Blue Island Review: Welcome to the Island of Depression
Blue Island explores what it means (and has meant) to be a Hongkonger over the last 150 years in the shadow of mainland China.
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Blue Island explores what it means (and has meant) to be a Hongkonger over the last 150 years in the shadow of mainland China.
In We Feed People, Ron Howard profiles celebrity chef José Andrés as he strives provides relief to the hungry through World Central Kitchen.
Michelangelo Frammartino's Il Buco ponders the intangible mysteries of existence as curious researchers explore caves with wonder.
Boylesque, directed by Bogna Kowalczyk, profiles Andrzej Szwan, who performs as Poland’s eldest drag queen Lulla La Polaca at 82 years young.
Batata is an extraordinary film because Noura Kevorkian stuck with it, even as the human drama changed, and the politics of the situation became more dire and complex.
In the beautifully shot Shelter, Tess Girard returns to Horning’s Mills, the small town in Ontario where she spent so much of her time while growing up.
Inspired by Sable Island and its one constant human inhabitant Zoe Lucas, filmmaker Jacquelyn Mills has constructed a work of art with Geographies of Solitude.
Animated documentary Eternal Spring is the new leader in the Hot Docs Audience Award rankings with the May 4th update.
Nathalie Bibeau discusses her true crime mini-series The Unsolved Murder of Beverly Lynn Smith and injecting nuance into a genre that audiences have seen many times before.
Just Animals directors Saila Kivelä and Vesa Kuosmanen discuss their film about animal rights and an activist's ability to inspire change.