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1-14 of 14
- The story of six men lost at sea in the North Atlantic.
- Meet Horace Cloverdale. Today is his birthday. He's the least lucky man on the planet, but that does not stop him from trying. Maybe today he will find what we are all looking for; a lucky break and true love. But will he survive long enough to attain it?
- Jenn's bedtime routine is interrupted by a noise in the closet. Is it her overactive imagination, or is it her darkest fears brought to life?
- Through audio interviews and montage sequences, LSD 25 is the travelogue of a young Nova Scotian woman's trip to Montreal in 1995, and the pyschotronic meltdown which she underwent there. Stephanie Preyde herself eloquently and unflinchingly narrates the film, describing the cumulative effects of the copious amounts of acid she took during that summer, the ongoing and Byzantine delusions which she suffered (Montreal as the lost City of Atlantis amongst others), the repudiation of her physical self, her eventual institutilization and journey to "normalcy." In this experimental documentary -- set to a trippy acid jazz score -- Preyde faces the ongoing repercussion of her trips: a possible misdiagnosis of bipolar disorder instead of temporary acid psychosis, and ironically, lifelong reliance on prescription meds.
- In April 2020, filmmaker Devon Cooke set out on a journey to find out how Canadian farmers make money. Devon spent the next eight months living and working on farms from Vancouver Island to Nova Scotia, as he tried to answer the question "can our farmers afford to feed us?" The Hands That Feed Us challenges audiences to think about what it means to be wealthy and to discover a completely different way of life from the nine to five "hustle culture" of money making. For farmers, wealth comes from stewarding the land - the richest farmers are the ones who have given the most to it. Farmers love their way of life. But does that make it okay that most farmers need off-farm jobs because we pay so little for their food? The farming way of life is threatened by the way farmland is financed. The price of farmland is far beyond the money it earns for farmers, so only giant farms and bigger corporations can access the debt necessary to buy it. Canadians face a choice about our food system: keep supporting it with debt that only corporate multinationals can afford, or adopt an economic system where decisions about farmland are made by the family farmers who live on it.
- A WWII vet returns home to help the daughter of a fallen comrade pursue her dreams of becoming a professional harness racer while he tries to out run his past.
- Join Shane Mountain and guests at Lumberjack's Cookbook to learn how to make fun, unique and customized wood products to impress your friends and family with your new knowledge and skills.
- The first feature length documentary on the life and literary work of the reclusive Pulitzer Prize winning poet from.Nova Scotia. Directed by Nova Scotia native John Scott.
- Living in Flow follows six empowered Atlantic Canadian youth facing different mental health challenges sharing how water has become essential in their self-care journey.
- A cinematic adaptation of Elizabeth Bishop's poem of the same name.
- A whimsical piece that explores the multi-faceted definition of "alone"; the relationship between solitude and loneliness; and the multitude of ways we can embrace being alone while negating the associated stigmas.
- A visual poem about the power of crying.
- A reporter covering a fundraiser for sick dogs will go to any length to get a leg up on her colleagues.