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World premiere of Min Sook Lee’s powerful NFB feature doc There Are No Words at TIFF

PRESS RELEASE
06/08/2025

August 6, 2025 – Toronto – National Film Board of Canada (NFB)

Min Sook Lee’s deeply personal National Film Board of Canada (NFB) feature documentary There Are No Words will have its world premiere at the 50th Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), which takes place September 4–14, 2025.

Over 40 years ago, Lee’s mother died by suicide. In There Are No Words, the award-winning Toronto filmmaker explores long-held silences, unstable memories and unforgettable truths, attempting to understand what happened.

There Are No Words will screen in the TIFF Docs program, showcasing the best in non-fiction cinema from around the world.

More about There Are No Words (98 min)
Produced for the NFB by Sherien Barsoum and Chanda Chevannes 

Min Sook Lee turns the camera on herself in this urgent documentary, searching for memories of her mother, Song Ji Lee, who died by suicide when Lee was just 12 years old.

Confrontational and speculative, There Are No Words reckons with how trauma fractures memory as Lee revisits the people and places of her childhood in Toronto, Canada, and Hwasun, South Korea, her place of birth.

A looming figure in this search is Lee’s now 90-year-old father, who met her mother while serving in a national intelligence agency under dictator Park Chung Hee in 1960s South Korea. He is her last direct connection to her mother, although he’s an unreliable narrator with a history of abuse who speaks in a mother tongue she cannot fully understand.

Through a fabric of real and imagined histories, Lee reveals that some stories must still be told, even when there are no words for grief.

“Silence and shame followed my mother’s suicide. I realized that if I didn’t make this film, a default narrative would take over that amounted to a permanent death of who she was and could have been. I used this documentary to give life back to both of us.”

—Min Sook Lee

About the filmmaker

Min Sook Lee is an award-winning director whose work explores themes of labour, migration and social justice. Her acclaimed documentaries include Migrant Dreams (2016), named Best Labour Documentary by the Canadian Association of Journalists and recipient of the Canadian Hillman Prize; The Real Inglorious Bastards (2012), winner of a Canadian Screen Award; Tiger Spirit (2008), which won the Donald Brittain Gemini Award; Hogtown (2005), named Best Canadian Feature at Hot Docs; and the Gemini-nominated El Contrato (2003).

She is a recipient of numerous awards, including the Cesar E. Chavez Black Eagle Award and the Alanis Obomsawin Award for Commitment to Community and Resistance. Canada’s oldest labour arts festival, Mayworks, has named the Min Sook Lee Labour Arts Award in her honour.

Lee is an Associate Professor at OCAD University, where her area of research and practice focuses on the critical intersections of art and social change in labour, border politics, migration and social justice movements.

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French version here | Version française ici.

Media Relations

  • About the NFB

    Founded in 1939, the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) is a one-of-a-kind producer, co-producer and distributor of engaging, relevant and innovative documentary and animated films. As a talent incubator, it is one of the world’s leading creative centres. The NFB has enabled Canadians to tell and hear each other’s stories for over eight decades, and its films are a reliable and accessible educational resource. The NFB is also recognized around the world for its expertise in preservation and conservation, and for its rich and vibrant collection of works, which form a pillar of Canada’s cultural heritage. To date, the NFB has produced more than 14,000 works, 7,000 of which can be streamed free of charge at nfb.ca. The NFB and its productions and co-productions have earned over 7,000 awards, including 11 Oscars and an Honorary Academy Award for overall excellence in cinema.