This year’s Canadian documentary selection at the Vancouver International Film Festival is highlighted by a pair of portraits of gifted British Columbia-based artists: Natalie Boll and LaTiesha Fazakas’s Meet Beau Dick: Maker of Monsters,
Keep ReadingThe title of a 2007 documentary says it all: Let’s All Hate Toronto. Ontario is a province that houses two formidable capitals, and while Ottawa officially represents the seat of Canadian political power,
Keep ReadingHugh Gibson's The Stairs and Charles Officer's Unarmed Verses are two docs set in Toronto’s social housing districts
Keep ReadingRay Klonsky, Chelsea McMullan, Nimisha Mukerji, and Victoria Lean are among a new generation of Canadian filmmakers breaking out.
Keep ReadingBrian M. Cassidy and Melanie Shatzky curate a selection of films at RIDM based around photographic images in the series A Photographer’s Eye.
Keep ReadingBehind the scenes looks at Apocalypse Now, Fitzcarraldo, and Jodorowsky’s unfinished Dune reveal how docs about filmmaking can exceed the original films themselves.
Keep ReadingMichèle Hozer's Sugar Coated, Mia Donovan's Deprogrammed, Ryan Mullins' Chameleon, and Jerry Rothwell's How to Change the World bring activist stories to Hot Docs 2015.
Keep ReadingYou’d be hard-pressed in 2014 to find anybody working in Canadian cinema who doesn’t owe something to Peter Harcourt.
Keep ReadingSturla Gunnarsson's Monsoon is a majestic new documentary shot on location in India and beneath torrents of relentless rain.
Keep ReadingThere’s a tingling contradiction in the idea of a documentary about Utopias: how does one ethnographize a ‘non-existent place’?
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