Chapter One

The Magpie River

Muteshekau-Shipu
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The Magpie River

Muteshekau-Shipu, Quebec · the first river in Canada granted legal personhood
Chapter One · Now Complete

The river that became a person

In 2021, the Innu Council of Ekuanitshit and the Minganie municipality granted the Magpie River nine rights of its own — and guardians empowered to defend them in court. We took a caravan of RVs from Toronto to its banks to find out what that means.

Format
Feature Documentary
River
Magpie · Quebec
Status
Completed
Chapter
I of an Ongoing Series

The Magpie — Muteshekau-Shipu in Innu-aimun, "the river where the water passes between square rocky cliffs" — runs 300 kilometres through the Côte-Nord. For the Innu of Ekuanitshit it has always been a relative, a living being held in reciprocal community. In 2021, they did in law what their own knowledge had never doubted.

We came to document it, and to sit with the people who love it — a white-water rafter, a poet, a philosopher, a yoga teacher, a musician, elders and locals. We slept at the river. We stood at the waterfall. And there, in the pure freedom of water forever throwing itself over the edge, the question changed: not how do we make the river a person? — but how do we learn to speak her language?

The Voyage

Toronto to the Côte-Nord

Two RVs, a rotating band of friends, two weeks on the road — a passage where the coming-together and separation of everyone aboard mirrored the river they were chasing.

Toronto Montreal Quebec City Havre-Saint-Pierre Magpie River
Sep 10–11 · Departure
Toronto → Tamworth → Ottawa River

The RV becomes a vessel. First rendezvous, first rapids with the crew's river guide.

Sep 12–14 · The Cities
Montreal → Quebec City

Dinner at Leo's parents' house, oil paintings of the St. Lawrence, street interviews on what a river means to a city.

Sep 15 · North
Quebec City → Havre-Saint-Pierre

Nine and a half hours as the river road turns from industrial to wild. A night at a truck stop, a conversation with a trucker about what it means to be always moving.

Sep 16–18 · Arrival
The Magpie River

Three days on the water. The waterfall. The guardians. The moment personhood stopped being the point.

Sep 19–23 · The Return
Montreal → Gatineau → Toronto

Three breakdowns. Relationships fraying and reforming, the way a river does on its way home.

The C-Story · Limnology as Metaphor

The grammar of water is the grammar of love

Limnology is the science of freshwater ecosystems. Its vocabulary — confluence, tributary, subsume, ephemeral — turns out to be a startlingly precise language for how human beings meet, merge, and move apart.

Confluence
The merging of two waters
The coming-together of two people and their separate worlds — where difference becomes a richer, deeper current.
Flow
Movement & vitality of a river
Connection needs continuous motion. Like a river, a relationship stagnant is a relationship dying.
Tributary
Smaller streams feeding the main
Friendships and family bonds — the smaller loves that pour themselves into the larger flow of a life.
Merging Identities
Rivers merging to create synergy
Two souls melding through love — becoming one current while somehow still being two waters.
Dams
Structures controlling flow
The boundaries we build. Necessary for protection, dangerous when they stop the water from being water.
Eddies
Reverse currents & swirls
The moments a relationship circles back on itself — testing, stirring, deepening what holds.
Ephemeral Rivers
Streams that flow only seasonally
Fleeting encounters that leave a permanent mark, though they were never meant to last.
Subsume
A river taking in smaller streams
How we absorb each other's stories and selves — every person you love rewriting the shape of you.
Canals
Waterways we build to connect
Mediation, empathy, the effort of communication — the channels we dig by hand toward one another.
Consumption
One river absorbing another
The vulnerability of love — letting go of a separate self for the sake of a deeper, unified one.
External Pressures
Forces acting on the river
Money, expectation, distance, time — the droughts and floods every bond must weather to endure.
Individuality & Unity
Oneness held with separateness
The whole art of it: to become one with another while still, wholly, remaining yourself.
The Voice of the River

Here, where waters from distant trails entwine, every merging droplet murmurs ancient tales. A union of journeys, a melding of souls, bound by the unseen threads of destiny.

On Confluence
The Souls Aboard

A confluence of makers

Not a crew so much as a current — artists, guides, philosophers and friends who each poured a different water into the film.

Tan

Creator · Director

The vision behind the lens — carrying the river as a life's work, braiding personhood and water into one story.

Matthew Turnbull

Philosophy · Two-Eyed Seeing

The compass of the film's existential meanderings — a lighthouse through the storm of questions.

Jake Baer

River Guide

Sentinel of the uncharted, river-bred — leading the caravan through the whispering waters of the Magpie.

Celina Lucareli

Poet · Artist

Weaver of colours and emotion, interpreting the sentient nature of the river in image and verse.

Antoine Panaioti

Navigator · Narrator

The poetic French liaison — bridging Buddhist and Hindu relations to the river with lyric guidance.

Leo Carter

Director of Photography

Capturing the fleeting and the eternal — the transient beauty that dances on the river's face.

Alex Widder

Music · Soundtrack

Composer of the film's flow — scoring the confluence of personalities into one harmonious current.

Kyle James

Producer · The Road

The heartbeat of the expedition — logistics, driving, and the fuel that carried the dream north.

Up Next

Chapter Two: The Wabigoon

Ontario's own case for personhood is already being built. Help carry the movement to its next river.

Join the Movement