Captured over a period of five years within 18 communities, "Indian Time" is a personal and current portrayal of the 11 Aboriginal nations of Québec, where some forty people take turns speaking, allowing for exceptional encounters and immersing the viewer—eyes and heart—in this "Indian time".
Carl Morasse practices and teaches in Chicoutimi, Canada. Filmmaker ethnographer within the cultural aboriginal organization La Boîte Rouge VIF for a dozen years, he plies the physical and imaginary territories of Quebec fascinated by cultural identities, the relationship with the Other and the challenges of the stakes of contemporary Quebec. His artistic approach led him to consider the practice of the documentary as a tool of reappropriation of identity.