and helped her recognize the things that she believes are really important in life. Friends, family and the relationships we build with them. It also helped her understand the importance of pursuing the things she wants in life.

Transcript

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0:00.0

I've been thinking about this movie for ages, been telling everybody about it.

0:15.9

These teenage girls fighting aliens in this remote Arctic community.

0:19.8

These are places that I know, and I could tell that people were responding to it.

0:25.1

And it was like all the movies that I'd watched growing up, but in a place that was familiar

0:29.3

to me, I really, really wanted to make it.

0:32.0

But I just, for some reason, couldn't, and it was just a, you know, I think that this

0:39.2

is something familiar with lots of people, just like, you know, this idea of being like,

0:43.4

well, why me?

0:44.4

Like, why should I get to do this?

0:45.7

And more, I'm not ready.

0:48.7

And I think with something like this, you might never be ready.

0:52.6

And so you just have to kind of, you know, throw your hat over the fence.

0:57.7

And then just go get it, because I've told everybody.

1:02.3

And so I think it was just one of those things.

1:06.3

And when I found out, and when a doctor says to you, you know, you have a 50-50 chance

1:11.9

of surviving the month, it just clarifies things in a real way.

1:17.2

And so it allowed me the freedom, almost, to be able to say, hey, I want to do this.

1:23.1

So that's another thing that I was really grateful for.

1:26.2

And I try to think about it, because our health is so precious, so we don't know what's

1:30.4

going to happen.

1:32.9

So we should be doing what we love if we can.

1:37.4

That was Naila and Nook Shook.

...

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