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1-13 of 13
- The film tells the story of three couples on the road between the Atlantic coast and the Northwest Territories in Canada.
- Dave, an urban aboriginal in his early twenties, is a Montreal actor. His adoption at the age of 3 has erased all memory of his Native culture. When he receives his first-ever contact with his biological mother through a photo in the mail, Dave leaves for Kinogamish, the reserve where he was born. And where his biological mother, Gertrude, still lives. The reunion does not unfold as expected and Dave becomes disoriented, confronted with a world that seems hostile and foreign. Although alienated from his Native culture, can Dave find a home there? Like Hamlet, the Shakespearian hero who he is working on in theatre class, Dave starts to experience an identity crisis. His unplanned return to this desolate community causes upheavals and chain reactions, while dredging up a painful past scarred by secrets and lies.
- A yakuza thriller, hiding in its maze the complexity of those who live as they can. Because what they want and what they get are two very different things.
- Directed by French documentary filmmaker Charles Najman, Royal Bonbon is the tale of a modern-day man who believes himself to be Henri Christophe, liberator of Haitian slaves during the early 1800s. King Chacha (Dominique Battraville) declares himself a ruler and his lady friend (Anne-Louise Mesadieux) a queen. When he is kicked out of Cap-Haitien, he joins up with young boy Thimothee (Benji) for a journey out of town. They end up in the abandoned palace of Sans Souci, which Chrisophe had built himself. Gathering support from the population of the next village, King Chacha lives out his dream as a ruler. Before long, he becomes a tyrant and is overthrown in a revolt.
- Canadian artist Emily Carr's diaries inspired composer Jean Coulthard's 1967 cantata for narrator, mezzo-soprano, and chamber ensemble. The Pines of Emily Carr interweaves performance, landscape, and visual effects to create its own film poem.
- Sixty years after the raid at Dieppe, photographer Bertrand Carrière brings 913 portraits of men to an Upper Normandy beach to create an ephemeral photographic installation, condemned to be destroyed by the wind and the rising tide.
- -An intimate portrait of two Muslim women from Quebec (in Canada), this documentary explores the reality of veiled women in today's Quebec.
- A celebration of the work of the late great choreographer Jean-Pierre Perreault, through the words and the movement of his principal dancers
- Grass is a luxury that represents relaxation, freedom, time off and of course, time away from the world of tarmac and concrete. A wild and quirky ride into the world of one of America's longest-standing obsessions, the perfect lawn.