Who We Are: A Chronicle of Racism in America sees the ACLU's Jeffrey Robinson deliver a compelling exploration of the nation's past and future.
Keep ReadingWanita Bahtiyar is one hot mess. The Australian honky tonk singer aims to hit the restart button on a stillborn musical career. Her comeback fuels the offbeat, entertaining, and consistently surprising documentary
Keep ReadingAn interview with director Courtney Montour about Mary Two-Axe Earley: I Am Indian Again, honouring the Mohawk activist, and drawing upon the work of Alanis Obomsawin.
Keep ReadingAn individualโs effort to make the world a better place can often feel like a drop in the ocean. Not in this case. Hell or Clean Water reminds audiences that one drop
Keep ReadingโWhat the fuck am I doing here?โ asks the narrator towards the end of Lost Boys. A similar question passed through this reviewerโs mind multiple times whilst screening the film. Lost Boys
Keep ReadingSystems Down, one of this yearโs themed programs at Hot Docs, features a collection of stories about individuals fighting against broken structures of oppression. Fitting snugly into the theme of the good
Keep ReadingโChinese rock โnโ roll is like a rolling egg,โ says musician Cui Jian at the end of You Are the Days to Come. โYet, we have not been broken or harmed. I
Keep ReadingFรฉlix Dufour-Laperriรจreโs Archipelago is an animated essay that navigates territories real and imagined while interrogating the mythology and history of Quebec.
Keep ReadingVladimir Dvorkin was a prolific artist who painted thousands of beautiful portraits during his lifetime. One wouldnโt know it, however, from gallery catalogues, exhibition reviews, or Google searches. One wouldnโt even know
Keep ReadingFurther proof that Canadian arts can learn a lot from their Australian counterparts can be seen in Firestarter โ The Story of Bangarra. This striking dance doc is a portrait of the
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