Cinema of Canada

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Cinema of Canada

TorontoPinewoodStudios.JPG
Pinewood Toronto Studios


No. of screens
3,114 (2015)[1]
 • Per capita9.6 per 100,000 (2015)[1]
Main distributors
Universal 20.9%
Disney 18.7%
Warner Bros. 13.3%[2]
Produced feature films (2015)[3]
Total103
Fictional77 (74.8%)
Documentary26 (25.2%)
Number of admissions (2015)[4]
Total118,000,000
Gross box office (2015)[4]
TotalC$986 million
National filmsC$18.8 million (1.9%)



The cinema of Canada or Canadian cinema refers to the filmmaking industry in Canada. Canada is home to several film studios centres, primarily located in its three largest metropolitan centres: Toronto, Ontario, Montreal, Quebec and Vancouver, British Columbia. Industries and communities tend to be regional and niche in nature. Approximately 1,000 Anglophone-Canadian and 600 Francophone-Canadian feature-length films have been produced, or partially produced, by the Canadian film industry since 1911.


Notable filmmakers from English Canada include James Cameron, David Cronenberg, Guy Maddin, Atom Egoyan, Patricia Rozema, Sarah Polley, Deepa Mehta, Thom Fitzgerald, John Greyson, Clement Virgo, Allan King, Michael McGowan, and Michael Snow. Notable filmmakers from French Canada include Claude Jutra, Gilles Carle, Denys Arcand, Jean Beaudin, Robert Lepage, Denis Villeneuve, Jean-Marc Vallée, Léa Pool, Xavier Dolan, Philippe Falardeau, and Michel Brault.


The cinema of English-speaking Canada is heavily intertwined with the cinema of the neighbouring United States: though there is a distinctly Canadian cinematic tradition, there are also Canadian films that have no obvious Canadian identity (examples include Porky's and Meatballs), Canadian-American co-productions filmed in Canada (including My Big Fat Greek Wedding and the Saw series); American films filmed in Canada (including the Night at the Museum and Final Destination films, among hundreds of others); and American films with Canadian directors and/or actors. Canadian directors who are best known for their American-produced films include Norman Jewison, Jason Reitman, Paul Haggis, and James Cameron; Cameron, in particular, wrote and directed the two highest-grossing films of all time, Avatar and Titanic, respectively.


Canadian actors who achieved success in Hollywood include Mary Pickford, Norma Shearer, Christopher Plummer, Donald Sutherland, Michael J. Fox, Keanu Reeves, Jim Carrey, Ryan Gosling, Rachel McAdams, and Ryan Reynolds, among hundreds of others.




Contents





  • 1 History


  • 2 Contemporary production and distribution


  • 3 Problems in the Canadian film industry

    • 3.1 Case studies: Porky's and Meatballs


    • 3.2 Current developments



  • 4 Notable films


  • 5 Directors


  • 6 Producers


  • 7 Writers


  • 8 See also


  • 9 Further reading


  • 10 References


  • 11 Further reading


  • 12 External links




History





Evangeline (1913), the first feature film in Canada; made by Canadian Bioscope Company


The first films that were shot in Canada were made at Niagara Falls; Lumière, Edison, and Biograph all shot there in 1897. James Freer is recognized as the first Canadian filmmaker. A farmer from Manitoba, his documentaries were shown as early as 1897 and were toured across England, under the title Ten Years in Manitoba, in an effort to promote immigration to Manitoba.


The first fiction film, Hiawatha, the Messiah of the Ojibway, was made in 1903 by Joe Rosenthal.[5] The first Canadian feature film, Evangeline, was produced by the Canadian Bioscope Company in 1913 and shot in Nova Scotia.


In 1917, the province of Ontario established the Ontario Motion Picture Bureau, "to carry out educational work for farmers, school children, factory workers, and other classes." The Canadian Government Motion Picture Bureau followed suit in 1918. The British Columbia Patriotic and Educational Picture Service, which produced and distributed short films about British Columbia in an attempt to counteract "Americanism" in Hollywood films, operated from 1920 to 1923.


