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One of the best documentaries of
the year… – Toronto
Star |
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Team Spirit…is
many different kinds of stories all at the same time—it's
a story of hope and determination, a story of unwavering family
commitment, a story of sports heroics and the pressures of
stardom, and a tragic tale of loss, grief and redemption.
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– Winnipeg Free Press |
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Team Spirit: The Jordin and Terence Tootoo Story
Ken Malenstyn/Barrie Dunn/Alexis Arthur
Big Red Barn Entertainment/Trailer Park Productions
48 minutes •
2004
Also available on DVD
Team Spirit: The Jordin and Terence Tootoo Story starts during
the summer of 2002 in Rankin Inlet, a tiny arctic community in Canada's
newly created Nunavut territory. Just as the Inuit—one of
the indigenous peoples of Canada's north—are realizing
the dream of self-government in their own territory, two young brothers
are also making history. Terence and Jordin Tootoo grew up playing
street hockey in a region known for its harsh winters and 22 hours
of darkness per day in mid-season. In the eyes of their community,
the brothers are already hockey superstars, but their talents are
about to attract attention at hockey's highest levels. Twenty-two-year
old Terence has become the first Inuit hockey player to play professionally,
and 19-year-old Jordin is trying out for Canada's 2002 national
junior team and ultimately the NHL.
But tragedy strikes when Terence suddenly commits suicide. A big
favourite with his Roanoke Express teammates, Terence is mourned
by family, friends, Inuit people across Nunavut, and his many fans
in his adopted hockey home in Virginia. Jordin, left with the full
weight of role-model pressure and the increasing glare of the media
spotlight, strives to carry on and realize his NHL dreams.
Subject(s): Canada–Northern,
Indigenous people–Inuit,
Sports–Hockey,
Suicide, Youth |