Valley featured in filmmakers sci-fi trilogy | DrumhellerMail
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Last updateTue, 24 Dec 2024 1pm

Valley featured in filmmakers sci-fi trilogy

Parallel Minds Still 01

Two months ago, there was a bit of local buzz, about an alien walking through downtown Drumheller. There is no need to worry, it was just Benjamin Ross Hayden doing what he does best.
Many in the valley might be familiar with the work of Hayden. The Albertan Métis filmmaker wrote and directed Northlander, a sci-fi epic with heavy shooting in the valley. This was released in 2016 and was nominated for A Canadian Screen Award, and won a Leo Award and an Alberta Film and Television Award.
Since then, he has been working on two more science fiction features, the most recent to be released is Parallel Minds. It has its theatrical release in Landmark Cinema this fall and will be at the Napier on December 3.
While Parallel Minds is a much different film than Northlander, it too features scenes from the Drumheller valley and also follows a common theatric theme.
“Thematically all of them are chapters of a larger whole. Each of them explores a different topic of science fiction through an indigenous lens,” he said. “Select scenes were shot in the Drumheller area at the Historic Graham Ranch. Stepping back as an indigenous filmmaker from the prairies it is important for me to explore and tell stories in and of the many different landscapes that this part of North America holds.”
Parallel Lines is about the corruption of a revolutionary contact lens that happens when a strange murder in the near future takes place. An old school detective and an intrepid researcher stop a rogue artificial intelligence entity before it is too late.
The film has been entered in 17 international film festivals all over the world, will have primetime viewing on APTN, and they have also locked in an international distributor.
“It is incredible an indigenous film about Canada is making a nice international footprint out there and getting foot traction in the international marketplace,” said Hayden.
As far as the alien on main street, Hayden has wrapped up a third sci-fi feature called First Encounter which is slated to be released next year.
“The Drumheller Badlands were paired with a more rural Canadian back roads in my next featured film coming out next summer, an indigenous extraterrestrial science fiction First Encounter,” he said.
This film features Eugene Brave Rock from Wonder Woman. It has a budget of $3 million and is an interprovincial co-production between Alberta and Manitoba.


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