Interest: Social Justice & Politics
Citizen Duane
Duane's favourite teacher (Fox), his girlfriend and even his mom try to dissuade him from his goal, but Duane's irrepressible desire to challenge the powers that be is too strong. With the help of his misfit uncle (Logue), he just might stand a chance of becoming a credible candidate!
“Napoleon Dynamite — Canuck style!” — Jim Slotek, Sun Media
Director
Michael Mabbott
Writer/director Mabbott made his debut with 2005’s Life and Hard Times of Guy Terrifico, winning Best Canadian First Feature Film at the Toronto International Film Festival. He followed with Citizen Duane and television shows like Baxter and The Yard. His short documentary Music Lessons premiered at Hot Docs 2015. He also wrote, produced, and co-directed Any Other Way: The Jackie Shane Story, which was named to the TIFF 2024 Top Ten List.
Writers
Robert DeLeskie, Jonathan Sobol
Cast
Douglas Smith, Devon Bostic, Vivica A. Fox, Donal Logue
Producers
Susan Cavan, Carolynne Bell
Genres
Comedy, Drama
Interest
Social Justice & Politics
Original Language
English
Le déclin de l’empire américain (The Decline of the American Empire)
While the story is set in the world of academia, there’s nothing bookish or stuffy about the stories that emerge! Satirical and witty, Le déclin de l'empire américain evolves from a comedy of manners to a poignant and moving exploration of relationship and loss.
Ranking twice in the Top 10 Canadian Films of All Time list (both the 1993 and 2004 lists), the film was nominated for an Academy Award and won nine Genie Awards.
Director
Denys Arcand
A Companion of the Order of Canada and a Knight of the Ordre national du Québec, Arcand is an icon of Canadian and Québécois cinema, and his work has earned him four Academy Award nominations, including a win for Best Foreign Language Film for Les invasions barbares. Le déclin de l'empire américain became the highest grossing film in Quebec, and his iconic Jésus de Montréal won 12 Genie Awards. His other films include Réjeanne Padovani, La chute de l'empire américain, and Testament.
Writer
Denys Arcand
Cast
Pierre Curzi, Dorothée Berryman, Louise Portal, Rémy Girard, Gabriel Arcand
Producers
Roger Frappier, René Malo
Genres
Comedy, Drama
Interests
Arts and Culture, Family Relationships, Social Justice & Politics
Original Language
French
Polytechnique
There are some tragedies so devastating they defy rational understanding. Villeneuve films in black and white, shifting back and forth in time, attempting to maintain a sane and calm point of view in the face of just such a senseless act of violence. The result is a sensitive yet stark account of one of the more profoundly disturbing crimes in recent Canadian history.
The film won nine Genie Awards, including Best Motion Picture, and five Jutra Awards. The Toronto Film Critics Association awarded it the Best Canadian Film Prize, with critic Brian D. Johnson referring to it as “a film of astonishing courage.”
Director
Denis Villeneuve
Writer
Jacques Davidts
Cast
Maxim Gaudette, Sébastien Huberdeau, Karine Vanasse, Evelyne Brochu
Producers
Julien Rémillard, Maxime Rémillard, André Rouleau, Don Carmody
Genres
Drama, Thriller
Interests
History, Social Justice & Politics
Original Language
French
The Skin We’re In
An urgent exploration of race relations, this documentary from acclaimed director Charles Officer follows award-winning journalist and activist Desmond Cole as he pulls back the curtain on racism in Canada, inviting all Canadians to understand the experience of being in his skin. Cole won a National Magazine Award for his impactful and incisive Toronto Life cover story about carding and racial profiling. Now, in Officer’s starkly honest doc, he journeys across North America, exploring what it’s really like to be Black in the 21st century.
“Cole’s journey is not just toward discovery, but toward the unveiling of a desperate, hidden truth: the truth about the skin he’s in. And the Canada we thought we knew.” – CBC.ca
Director
Charles Officer
Actor, writer and filmmaker Officer’s first feature, Nurse.Fighter.Boy, was nominated for 10 Genies, winning one. Officer also directed the docs Mighty Jerome, The Skin We're In, Unarmed Verses, and Invisible Essence: The Little Prince, as well as the feature Akilla's Escape, which won five CSAs. He directed episodes of Coroner, and executive produced and co-directed The Porter, which was nominated for an Emmy. Officer passed away in 2023. He changed the Canadian film and television landscape with his fierce dedication to portraying Black perspectives and experiences, and is greatly missed.