The Cinematograph Films Act 1927 established a quota of films that had to be shown in British cinemas that would be shot in Great Britain as well as nations in the British Empire that stimulated Canadian film production. However the Cinematograph Films Act 1938 mollified the British film industry by specifying only films made by and shot in Great Britain would be included in the quota, an act that severely reduced Canadian film production.[6]


In 1938, the Government of Canada invited John Grierson, a British film critic and film-maker, to study the state of the government's film production and this led to the National Film Act of 1939 and the establishment of the National Film Board of Canada, an agency of the Canadian government. In part, it was founded to create propaganda in support of the Second World War, and the National Film Act of 1950 gave it the mandate "to interpret Canada to Canadians and to other nations." In the late 1950s, Québécois filmmakers at the NFB and the NFB Candid Eye series of films pioneered the documentary processes that became known as "direct cinema" or cinema vérité.


Federal government measures as early as 1954, and through the 1960s and 1970s, aimed to foster the development of a feature film industry in Canada; in 1968 the Canadian Film Development Corporation was established (later to become Telefilm Canada) and an effort to stimulate domestic production through tax shelters peaked in the late 1970s (see Meatballs below).



Contemporary production and distribution


As in all cinema, the line between broadcast and cinema continues to be blurred in Canada as the means of production and distribution converge.


A typical Canadian film production is made with money from a complex array of government funding and incentives, government mandated funds from broadcasters, broadcasters themselves, and film distributors. International co-productions are increasingly important for Canadian producers. Smaller films are often funded by arts councils (at all levels of government) and film collectives.


The National Film Board of Canada is internationally renowned for its animation and documentary production. More recently it has been criticized for its increasingly commercial orientation; only one third of its budget is now spent on the production of new films.[citation needed]


Much of Canada's film industry services American producers and films driven by American distribution, and this part of the industry has been nicknamed "Hollywood North".


The major production centres are Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. In 2011, Toronto ranked third in North America, behind only Los Angeles and New York City, in total industry production;[7] however, for several years previous, Vancouver's industry outputs exceeded those for Toronto.


Alliance Atlantis (acquired by CanWest Global Communications in 2007) is the major Canadian distributor of American and international films and in 2003 it ceased to produce films (and almost all television) to focus almost exclusively on distribution. Lions Gate Entertainment has also become a major distributor in recent years.


Distribution continues to be a problem for Canadian filmmakers, though an established network of film festivals also provide important marketing and audience exposure for Canadian films. The major festival is the Toronto International Film Festival, considered one of the most important events in North American film, showcasing Hollywood films, cinema from around the world, and Canadian film. The smaller Vancouver International Film Festival features films from around the world, and festivals in Montreal, Sudbury (Cinéfest), and Halifax (Atlantic Film Festival)—among other cities—are also important opportunities for Canadian filmmakers to gain exposure among film audiences. Very often, however, a Canadian film's largest opportunity to achieve a significant audience comes from negotiating television carriage rights with a broadcaster such as CBC Television, TMN/Movie Central or Showcase.[8]



Problems in the Canadian film industry




The Bridge Studios in Burnaby, British Columbia


Of all Canadian cultural industries, English-Canadian cinema has the hardest time escaping the shadow of its American counterpart.[citation needed] Between the marketing budgets of mainstream films, and the largely US-controlled film distribution networks, it has been nearly impossible for most distinctively Canadian films to break through to a wide audience.[8]


Although Canadian films have often received critical praise, and the National Film Board has won more Academy Awards than almost any other institution (for both their animation and documentary work), in many Canadian cities moviegoers do not even have the option of seeing such films, as they have poor distribution and are not shown at any theatres. One This Hour Has 22 Minutes sketch parodied an Atom Egoyan-like director whose films had won numerous international awards, but had never actually been released or exhibited.[citation needed]


Almost all Canadian films fail to make back their production costs at the box office.[citation needed] For example, Men With Brooms made CA$1,000,000 in its general domestic release, which by Canadian standards is fairly high. However, it was made on a budget of over CA$7,000,000. French-Canadian films, on the other hand, are often more successful—as with French-language television, the language difference makes Quebec audiences much more receptive to Canadian-produced films. In most years, the top-grossing Canadian film is a French-language film from Quebec. (See also Cinema of Quebec.) By comparison, Australian films, made in a country with a smaller population than Canada's, more frequently make their money back from the domestic market. Many do comparatively better; the best known example is Mad Max, made with the then unknown Mel Gibson, and with a budget of A$350,000, and which made A$5.6 million in its domestic release alone.


