The Indiecan Entertainment Playlist
Numéro de catalogue: MCI739
Producteur: Indiecan Entertainment Inc.
Sujet: Documentaire, Droit criminel, Étude des premières nations, Études de l'environnement, Études familiales / Économie domestique, Études féminines, Études mondiales canadiennes, Études religieuses, Études sociales, Études sociales canadiennes, Événements actuels, Faits de société canadienne, Histoire du Canada, Instruction civique, Musique, Orientation, Peuples autochtones, Politique, Problèmes mondiaux, Problèmes sociaux, Psychologie, Questions autochtones, Santé et Médecine, Science, Sciences sociales, Sociologie
Niveau scolaire: 9 - 12, Post-secondaire
Pays d'origine: Canada
Avi Federgreen is one of Canada's top independent filmmakers and distributors. In partnership with McIntyre Media, we are now offering this wonderful collection of seventeen "indie films" that will inspire, intrigue and inform students and staff.
These programs deal with a vast array of subjects. Learn how big things happen when humanity is at the core of business in A New Economy. In the Shadow of a de Beers diamond mine, the remote community of Attawapiskat lurches from crisis to crisis, as their homeland transforms into a modern frontier. Follow Attawapiskat's journey from obscurity into the international spotlight in After the Last River. The Globe and Mail calls Road to Mercy "powerful, provocative, and philosophical." It chronicles Canada's first legal-assisted deaths and peers into the extreme boundaries of this practice.
A "must-have" collection of sixteen programs for colleges, universities and libraries. Please call today for pricing.
Programs included in this playlist are:
The Promised Band:
WINNER: Best Documentary – CINEQUEST Film Festival
Victor Walk:
AUDIENCE AWARD: Dances with Films
After the Last River:
WINNER: DOXA Documentary Film Festival
WINNER: Bay Street Film Festival
NOMINATED for Canadian Screen Award - Best Social Issue Documentary 2016
Let's Talk About It:
“Children are our greatest teachers and I hope this film helps to fuel meaningful action and commitment to stop the cycle of family abuse and give voice to every child and parent living in the unspoken despair of an abusive home.” Deepa Mehta
Road to Mercy:
"Powerful, provocative, philosophical." – The Globe and Mail