Rhymes for Young Ghouls

Director Jeff Barnaby (Mi’qmaw)
Year 2013
Run Time 88min
Genre Drama, Sci-Fi/Fantasy
2026 spotlight contributor Jason Gorber
It’s 1976 on the Red Crow Mi’kmaw reserve, and 15-year-old Aila (Jacobs) is the weed princess of her community. Hustling drugs with her uncle Burner, she sells enough dope to pay a “truancy tax” to Popper, the sadistic “Indian agent” who runs St. Dymphna’s Residential School.

It’s a tough life, but she’s making it work. That is, until the precarious balance of her world is threatened by her father’s return from prison and the theft of her drug money.

Part fable, part small-town drama, Rhymes for Young Ghouls is a richly imaginative and striking drama about growing up during a very dark time in Canada’s treatment of Indigenous people.

“A savvy [Indigenous] genre film with a strong, beautiful and ingenious heroine whose courage helps right an injustice.” — Liam Lacey, The Globe and Mail

Director

Jeff Barnaby (Mi’qmaw)

Barnaby’s films paint an urgent and unflinching portrait of Indigenous life and culture. His shorts include the Genie Nominated File Under Miscellaneous, the Jutra nominee The Colony, and the Sundance selection From Cherry English. His features, Rhymes for Young Ghouls and Blood Quantum, both premiered at TIFF and won 13 awards collectively. Following his death from cancer in 2022, imagineNATIVE launched the Jeff Barnaby Grant for emerging Indigenous filmmakers, and he received a posthumous tribute award at the CSAs.

Writer

Jeff Barnaby (Mi’qmaw)

Cast

Kawennáhere Devery Jacobs (Mohawk), Glen Gould (Mi’qmaw), Brandon Oakes (Mohawk), Roseanne Supernault (Cree/Métis)

Producers

Aisling Chin-Yee, John Christou, Justine Whyte

Genres

Drama, Sci-Fi/Fantasy

Interests

BIPOC Stories, Indigenous Filmmaker

Original Language

English