Although many Canadians have made their names in Hollywood, they have often started their careers in Los Angeles, despite Toronto, Vancouver or Montreal being thriving filmmaking centres in their own right. Some actors or directors who have started their early careers in Canada include: David Cronenberg, John Candy, Lorne Michaels, Dan Aykroyd, Michael J. Fox, Mike Myers, Ivan Reitman, Derek Harvie, Seth Rogen, Eugene Levy, Tom Green, Scott Mosier, and Paul Haggis. However, despite these successes, several actors have favoured moving to Los Angeles to further pursue their careers.


Canada's difficulties in the film industry are often difficult to explain. The following explanations have been proposed for why Canadian films and television have often failed completely to find an export market:[citation needed]


  • Films labelled as American films could often be better described as collaborations between Canada and the US. In addition, films which are sometimes designated as "American" productions often involve a higher-percentage of Canadian participation but the "American" designation is favoured for tax purposes. Also, unlike other countries who tend to have citizens with discernible accents, the American media too rarely highlights or identifies actors, actresses, directors or producers as Canadian in origin, leaving the false perception that few Canadians work in the industry.

  • Canada's film industry competes directly with that of the United States. Production costs between the two countries are similar (they are lower in Australia) meaning that Canadian films often need a budget equal to that of an American film of similar quality. Canadian film studios rarely, if ever, have the budgets to make films that can directly compete with the most popular Hollywood fare. Instead, the vast majority of Canadian films are character-driven dramas or quirky comedies of the type that often appeal to critics and art house film audiences more than to mass audiences.[8]

  • During the 1970s, Canada's tax policy encouraged making films merely to obtain a significant tax credit. As such, many films were produced merely for tax purposes, and quality became unimportant. For example, producers of Canadian films were allowed to take a fee out of the production costs, something that is not allowed in the United States, where producers may only take a fee once the film earns back its production costs (the exact situation that drove the plot line in The Producers).

  • While British, Australian and American filmmakers embrace their cultural heritage in film, Canadian films often have no discernible connection to Canada. It often comes as a surprise to many people that movies like Porky's, Children of a Lesser God and The Art of War were partially produced in Canada, as they are indistinguishable from films made entirely in the United States.

  • When there are major Canadian productions, the lead roles often go to American or British actors. For example, in The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz, both the role of Duddy and his father went to American-born actors (the then unknown Richard Dreyfuss and the established character actor Jack Warden respectively). Joseph Wiseman, who played Duddy's uncle, was born in Montreal, but had not lived or worked in Canada in over forty years. Although this phenomenon is not as common today as it was in the 1970s, Canadian films do still sometimes cast famous foreign actors: Michael Caine starred in the 2003 film The Statement, Helena Bonham Carter played the lead role in 1996's Margaret's Museum and Olivia Newton-John has a starring role in the forthcoming Score: A Hockey Musical.[8]

  • Unlike radio and television, which both have strict Canadian content regulations, there is no protection for Canadian content in movie theatres. The distribution networks for Canadian movie theatres are largely controlled by the American studio system, and Canada is in fact the only non-U.S. country that is considered part of the domestic market by Hollywood studios. As a result, the marketing budgets and screening opportunities for Canadian films are limited. In many cities outside of Canada's largest metropolitan markets, the local movie theatres almost never book a Canadian film, and even in many of the major markets Canadian films are usually only available in repertory theatres or on the film festival circuit. Once again, the exception is Quebec, which has many French-Canadian produced films running on multiple screens all over the province alongside both French-produced films and dubbed or subtitled American films.

