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1-12 of 12
- TV SeriesWarrior Up. is a 13 x 22-minute documentary series that follows inspiring Indigenous youth making positive change in their communities. Whether it's defending the land, learning and then teaching nearly lost Indigenous hunting and building techniques, feeding unsheltered relatives or helping decolonize the fashion industry, the young change makers featured in this series are making an impact. Warrior Up. shares their inspiring journeys of activism in engaging, entertaining ways as our three hosts take turns traveling Turtle Island, jumping in to lend a hand alongside these young warriors. Inuk actor Anna Lambe, from Iqaluit, Nunavut, Anishnaabe actor Joshua Odjick, from the Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg First Nation, and actor Joel Oulette, a member of the Cumberland House Cree and Red River Métis Nation, find themselves shooting arrows from horseback, improvising a rap, walking the runway, building a pit house and packing blessing bags alongside these powerful youth, learning just what it means to be a warrior.
- BEND & BREAK explores young relationships and the cluelessness of men in search of direction. Set in beautiful Montréal, a group of twenty-somethings struggle through the misguided awkwardness that comes with early romance. Bryce meets a French girl one day in the city. Jules runs into an old flame he has secretly been in love with for years. Blake realizes that his friend's sister is suddenly "all grown up" and these young men are forced to come to grips with the unknown... women. In the quirky vein of "Diner" and "The Brothers McMullen," this ensemble-driven comedy will endear itself to anyone who has suffered and savored being a young adult.
- It takes viewers on an intimate road trip across North America - from a polyamory conference in the Catskills, a swingers' convention in Las Vegas, to long-term multipartner families in California. Along the way, the filmmakers try to learn from these relationship veterans, while navigating their own fledgling polyamorous relationships. The results are as giddy, painful, sad and loving as real life tends to be.
- Forget what you think you know about arm wrestling. Arm Nation focuses on the diverse and passionate men and women who train and "pull" in the fast growing North American sport - arm wrestling. Each episode traces two compelling stories from the characters' work, relationship, family and tournament lives, leading up to the season finale - a national championship where the stories of 10 of our characters combine into intense emotional and physical drama. Arm Nation is an inspiring series about Indigenous men and women rising above personal and community challenges to succeed at the top levels of a sport they love.
- Follows four at-risk young people through a video-making workshop.
- Drawing Blank is a dream-like story of impermanence told through dance and stop-motion painting.
- We track a rocky summer in the lives of six street youths as they learn to make videos in an effort to get themselves off the streets.
- The Canadian Museum of Nature has been a beloved Ottawa landmark for decades and was the birthplace of Canada's national museums. But the imposing 100-year-old heritage building needed a major overhaul to restore it to its original splendor. A Modern Castle presents the history and architecture of this beautiful building and follows the team tasked with the monumental project of modernizing it for the 21st century - all under the silent watch of the ghost of the original architect.
- The Invisible Red Thread follows fifteen year old Vivian Lum from Canada to China to discover the land she was adopted from in 1995. She returns to her birth city and orphanage and also meets Shumin Zhu, a locally adopted teen girl. The girls compare lives as the film explores the ripple effects of China's Family Planning Policy. The Invisible Red Thread travels the twists of fate that brought these girls to very different worlds, and the ties that still connect Vivian to China.
- Fanny and her best friend, Sonia are street-kids, newly arrived in Montreal (Canada) from a small town. The first weeks are fun and deliciously dangerous. The girls are far away from authority, school and Fanny's mother's boyfriend. But after several weeks of coasting downtown, what happens on a joyride with no exit ramp in sight?
- Watchers of the North is an upcoming six-part APTN miniseries chronicling the daily lives of the Canadian Rangers, one of the most intriguing military regiments in the Canadian Forces.