In The Uncondemned, Michele Mitchell and the late Nick Louvel tackle the complexity of trying rape as a war crime.
Keep ReadingI Am Sun Mu is a bold and compelling portrait of an artist fighting a totalitarian system and triumphing through his work.
Keep ReadingThe Infinite Happiness shows that some of the most satisfying elements of urban life aren’t to be found in concrete jungles.
Keep ReadingBryn Evans' Hip Hop-eration offers a crowd-pleasing tale that defies age and celebrates life with its portrait of golden-age boppers.
Keep ReadingPing’an yueqing might be Ai Weiwei's most engaged work of activism as a filmmaker with its chilling portrait of China under surveillance.
Keep ReadingAbbas Kiarostami’s hybrid films draw upon documentary, neo-realism, and dramatic filmmaking, and blur the lines of fiction/non-fiction.
Keep ReadingNiobe Thompson and Darren Fung discuss their epic mini-series The Great Human Odyssey and its accompanying live-score orchestration.
Keep ReadingPart 2 of POV's 2015 Focus on Education survey looks at film programmes at Carleton University, Queen's University, U of T, NSCAD, Fanshawe College, the University of Manitoba, and Concordia.
Keep ReadingStar Men follows stargazers Roger, Donald, Nick, and Wal, four lifelong friends whose work collectively advanced the field of astronomy.
Keep ReadingReview of the Oscar-nominated short docs Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah, The Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness, Chau, Body Team 12, and Last Day of Freedom.
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