  • In a phenomenon which can be likened to the theory of cultural cringe, a considerable number of Canadians reflexively dismiss all Canadian films as inherently inferior to Hollywood studio fare. This is not necessarily connected to reality, as many critically acclaimed films have been made in Canada, but the idea nevertheless presents a significant hurdle to Canadian filmmakers seeking to build an audience for their work.


Case studies: Porky's and Meatballs


For many years the most successful Canadian film of all time at the Canadian box office was Porky's; it was produced by a Canadian team (though directed by Bob Clark, an American, and shot in Florida), but only with one of the major American studios backing distribution. (Porky's' record was widely reported as broken in 2006 by the bilingual police comedy Bon Cop, Bad Cop, but that assessment does not take inflation into account. Porky's still retains its status as the most successful Canadian film internationally.[citation needed])


Meatballs makes an excellent case study on common criticisms of the Canadian film industry. Produced and shot entirely in Canada on a budget of CA$1,600,000, it was a tremendous hit, one of the most financially successful Canadian films of all time. As with Children of a Lesser God, although it takes place in a summer camp, there is nothing recognizably Canadian about the location or the characters, except for a Montreal Canadiens sweater. The starring role went to American comedian Bill Murray in his earliest featured film role. The chief love interest was played by Canadian Kate Lynch, who won the Genie Award that year for Best Actress. The casting of Americans in the "Tax-Shelter Era", as well as today, often caters to an American audience. However, it provided Murray with his breakout role. Almost all of its box office gross was in the United States, where it took in US$43,000,000. It received a much more limited release in Canada.


In 2010, Resident Evil: Afterlife grossed more than $280 million at the box office internationally and nearly $7 million domestic, making it the most successful production in Canadian film history.[9][10][11]



Current developments


The Department of Canadian Heritage gave Telefilm Canada more funds in 2001 to help develop the Canadian film industry, with the goal of having Canadian feature films obtain five per cent of the domestic box office by 2005.[8] Telefilm divided this between English films then capturing four per cent of the market and French films at 12 per cent. At first, the new initiative did not seem to be making much progress: at the end of 2003, English films represented only one per cent of the domestic box office, while French films made up 20 per cent. The overall goal of the Canada Feature Film Fund now is to have Canadian feature films capture five per cent of the domestic box office by 2006, one year behind schedule. It is now 2014 and they have not met their goal.[citation needed]


According to Telefilm Canada, From Script to Screen, the two-year-old feature film policy created to improve the success rate of Canadian films, is seeing results. Before the initiative, the market share for Canadian films was 1.4 per cent and is now 3.6 per cent. Furthermore, the French-language cinema accounts for 20 per cent of the market.


In recent years, there has been a cultural resurgence in Canada's aforementioned documentary stream. Films exploring Canada's identity and role on the world stage have become popular. Due to a political and social split between their American counterparts, Canadian independent documentaries have begun garnering a cult status. Current examples are Mark Achbar's award-winning and top grossing Canadian feature documentary The Corporation, and Albert Nerenberg's underground hit Escape to Canada. These films not only nurture homegrown talent, inspiring local industry but also creating a unique voice for Canada itself.


In 2015 two Canadian co-productions, partly funded by Telefilm Canada, were nominated for Best Picture at the 88th Academy Awards: Room and Brooklyn.[12]



Notable films



For all the industry's challenges, quite a few Canadian films have succeeded in making a cultural impact. Some of the most famous or important Canadian films include:








See Also:


  • Canadian Film Award

  • Genie Award for Best Motion Picture

  • Genie Award for Best Achievement in Direction


Directors


Canadian film tends to be more director-driven than star-driven, and have much more in common with the European auteur model of filmmaking than with the Hollywood star system. The most famous Canadian film directors are very often the real star power of their films, more so than the actors they cast. Notable Canadian film directors include:



























































































































































































































































Name
Lifetime
Notable works as Director

Paul Almond
b. 1931

Isabel  »  The Act of the Heart  »  Journey

Denys Arcand
b. 1941

La maudite galette  »  Réjeanne Padovani  »  Le déclin de l'empire américain  »  Jesus of Montreal (Jésus de Montréal)  »  The Barbarian Invasions (Les Invasions barbares)

