A Story of Sahel Sounds (Germany, 82 mi.) Programme: Artscapes (North American Premiere) There’s a term that has gained credence in recent years to describe the new wave of interest in
Keep ReadingRecruiting for Jihad is a Vice-style profile of Norwegian Islamist Ubaydullah Hussain, but is ultimately a bit of a missed opportunity.
Keep ReadingFrançois Jacob’s A Moon of Nickel and Ice, Ann Shin’s My Enemy, My Brother and Mila Aung-Thwin and Van Royko’s Let There Be Light offer global perspectives
Keep ReadingArguably the first Canadian music video, The Ballad of Crowfoot sees Mi’kmaq singersongwriter Willie Dunn setting his own epic protest ballad to visuals. In Dunn’s song, the biography of legendary 19th-century Blackfoot chief
Keep ReadingA characteristically intimate study of an experimental psychiatric centre for adolescents in Etobicoke, Ontario, Warrendale is both King’s most provocative film bearing a family resemblance to Frederick Wiseman’s devastating Titicut Follies
Keep ReadingThe World in Ten Blocks creators Marc Serpa Francoeur and Robinder Uppal discuss their interactive doc about Toronto's diverse make-up.
Keep ReadingPeter Svatek's Theater of Life takes audiences inside Refettorio Ambrosiano, a soup kitchen in Milan established by internationally renowned chef Massimo Bottura where food waste feeds the homeless with signature gourmet cuisine.
Keep ReadingIn All Governments Lie, Fred Peabody and Peter Raymont consider the legacy of independent journalists like I.F. Stone in the age of Trump.
Keep ReadingSergei Loznitsa's Austerlitz is an immersion in the absence of meaning, becoming a sort of nihilistic totem to the impossibility of understanding.
Keep ReadingWang Bing's Ta'ang is a vivid document of lived experience, but as a feature documentary, it could use a bit more context or inquisitiveness.
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