Cast
Desmond Cole
Producer
Stuart Henderson
Genre
Documentary
Interests
BIPOC Stories, Discrimination, Social Justice & Politics
Original Language
English
The Secret Path
Gord Downie began The Secret Path as ten poems inspired by the story of Chanie Wenjack, a twelve-year-old Anishinaabe boy who died on October 22, 1966, while fleeing from the Cecilia Jeffrey Indian Residential School near Kenora, Ontario. Chanie was attempting to walk home to his family over 600 km away. Gord learned about the story of Chanie (misnamed “Charlie” by his teachers) through his brother Mike, who introduced him to Ian Adams’ Maclean’s story from February 6, 1967, “The Lonely Death of Charlie Wenjack.”
First released in 2016, The Secret Path marks its 10th anniversary this year. The project includes an album, a graphic novel illustrated by Jeff Lemire, and an animated film. Together, the Secret Path project has become a powerful tool for education, reflection and conversation about the ongoing impacts of residential schools in Canada.
Lesson plans for The Secret Path have been generously provided in partnership with the Gord Downie & Chanie Wenjack Fund. Join the Legacy Schools program to receive a free Legacy Schools toolkit and gain access to resources throughout the school year.
Director
Gord Downie
Downie was a legendary musician, writer, poet, and activist, best known as the frontman of the iconic band, The Tragically Hip. He won six Junos and two Canadian Screen Awards for his music, and is remembered as a brilliant lyricist and inspiring figure in Canadian music. The Secret Path was his directorial debut.
Writers
Gord Downie, Mike Downie
Producers
Gord Downie, Jeff Lemire, Justin Stephenson
Genres
Animation, Drama
Interests
Biography, BIPOC Stories, Discrimination, History, Literary Adaptation, Social Justice & Politics
Original Language
English
Canada: A People’s History
Dramatic and gripping, this popular series illustrates pivotal moments in Canada’s history, bringing a compelling intimacy to grand, historic developments. From the stories passed down through oral tradition to the first encounters between Indigenous peoples and Europeans, through the battles that engulfed the continent and the formation of the Dominion of Canada in 1867, to the modern era of feminism, multiculturalism and globalization, this captivating series brings to life the moments that have shaped our nation, telling Canada’s story through the eyes of the people who lived it.
Canada: A People’s History won the Gemini Award for Best Documentary Series and attracted over 14 million viewers. It is a collaborative production between the CBC and Radio-Canada and is available in both English and French.
Students can explore Canadian history further by delving into the series’ award-winning website (www.cbc.ca/history), which features behind-the-scenes footage, games, puzzles, lesson plans and links to other historical resources.
Each 105 minute episode is made up of several 10-to-15-minute segments, which can be shown independently. For a more detailed breakdown of the topics covered in each episode, please see www.cbc.ca/history.
SERIES 1: 15,000 B.C. to 1800 A.D. For centuries, the territory now known as Canada is home to over 50 Indigenous nations, each with unique traditions and culture. In the 16th century, European explorers arrive, creating Canada’s first colonies, and forever changing the landscape and the lives of the First Peoples.
SERIES 2: 1670 to 1873 By the 1800s, British exploration opens the West to settlement, laying the foundation of a new nation, but also displacing and devastating Indigenous inhabitants. Confederation soon follows, with the creation of the Dominion of Canada in 1867.
SERIES 3: 1873 to 1940 Canada’s early years are fraught with economic depression, rebellions and tension between English- and French-speaking Canadians. Immigration, rapid growth and sociopolitical change follow, ending abruptly with World War II, a pivotal moment in Canada’s quest for autonomy that comes at the enormous cost of 60,000 lives.
SERIES 4: 1940 to 1990 The end of the Great Depression and the flames and ravages of World War II give way to a new era of peace, progress and prosperity, as well as free trade, globalization, feminism, Indigenous land claims, multiculturalism, Québec nationalism and the explosion of computer technology.