Frédéric Back
b. 1924
Tout rien  »  Crac  »  L'homme qui plantait des arbres  »  Le fleuve aux grandes eaux

Jean Beaudin
b. 1939
Jeux de la XXIe olympiade  »  J.A. Martin, photographe  »  Cordélia  »  Le matou  »  Being at Home with Claude

Louis Bélanger
b. 1964
Post Mortem  »  Gaz Bar Blues

Charles Binamé
b. 1949
Eldorado  »  Le coeur au poing  »  Séraphin: Heart of Stone  »  Maurice Richard

Phillip Borsos
1953–1995

The Grey Fox  »  Bethune: The Making of a Hero

Michel Brault
b. 1928

La lutte  »  Pour la suite du monde  »  Entre la mer et l'eau douce  »  Les ordres  »  Les noces de papier

Donald Brittain
1928–1989

Memorandum  »  Volcano  »  Paperland  »  The Champions  »  Canada's Sweetheart

Gary Burns
b. 1960

Kitchen Party  »  waydowntown  »  Radiant City

Gilles Carle
1928–2009

La vie heureuse de Léopold Z  »  La vraie nature de Bernadette  »  La mort d'un bûcheron  »  La tête de Normande St-Onge  »  Les Plouffe

Marcel Carrière
b. 1935

La lutte  »  Pour la suite du monde  »  Avec tambours et trompettes  »  O.K. ... Laliberté  »  Ti-mine, Bernie pis la gang...

Jack Chambers
1931–1978
Circle  »  The Hart of London

Denis Chouinard
b. 1964
Clandestins  »  L'ange de goudron

F. R. Crawley
1911–1987
The Loon's Necklace  »  Newfoundland Scene

David Cronenberg
b. 1943

Videodrome  »  Dead Ringers  »  Naked Lunch  »  Crash

Fernand Dansereau
b. 1928

Astataïon ou Le festin des morts  »  Faut aller parmi l'monde pour le savoir  »  Doux aveux  »  La brunante

Xavier Dolan
b. 1989

J'ai tué ma mère  »  Les amours imaginaires » Mommy

Georges Dufaux
1927–2008
À votre santé  »  Au bout de mon âge  »  Les jardins d'hiver  »  Gui Daò – Sur la voie  »  10 jours...48 heures

Christian Duguay
b. 1957

Screamers  »  The Assignment  »  Joan of Arc  »  Hitler: The Rise of Evil

Atom Egoyan
b. 1960

Speaking Parts  »  Exotica  »  The Sweet Hereafter  »  Felicia's Journey  »  Ararat  »  Chloe

Robert Favreau
b. 1948
Les muses orphelines  »  Un dimanche à Kigali

Thom Fitzgerald
b. 1968

The Hanging Garden  »  Beefcake  »  3 Needles

André Forcier
b. 1947
Bar Salon  »  Au clair de la lune  »  Une histoire inventée  »  Le vent du Wyoming

Beryl Fox
b. 1931
One More River  »  Summer in Mississippi  »  The Mills of the Gods: Viet Nam  »  Saigon: Portrait of a City  »  Last Reflections on a War

François Girard
b. 1963

Thirty Two Short Films About Glenn Gould  »  The Red Violin

Jacques Godbout
b. 1933

YUL 871  »  Kid Sentiment  »  La gammick  »  Deux épisodes dans la vie d'Hubert Aquin  »  Alias Will James

John Greyson
b. 1960

Zero Patience  »  Lilies  »  The Law of Enclosures  »  Fig Trees

Gilles Groulx
1931–1994

Golden Gloves  »  The Cat in the Bag (Le Chat dans le sac)  »  Où êtes-vous donc?  »  Entre tu et vous  »  24 heures ou plus...

