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Canada: A People's History is a 17-episode, 32-hour documentary television series on the history of Canada. It first aired on CBC Television from October 2000 to November 2001. [ 1 ] The production was an unusually large project for the national network, especially during budget cutbacks.
Just Watch Me: Trudeau and the '70s Generation (French title: Frenchkiss : La génération du rêve Trudeau) is a Canadian documentary film by Catherine Annau, produced in 1999 by the National Film Board of Canada. The documentary follows eight Generation Xers from various parts of Canada that have been impacted by former Prime Minister Pierre ...
Wild Canada is a Canadian documentary television miniseries, which aired in 2014 on CBC Television as part of its The Nature of Things series. [1] Created by documentarians Jeff and Sue Turner, [ 2 ] the series profiles the natural environment of Canada through high-definition video footage. [ 1 ]
Best Documentary Film Genie and Canadian Screen Award winners (2 C, 56 P) Best Documentary Film Jutra and Iris Award winners (29 P) National Film Board of Canada documentaries (14 C, 440 P)
Documentary films about law in Canada (4 C, 1 P) O. Documentary films about Ontario (1 C, 11 P) P. Documentary films about Canadian politics (3 C, 8 P) Q.
Licensed as The Canadian Documentary Channel on November 24, 2000 by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), it was launched as the Documentary Channel on September 7, 2001 under the majority ownership of Corus Entertainment through their YTV Canada Inc. subsidiary (53%), the CBC (29%), the NFB (14%), and the following film producers at 1% each: Omni Film ...
Life in a Day is a crowd-sourced documentary film comprising an arranged series of video clips selected from 80,000 clips submitted to the YouTube video sharing website, the clips showing respective occurrences from around the world on a single day, 24 July 2010.
This award-winning documentary film, shot in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada’s notorious Downtown Eastside, caught the eyes of audiences, film makers and critics worldwide for its unusual and sensitive depiction of life on the street. Through A Blue Lens documents a year of life and death on the street and behind tenement walls.