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Canada's Air Defence; Capturing Reality: The Art of Documentary; Carts of Darkness; Challenger: An Industrial Romance; The Champagne Safari; The Champions (miniseries) Chi (2013 film) The Children from Overseas; Chile, Obstinate Memory; Christopher's Movie Matinée; Churchill's Island; Cinéma Vérité: Defining the Moment; Circle of the Sun ...
Danielson: A Family Movie; Danny (2019 film) The Dark Side of the White Lady; Dark Suns (film) Dave Not Coming Back; Days (2023 film) Dead Man's Switch: A Crypto Mystery; Deadly Currents; Dear Audrey; Dear Jackie; The Defector: Escape from North Korea; The Defender (1989 film) Dehors Serge dehors; Design Canada; Destierros; Destiny in Space ...
Documentary films about racism in Canada (18 P) Pages in category "Documentary films about Canada" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total.
[22] [23] On February 1, 2014, the film received the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Documentary Screenplay. [24] Stories We Tell was nominated for a 2013 Cinema Eye Honors award and a 2013 International Documentary Association award. [25] [26] It was among the 15 films shortlisted for the 2013 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature ...
It's not easy to find all the best documentaries on a single streaming service. Whether you're in the mood for an awe-inspiring nature movie or a true crime spectacle for the ages, YouTube's ...
Poor No More is a 2010 documentary film directed by Canadian filmmakers Bert Deveaux and Suzanne Babin. The executive producer is David Langille. Hosted by Canadian actor and comedian Mary Walsh, the film is set at the height of the late 2000s recession and looks at solutions for Canada's working poor.
The Champions is a three-part Canadian documentary mini-series on the lives of Canadian political titans and adversaries Pierre Elliott Trudeau and René Lévesque.. Directed by Donald Brittain and co-produced by the National Film Board of Canada and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the series follows Trudeau and Lévesque from their early years until their fall from power in the mid 1980s.
Finding Dawn is a 2006 documentary film by Métis filmmaker Christine Welsh looking into the fate of an estimated 500 Canadian Aboriginal women who have been murdered or have gone missing over the past 30 years. [1]