Claude Jutra
1930–1986
Les mains nettes  »  À tout prendre  »  Wow  »  Mon oncle Antoine  »  Kamouraska

Ron Kelly
b. 1929

The Open Grave  »  The Gift  »  The Last Man in the World  »  Waiting for Caroline

Larry Kent
b. 1937
The Bitter Ash  »  Sweet Substitute  »  When Tomorrow Dies  »  High  »  Mothers and Daughters

Allan King
1930–2009

Warrendale  »  A Married Couple  »  Who Has Seen the Wind  »  Termini Station  »  Dying at Grace

Wolf Koenig
b. 1927

City of Gold  »  The Days Before Christmas  »  Glenn Gould: On & Off the Record  »  Lonely Boy  »  Stravinsky

Roman Kroitor
b. 1927
Paul Tomkowicz: Street-railway Switchman  »  Universe  »  Lonely Boy  »  Stravinsky  »  Labyrinth

Jean-Claude Labrecque
b. 1938
60 cycles  »  La visite du général de Gaulle au Québec  »  Les smattes  »  Les vautours  »  La nuit de la poésie Trilogy

Arthur Lamothe
b. 1928
Bûcherons de la Manouane  »  Poussière sur la ville  »  Le mépris n'aura qu'un temps  »  La conquête de l'Amérique

Micheline Lanctôt
b. 1947
L'homme à tout faire  »  Sonatine  »  Deux actrices

Ryan Larkin
1943–2007
Syrinx  »  Cityscape  »  Walking  »  Street Musique

Jean-Claude Lauzon
1953–1997
Piwi  »  Night Zoo (Un zoo la nuit)  »  Léolo

Caroline Leaf
b. 1946
The Owl Who Married a Goose  »  The Street  »  The Metamorphosis of Mr. Samsa  »  Two Sisters

Jacques Leduc
b. 1941
On est loin du soleil  »  Tendresse ordinaire  »  Le dernier glacier  »  Trois pommes à côté du sommeil  »  La vie fantôme

Jean Pierre Lefebvre
b. 1941
Abel Trilogy  »  Les maudits sauvages  »  Les dernières fiançailles  »  Avoir 16 ans  »  Les fleurs sauvages

Robert Lepage
b. 1957

The Confessional (Le Confessionnal)  »  Nô  »  Possible Worlds  »  La face cachée de la lune

Richard J. Lewis


Whale Music  »  Barney's Version

Arthur Lipsett
1936–1986

Very Nice, Very Nice  »  Free Fall  »  21-87  »  A Trip Down Memory Lane  »  N-Zone

Colin Low
b. 1926

The Romance of Transportation in Canada  »  Corral  »  City of Gold  »  Universe  »  Circle of the Sun

Guy Maddin
b. 1956

Careful  »  The Heart of the World  »  The Saddest Music in the World  »  Brand Upon the Brain!  »  My Winnipeg

Francis Mankiewicz
1944–1993
Le temps d'une chasse  »  Les bons débarras  »  Les beaux souvenirs  »  Les portes tournantes

Bill Mason
1929–1988

Paddle to the Sea  »  The Rise and Fall of the Great Lakes  »  Blake  »  Death of a Legend  »  Cry of the Wild  »  Song of the Paddle  »  Waterwalker

Bruce McDonald
b. 1959

Roadkill  »  Highway 61  »  Dance Me Outside  »  Hard Core Logo  »  The Tracey Fragments

Michael McGowan
b. 1966

Saint Ralph  »  One Week

Norman McLaren
1914–1987

Begone Dull Care  »  Neighbours  »  Blinkity Blank  »  Rythmetic  »  A Chairy Tale  »  Mosaic  »  Pas de deux

Deepa Mehta
b. 1950
Sam and Me  »  Fire  »  Earth  »  Water  »  Heaven on Earth

Peter Mettler
b. 1958
Scissere  »  The Top of His Head  »  Picture of Light  »  Gambling, Gods and LSD  »  Petropolis

Robert Morin
b. 1949
Requiem pour un beau sans-coeur  »  Yes Sir! Madame...  »  Quiconque meurt, meurt à douleur  »  Le nèg'  »  Journal d'un coopérant

Allan Moyle
b. 1947

The Rubber Gun  »  Pump Up the Volume  »  New Waterford Girl

Vincenzo Natali
b. 1947

Cube  »  Cypher  »  Splice

Don Owen
b. 1935

Nobody Waved Goodbye  »  Ladies and Gentlemen... Mr. Leonard Cohen  »  Notes for a Film About Donna & Gail  »  The Ernie Game

