Issue 61 - Spring 2006
Nelofer Pazira captures the truth from the frontlines of Afghanistan while Allan King, director of Warrendale and Dying at Grace, receives his due as one of the true masters of Canadian cinema.
Journalist, memoir writer, documentary filmmaker, actor. At the age of 32, Nelofer Pazira has accomplished much behind, and in front of, the camera. Judith Doyle looks at the woman behind the accomplishments.
Read MoreToronto’s Floria Sigismondi has created some of the finest music videos in the world, featuring top performers ranging from David Bowie to Fiona Apple
Read MoreCanada’s Allan King is unquestionably one of our greatest unknown treasures, the undisputed Godfather of Documentary Film.
Read MoreJeremy Munce’s award-winning documentary The Alma Drawings investigates the odd tale of a quiet Ontario woman who created powerful, mystical paintings.
Read MoreThe inaugural DOC Salon screening was of Robert Greenwald’s Outfoxed, a cheeky deconstruction of what some call the Faux News Network.
Read MoreThis is yet another coffee table book foray into the minds of some key documentary-makers like D.A. Pennebaker, Albert Maysles and Ken Burns, and several more not represented by separate chapters, such as Carol Dysinger and Sheila Nevins. Though each
Read MorePat Aufderheide’s catch words for Fair Use are: transformation, commentary, context, and taking only as much as needed to make a point.
Read MoreWhen it comes to financing Canadian productions, how far will the Tories go to walk the talk of rebalancing the wrongs of aggressive marginalization?
Read MoreA Fire Horse is supposed to bring bad luck and tough living. That superstition has been broken in Eve and the Fire Horse, as well as in real life.
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