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Endless Cookie
2025 animated documentary film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Endless Cookie is a 2025 Canadian animated documentary film, directed by Seth Scriver and Peter Scriver.
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Summary
The film centres on their experiences as half-brothers who share the same father, but whose relationship faced various complications as they were growing up, including a 16-year age gap and the fact that Peter's mother was a Cree member of the Shamattawa First Nation while Seth's mother was white.
Production
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Seth Scriver created Asphalt Watches in 2013. Daniel Bekerman, who founded Scythia Films, learned of Seth through Asphalt Watches and enjoyed the film. Bekerman became a producer for Endless Cookie[2] and secured funding for it.[3]
Seth, who is white, and his half-brother Peter, who is indigenous,[2] started work on Endless Cookie, a film about their family's history, in 2016, at Peter's house in Shamattawa First Nation. They faced interruptions from the 7 children and 12 dogs in Peter's house,[4][5] but Seth chose to incorporate them into the production.[6] The thousands of miles in distance between Peter and Seth's houses made it so that Seth had to save up money or apply for travel grants in order to record Peter's stories.[7] Peter's family was inexperienced with the microphone Seth gave them and sent 20 blank audio files to him at one point.[8]
Telefilm Canada provided funding for the film and is featured in the film as a character.[5] The National Film Board of Canada did not provide funding for the film, but is mentioned in it as the NFG (No fucking good).[9]
Seth animated around 90% of the film[10] over the course of nine years and Julian Gallese helped for two months.[11] Animation was initially done using Adobe Flash 8, but Seth later switched to Adobe Animate and Adobe After Effects.[7]
The story line about building a tipi was created in order to ground the audience in the world of the characters.[12] A scene in which two car seats hear about the disproportionate incarceration of indigenous people was inspired by the Idle No More protest.[6]
Adobe Premiere Pro was used to edit the film.[12] Alex Ordanis and Sydney Cowper were the ones that assembled the large amount of footage into a coherent film according to Scriver.[11] It was the first animated film that Cowper edited.[12] Over two hours of animation was made for the film, but it was edited to 97 minutes.[5] Cowper was aided by the film being animated as "if something was missing from a scene, Seth could just draw it in".[12] Multiple stories, such as wolves luring pet dogs onto the ice in order to kill them or a kid showing a photograph of Bigfoot, were not included in the final version.[6]
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Release
Endless Cookie premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival as part of the World Cinema Documentary Competition on 25 January.[13] At the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival[14] it received the $50,000 prize from the Rogers Audience Award,[15] and it was the opening film at the imagineNATIVE Film and Media Arts Festival.[15] It was available online from 30 January to 2 February.[13]
MAGNIFY was the sales agent for the global distribution rights.[13] It was released in Canada on 13 June.[16]
Reception
Pat Mullen, writing for Point of View, praised the film's humour and eccentric animation.[17] Carlos Aguilar, writing for Variety, wrote that Seth succeeded at showing the storytelling abilities of his brother and compared the structure and humour of the film to Adventure Time, Regular Show, and Rick and Morty.[18] Jacob Oller gave the film a B rating in The A.V. Club.[19]
Seth stated that his favourite scene in the film was when Peter was interrupted while telling a story about being stuck in his own trap. Cowper stated that her favourite scene was one involving a character throwing chickens onto the streets of Kensington Market.[7]
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Analysis
Chris Robinson, writing for Cartoon Brew, noted that the animation looked like a mix of South Park, Pee-wee's Playhouse, and the works of Gary Baseman (Teacher's Pet).[11] Randall King noted in the Winnipeg Free Press that the animation was reminiscent of the art of Kim Deitch.[9] Brad Wheeler stated in The Globe and Mail that Endless Cookie, like North of North and Inuktitut, did not show the life of indigenous people as an exotic sub-genre.[2] compared it to animations on Adult Swim and the works of Richard Scarry.[19]
Seth listed Akira Toriyama, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Juzo Itami, Stephen Chow, The Fugs, and Michael Hurley as his creative heroes.[10]
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Accolades
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References
Works cited
External links
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