Pierre Patry
b. 1933
Trouble fête  »  Caïn  »  La corde au cou

Peter Pearson
b. 1938

The Best Damn Fiddler from Calabogie to Kaladar  »  Paperback Hero

Pierre Perrault
1927–1999
L'Isle-aux-Coudres Trilogy  »  L'Acadie, l'Acadie  »  Un royaume vous attend  »  La bête lumineuse  »  L'oumigmag ou l'objectif documentaire

Clément Perron
1929–1999
Jour après jour  »  Taureau  »  Partis pour la gloire

Jeremy Podeswa
b. 1962

The Five Senses  »  Fugitive Pieces

Sarah Polley
b. 1979
I Shout Love  »  All I Want for Christmas  »  Away From Her

Anne Claire Poirier
b. 1932
De mère en fille  »  Les filles du Roy  »  Le temps de l'avant  »  Mourir à tue-tête  »  Tu as crié: Let me go

Léa Pool
b. 1950

La Femme de l'hôtel  »  Anne Trister  »  À corps perdu  »  Mouvements du désir  »  Emporte-moi  »  Lost and Delirious

David Rimmer
b. 1942
Surfacing on the Thames  »  Variations on a Cellophane Wrapper  »  Canadian Pacific  »  Al Neil: A Portrait  »  As Seen on TV  »  Local Knowledge

Patricia Rozema
b. 1958

I've Heard the Mermaids Singing  »  White Room  »  When Night Is Falling

David Secter
b. 1943

Winter Kept Us Warm  »  The Offering

Donald Shebib
b. 1938

Goin' Down the Road  »  Between Friends  »  Heartaches  »  Running Brave  »  The Climb

Yves Simoneau
b. 1955
Les yeux rouges  »  Intimate Power (Pouvoir intime)  »  Les fous de bassan  »  Perfectly Normal  »  Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee

John N. Smith
b. 1943
First Winter  »  Train of Dreams  »  Welcome to Canada  »  The Boys of St. Vincent  »  Dieppe

Michael Snow
b. 1929

Wavelength  »  <---->  »  La Région Centrale  »  Rameau's Nephew  »  Presents  »  So Is This  »  See You Later

Robin Spry
1939–2005
Flowers on a One-Way Street  »  Prologue  »  Action: The October Crisis of 1970  »  One Man

Lynne Stopkewich
b. 1964

Kissed

Ralph L. Thomas
b. 1939

Ticket to Heaven  »  The Terry Fox Story

Jean-Marc Vallée
b. 1963
Les fleurs magiques  »  Liste noire  »  Les mots magiques  »  C.R.A.Z.Y.

Denis Villeneuve
b. 1967

Un 32 août sur terre  »  Maelström  »  Next Floor  »  Polytechnique  »  Incendies

Clément Virgo
b. 1966
Save My Lost Nigga Soul  »  Rude  »  The Planet of Junior Brown  »  Love Come Down  »  Poor Boy's Game

Anne Wheeler
b. 1946

A War Story  »  Loyalties  »  Bye Bye Blues  »  Angel Square  »  The War Between Us

Sandy Wilson
b. 1947

My American Cousin  »  My American Boyfriend  »  Harmony Cats

Notable Canadian expatriate directors who are or have worked primarily in Hollywood include:


  • James Cameron

  • Bob Clark

  • Edward Dmytryk

  • Allan Dwan

  • Sidney J. Furie

  • Paul Haggis

  • Mary Harron

  • Arthur Hiller

  • Norman Jewison

  • Ted Kotcheff

  • Shawn Levy

  • Silvio Narizzano

  • Daniel Petrie

  • Ivan Reitman

  • Jason Reitman

  • Mark Robson

  • Mack Sennett

  • Roger Spottiswoode

See also Category:Canadian film directors.



