Catopia Cinema (January)

from $7.00

Catopia Cinema is our cozy monthly movie night at Purring Oaks. Expect blankets, homemade pizza and salad, low lights, and a comfort film chosen for rest and winter re-entry. This is a low-pressure evening for being together without needing to do or perform anything.

Click Additional Info to learn about this month’s feature film(s).

All events are 420-friendly. We share space with cats — please plan accordingly if you have allergies.

Sliding Scale Pricing
Choose the tier that feels most supportive — all options offer the same experience.

Sliding Scale:

Catopia Cinema is our cozy monthly movie night at Purring Oaks. Expect blankets, homemade pizza and salad, low lights, and a comfort film chosen for rest and winter re-entry. This is a low-pressure evening for being together without needing to do or perform anything.

Click Additional Info to learn about this month’s feature film(s).

All events are 420-friendly. We share space with cats — please plan accordingly if you have allergies.

Sliding Scale Pricing
Choose the tier that feels most supportive — all options offer the same experience.

Movie of the Month! January 30th 6:30-10ish (yes,we are gently time-blind here)

The Eternal Song Over the next two years, we will release a total of 12 full-length films featuring different indigenous traditions.

Each film opens a portal into the ancestral wisdom of these cultures, calling us to remember, grieve, heal, and act.

Our vision for the 12-film Wisdom of the Ancestors documentary series is to honor Indigenous resilience, illuminate sacred wisdom held for humanity and Earth, and invite healing across communities facing trauma and colonial erasure.

First Video in the Series: If an Owl Calls Your Name

Patricia June Vickers, her brother Roy Henry Vickers, and other Indigenous Elders, healers, and activists from the Esk’etemc, Gitxsan, and Wet’suwet’en territories open their hearts and histories in this deeply human story of healing. Read Less Born into a world shaped by the violence of forced assimilation, they carry the intergenerational impact of residential schools, scars that ripple through memory, body, and lineage. Through trauma healing work, ceremony, land, and language, they navigate the deep echoes of intergenerational trauma, transforming disconnection, substance use, and cultural grief into profound pathways of healing and deep remembrance.