Directors
Writers
Hubert Gendron, Mark Starowicz, Gene Allen
Producer
Mark Starowicz
Genre
Documentary
Interests
History, Social Justice & Politics
Original Languages
English, French
Future History
Beautifully shot and packed with powerful interviews, Future History celebrates and explores diverse Indigenous perspectives to create a deeper understanding of our shared history as well as a positive path forward. It is a journey that can’t be missed.
Each 21-minute episode can be viewed independently, or you can watch it as a complete series. Contact us for specific programming recommendations.
Directors
Jennifer Podemski (Anishinaabe)
Podemski is an award-winning film and television producer and actor. She produced and starred in Empire of Dirt, is the creator and producer of APTN’s The Other Side, and most recently produced and directed the series Unsettled.
Nyla Innuksuk (Inuk)
Innuksuk is a director, writer, producer, and VR creator. She co-created the Inuk character Snowguard with Marvel and has written several short films and documentaries. Her first feature was Slash/Back, released in 2022.
Writer
Tamara Podemski (Anishinaabe)
Cast
Kris Nahrgang (Anishinaabe/Ojibwe), Sarain Fox (Anishinaabe)
Genre
Documentary
Interests
BIPOC Stories, Discrimination, History, Indigenous Filmmaker, Social Justice & Politics
Original Language
English
Roméo onze (Romeo Eleven)
Director
Ivan Grbovic
Writer
Sara Mishara
Cast
Joseph Bou Nassar, Eleonore Millier, Ali Ammar, Sanda Bourenane
Genre
Drama
Interests
BIPOC Stories, Social Justice & Politics
Original Languages
French, Other Language
One Day in the Life of Noah Piugattuk
It is 1961 in Kapuivik, north Baffin Island, and Noah Piugattuk’s nomadic Inuit band live and hunt by dog team as his ancestors did when he was born in 1900. When the white man known as Boss arrives at Piugattuk’s hunting camp, what appears as a chance meeting soon opens up the prospect of momentous change.
Boss is an agent of the government, assigned to get Piugattuk to move his band to permanent housing, assimilate his children into settler society and give up their traditional way of life.
Told through the extended showdown between Inuit camp leader Noah Piugattuk (Kotierk) and a government emissary (Bodnia) (as well as the translator who must help them communicate), One Day in the Life of Noah Piugattuk is a deeply absorbing account of a little-known and important piece of Inuit and Canadian history.
“One Day In The Life Of Noah Piugattuk illustrates Inuit-colonial relationships brilliantly.” - Kelly Boutsalis, NOW Magazine
Director
Zacharias Kunuk (Inuk)
In 2015, Atanarjuat was selected as TIFF’s number one Canadian film of all time. Kunuk has directed shorts such as Exile and Home and features such as Maliglutit, which was nominated for two CSAs. He recently directed the series Hunting With My Ancestors and executive produced SGaawaay K'uuna (Edge of the Knife). His latest feature, One Day in the Life of Noah Piugattuk, premiered at TIFF 2019. Most recently, he directed the short The Shaman’s Apprentice, which won the CSA for Best Animated Short among other awards at festivals worldwide.
Writers
Zacharias Kunuk (Inuk), Norman Cohn
Cast
Apayata Kotierk (Inuk), Kim Bodnia, Benjamin Kunuk (Inuk), Tessa Kunuk, Mark Taqqaugaq
Producers
Jonathan Frantz, Zacharias Kunuk (Inuk)
Genre
Drama
Interests
BIPOC Stories, History, Indigenous Filmmaker, Social Justice & Politics
Original Language
Inuktitut
We Were Children
Harrowing stories of survivors of the Canadian Indian residential school system are woven together in this profoundly moving film about the resilience of the human spirit in the face of institutionalised racism, abuse and injustice on a national scale.
Director
Tim Wolochatiuk
Writer
Jason Sherman
Producers
Kyle Irving, David Christensen
Genres
Documentary, Drama
Interests
BIPOC Stories, History, Indigenous Filmmaker, Social Justice & Politics
Original Languages
English, French, Other Language