Producers


  • Al Christie

  • Charles Christie

  • Harold Greenberg

  • Suresh Joachim

  • Louis B. Mayer


Writers


  • Ed Gass-Donnelly

  • Paul Haggis

  • Suresh Joachim

  • Ian Iqbal Rashid

  • Seth Rogen

  • Evan Goldberg

  • PJ Torokvei


See also



  • Canuxploitation

  • History of Canadian animation

  • Canadian pioneers in early Hollywood

  • List of Canadian films

  • List of Canadian actors and actresses

  • Top 10 Canadian Films of All Time

  • Documentary Organization of Canada

  • Northern (genre)

  • Hot Docs

  • List of filming locations in Metro Vancouver

  • List of films shot in Toronto

  • Montreal in films

  • World cinema


Further reading


  • Shooting from the East: Filmmaking on the Canadian Atlantic by Darrell Varga, 2015, McGill-Queen's University Press


References




  1. ^ ab "Cinema Infrastructure – Capacity". UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Retrieved May 8, 2017..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output .citation qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-maintdisplay:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  2. ^ "Share of Top 3 distributors (Excel)". UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Retrieved May 8, 2017.


  3. ^ "Feature Film Production – Genre". UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Retrieved May 8, 2017.


  4. ^ ab "Exhibition – Admissions & Gross Box Office (GBO)". UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Retrieved May 8, 2017.


  5. ^ Ross, Ryan (Fall 2012). "Hiawatha, the Messiah of the Ojibway (1903): Photographic Stills from the First Dramatic Narrative Film Made in Canada". Canadian Journal of Film Studies. 21 (2): 140–147.


  6. ^ Druick, Zoë Projecting Canada: Government Policy and Documentary Film at the National Film Board McGill-Queen's Press MQUP, 22 Feb 2007


  7. ^ "Film and Television Industry: 2011 Year in Review" (PDF). City of Toronto. 2012-09-01.


  8. ^ abcde "Canadian film scene still waiting for happy ending". Toronto Star, September 24, 2010.


  9. ^ OBTD|http://ohnotheydidnt.livejournal.com/53087593.html


  10. ^ The Star.com|https://www.thestar.com/entertainment/movies/article/887490--sci-fi-zombie-flick-resident-evil-iv-top-grossing-canadian-film


  11. ^ The Globe and Mail|https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/film/resident-evil-afterlife-is-top-grossing-canadian-flick/article564435/


  12. ^ "Oscar nods give Canadian films Room, Brooklyn a second life". The Globe and Mail, January 14, 2016.




Further reading


.mw-parser-output .refbeginfont-size:90%;margin-bottom:0.5em.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>ullist-style-type:none;margin-left:0.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>ul>li,.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>dl>ddmargin-left:0;padding-left:3.2em;text-indent:-3.2em;list-style:none.mw-parser-output .refbegin-100font-size:100%


  • Gendering the Nation: Canadian Women's Cinema, ed. by Kay Armatage, Janine Marchessault, Brenda Longfellow, University of Toronto Press, 2006

  • Foster, Charles (2000). Stardust and Shadows: Canadians in Early Hollywood, Dundurn Press,
    ISBN 1-55002-348-9


  • Gittings, Christopher E (2001), Canadian national cinema: ideology, difference and representation, Routledge, ISBN 0-415-14282-2


  • Graham, Gerald G (1989), Canadian film technology, 1896–1986, University of Delaware Press, ISBN 0-87413-347-5


  • Melnyk, George (2004), One hundred years of Canadian cinema, University of Toronto Press, ISBN 0-8020-3568-X


  • Melnyk, George (2007), Great Canadian film directors, University of Alberta Press, ISBN 0-88864-479-5

  • Morris, Peter (1978). Embattled shadows: a history of Canadian cinema, 1895–1939, McGill-Queen's University Press,
    ISBN 0-7735-0322-6


  • Rist, Peter (2001), Guide to the cinema(s) of Canada, Greenwood Press, ISBN 0-313-29931-5


  • Walz, Eugene P (2002), Canada's Best Features: Critical Essays on 15 Canadian Films, Rodopi, ISBN 90-420-1209-9


  • Wise, Wyndham (2001), Essential guide to Canadian film, University of Toronto Press, ISBN 0-8020-3512-4



External links




  • Canadian Feature Film Database

  • Canadian Film Encyclopedia

  • Canadian Film Online









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