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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.
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)
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.
The generation of English people living on the prairies who could speak French." The documentary remains the first and probably only documentary to examine Canada's bilingualism through the eyes of the Generation Xers. Annau's inspiration derived after the 1995 Quebec referendum where she felt her generation's voices were being sidelined."In ...
The film won Best Music Documentary at the 2017 Boulder International Film Festival. [6] At the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, the film won both of the Audience Award categories. [7] In December, the Toronto International Film Festival named the film to its annual Canada's Top Ten list of the ten best Canadian films. [8]
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.
Pink Ribbons, Inc. is a 2011 National Film Board of Canada (NFB) documentary about the pink ribbon campaign, directed by Léa Pool and produced by Ravida Din. [1] The film is based on the 2006 book Pink Ribbons, Inc: Breast Cancer and the Politics of Philanthropy by Samantha King, associate professor of kinesiology and health studies at Queen's University.
The Grizzlie Truth is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Kathleen Jayme and released in 2022. Following up on Jayme's 2018 film Finding Big Country, the film traces the history of the ill-fated Vancouver Grizzlies of the National Basketball Association, attempting to trace the reasons for the team's relocation to Memphis.