Having a cinematic tradition that is inexorably linked to the documentary means that the battle between Canadian labour and multinational big business has been well-documented. Since its inception, documentary filmmakers working with
Keep ReadingDOC responds to the NFB’s strategic plan with steps that include restoring production spending and committing to greater racial and filmmaker representation.
Keep Reading"You can’t afford to not have hope. The one thing you can do when you think about what’s happening to trees, is to plant a tree."
Keep ReadingThe End of Certainties would be especially valuable for educational purposes, finding its place in curricula on the topic of globalization. Ultimately the film leaves you wondering what these people would be
Keep ReadingMichelle Latimer's Inconvenient Indian adapts the popular book by Thomas King and shatters colonial narratives about Indigenous people. history and representation.
Keep ReadingClaude Joli-Coeur, Julie Roy, and Jérôme Dufour discuss the 2020-2023 strategic plan released by the National Film Board of Canada (NFB), which emphasizes creators and audience engagement
Keep ReadingIn As the Crow Flies, director Tess Girard captures a visually stunning journey through the clouds piloted by a group of young recruits of the Royal Canadian Air Cadets, many not yet
Keep ReadingInto the Light brings discussions about domestic violence in Canada’s immigrant communities into the open and refreshingly destigmatises the act of speaking out.
Keep ReadingFor many anglophones inside and outside of Quebec, the October crisis represents the first time many considered the unequal treatment of French Canadians within the country. We mark its 50th anniversary with
Keep ReadingJohn Ware Reclaimed is an engaging and insightful film that brings Ware’s legacy to the forefront—where it should have been in the first place.
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