Edmonton

A Dene filmmaker and his 'Cold Road' to Indigenous representation on screen

Filmed in Alberta and the N.W.T, Dene filmmaker Kevin Redvers’s newly-released thriller Cold Road is entirely written, directed and produced by Indigenous creatives.

Thriller movie features all-Indigenous cast and crew

It's night time. A car with bright white headlights drives down an isolated, snowy highway. It is followed by a semi-truck.
Cold Road is a thriller that tells the story of an Indigenous woman and her dog being hunted by a stranger in a big rig on a frozen highway in the remote Canadian North. (Courtesy of IndigiFilm/Level Film)

Dene filmmaker Kelvin Redvers wants audiences for his latest movie to sit on the edges of their seats.

An isolated, snow-covered highway in the middle of northern Canada sets the scene for Cold Road, a thriller that tells the story of an Indigenous woman driving with her dog to her remote First Nation to visit her dying mother.

While she's driving, the woman is hunted down by a stranger in a big rig.

Released in January, the film is currently being screened in 18 movie theatres across Canada, including B.C., Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick.

We meet local Cree and Métis actor Roseanne Supernault, who has a leading role in the Indigenous-produced film Cold Road.

Hailing from Hay River, N.W.T., Redvers said he loves — and feels particularly inspired by — thriller movies from the '70s and '80s. He wanted to be a filmmaker since his teens, but didn't see people who looked like him or places familiar to him on the big screen.

"I'm from a place where it takes forever to drive places; I think a lot of Canadians know it can be three hours sometimes to drive from town to town," he said.

"But what if you put those two worlds together?"

A man sits in a hotel room. He wears a black shirt and a silver chain around his neck. He has short black hair.
Dene filmmaker Kelvin Redvers said his newest film Cold Road took inspiration from early Steven Spielberg and Coen brothers flicks. (Aaron Sousa/CBC)

Filming primarily took place in Hay River, N.W.T., but some scenes were shot in Calgary and Athabasca, Alta., 145 kilometres north of Edmonton. 

Redvers took inspiration from early Steven Spielberg and Coen brothers flicks like Duel and Blood Simple. Modern movies, he said, often feel artificial with CGI, so he wanted the film to get back to basics. All outdoor scenes were filmed in cold weather, including the stunt sequences and action scenes, he said. 

The storyline touches on themes like missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, and the overall fear of driving alone on a snowy highway at night.

"It's everything you would think of when you think of a thriller, but then add in things that you just don't normally see on a movie screen, like the Indigenous female leads," Redvers said.

One of the film's draws is its all-Indigenous cast and crew. Having that was important, Redvers said, because it's rare to see in the current movie industry.

It is starting to change, he said.

"There's been a lot of movement and there's been some really great indie Canadian Indigenous films," Redvers said.

A woman with long black hair and a black blouse sits in front of a microphone in a radio studio. She wears headphones.
Cree and Métis actress Roseanne Supernault said it's crucial to include Indigenous people in the creation of films and TV shows centred around Indigenous narratives. (CBC)

The film stars Cree and Métis actress Roseanne Supernault in the lead role of Tracy, alongside Caribou the dog, as Pretzel.

Supernault is known for her roles in the television series Blackstone and the 2013 film Maïna

In an interview on CBC's Radio Active on Thursday, she said it's crucial to have Indigenous people in various roles and positions in the creation of films and TV shows centred around Indigenous narratives.

"When we are telling our stories, we are bringing our spirits, our energy, our ancestors with us as well and they're present with us," Supernault said.

"I think that Cold Road — in a lot of ways — can be a touchstone to how Indigenous cinema can be approached, how it can be delivered, how it can be manifested."

A new thriller taking place on a remote frozen highway is now playing in theatres across Alberta.Cold Road is about an Indigenous woman named Tracy, who goes on a long road trip with her dog Pretzel. She is travelling to see her mother who had a stroke. Tracy is mostly driving alone on the highway, except for a semi-truck that's following her...And eventually she realizes she is being stalked. Director Kelvin Redvers shares why this movie was important to him to create.

Intense reactions have been pouring in since the movie's release last month, said Redvers. He said he's heard stories of audiences hiding under their hoods, and jumping out of their seats while watching the movie. 

One woman nearly broke her husband's hand from squeezing it so hard, he said. 

"You make movies to make people feel and go on an experience and I think that's what we've been able to do," Redvers said.

The movie will be released on digital platforms later this year.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Aaron Sousa.

Former CBC Reporter

Aaron was a reporter with CBC Edmonton. Originally from Fredericton, N.B., he was editor-in-chief of his campus newspaper, The Aquinian.