Trained to See – Three Women and the War sees Luzia Schmid spotlight three women journalists who broke the glass ceiling during WWII.
Keep ReadingSoviet Barbara: The Story of Ragnar Kjartansson in Moscow is a true portrait of artistic expression amid life under Putin.
Keep ReadingPure Unknown is the kind of social issue film that always attracts an audience at Hot Docs—and deservedly so in the case of this empathetic work.
Keep ReadingTrained to See—Three Women and the War offers unique insights into World War II via journalists Martha Gellhorn, Lee Miller and Margaret Bourke-White
Keep ReadingJialing Zhang delivers a haunting and vital film that observes the impact of China's surveillance on its own citizens with Total Trust.
Keep ReadingThe Mountains and I Lost My Mom win the Hot Docs awards for best International and Canadian feature.
Keep ReadingThe poetic documentary Sundial harnesses the power of slow cinema to create an immersive and experiential portrait of rural Estonia.
Keep ReadingName Me Lawand feels like a documentary that moves the medium forward with its artistic portrait of a young boy learning British Sign Language.
Keep ReadingIn Is My Living in Vain, Ufuoma Essi artfully considers the role of the church in Black communities on both sides of the ocean.
Keep ReadingPau Faus observes parallels between humans and non-human animals amid the changes of technology in Fauna.
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