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- A woman framed for her husband's murder suspects he is still alive; as she has already been tried for the crime, she can't be re-prosecuted if she finds and kills him.
- The true story of Herb Brooks, the player-turned-coach who led the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team to victory over the seemingly invincible Soviet squad.
- A driver saves a waitress from her ex. He continues driving but crashes during a blizzard. Now injured and trapped in a ravine, he spots a beast stalking him. With dwindling time he must find a way to survive the cold and the predator.
- Friends on a camping trip discover that the town they're vacationing in is being plagued in an unusual fashion by parasitic aliens from outer space.
- After assuming his dead cell-mate's identity to get with the other man's girlfriend, an ex-convict finds himself a reluctant participant in a casino heist.
- Canada's most famous hosers, Bob and Doug McKenzie, get jobs at the Elsinore Brewery, only to learn that something is rotten with the state of it.
- A woman tries to get over the death of her sister by taking an Acrophobiac group. Then the group starts to get killed one by one.
- "Highway of Tears" is about the missing or murdered women along a 724 kilometer stretch of highway in northern British Columbia. None of the 18 cold-cases had been solved since 1969, until project E-Pana (a special division of the RCMP) managed to link DNA to Portland drifter, Bobby Jack Fowler with the 1974 murder of 16 year-old hitchhiker, Collen MacMillen. Why haven't the killers been found? Is this the work of one or several serial killers? In Canada, more than 500 cases of Aboriginal women have gone missing or been murdered since the 1960s. Half the cases have never been solved. Viewers will discover what the effects of generational poverty, residential schools, systemic violence, and high unemployment rates have done to First Nation reserves and how they tie in with the missing and murdered women in the Highway of Tears cases. Aboriginal women are considered abject victims of violence. Now find out what First Nation leaders are doing to try and swing the pendulum in the other direction.
- A young hockey player deals with the consequences of hockey violence after he critically injures another player during a game.
- Caroline North is LA's entertainment power-attorneys. She is beautiful, smart and aggressive type-A woman in her 30s.
- A true crime series focusing on the cases of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls in Canada.
- A big-city chef has lost her spark. To save her job she returns to her hometown where she'll try to find her passion for food and reconnect with her father.
- Road Hockey Rumble is a half-hour reality series following two all-Canadian hosts, Calum MacLeod and Mark McGuckin. It is in the documentary form but crosses over into the genres of sports, travel, and comedy with an attitude that defies description. We watch as Calum and Mark hit the road, playing their way across Canada in a 13 game grudge match series of Road Hockey. From Trail, British Columbia to St. John's, Newfoundland, they tap into the rivalries, legends, and grit of Canada's most colourful and competitive towns. Friends in life but rivals in hockey, each host drafts their own team of locals to battle it out on the court.
- Marie Clements' musical documentary connects a pivotal moment in Canada's civil rights history-the beginnings of Indian Nationalism in the 1930s-with the powerful momentum of First Nations activism today.
- Documentary filmmakers get too close to their subject: the dealer of a strange new drug.
- An avid outdoorsman invites his cousin, Joel to leave the city life and join him in the pursuit of building a new remote wilderness cabin in the rugged and wild province of British Columbia, Canada. Before they're ready to start, they must assess the survivability of an array of harsh-climates, not to mention, Joel must learn how to hunt, fish, forage, grow and build. The series explores themes of rewilding, survival education, wilderness and animal conservation, small town life, family and our history as humans who once lived off the land.
- As the title says, a look into female sexual offenders whose victims are under age of consent. Their motives, methods, and the affects on their young victims that can last a lifetime.
- Alcan Highway is a film about a journey, a dream which seems to be coming true. But is it what Hese really wanted?
- The Window, Josh Saltzman's tale of a little girl following the death of her older brother. After seeing him trapped in her bed room window, she searches for a way to get him out, but sometimes dead is better.
- A down on his luck stupid nobody gets his world thrown in a loop thanks to his new room mate......a ninja!
- Comedian James Ritchey does his first stand-up comedy performance.
- A videographer who films terminally ill patients last messages meets a mysterious figure with a terrifying past. The once forgotten evil that follows will change her forever.
- Teenaged Milan is like other boys his age: he likes sports, lasagna and playing with friends. But unlike others, he faces the struggles that come with a transgender identity. With the loving support of his family, Milan chooses to stay in the rural community of Prince George to continue to educate and inspire.
- At its simplest, The Electric Arctic Circle is a motorcycle excursion to the Arctic Circle captured on film, a generically American formula so familiar and true that it begs at every splice to be left alone to become the iconic motorcycle montage that should be its sovereign right. Yet, that would have only told half the story. The movie is in some final sense a transmission of whispers and groans from people on the edge of worlds, riding 1970s motorcycles to a space where fiction and reality most tangibly collide.
- BC Legacy: The Parks of Prince George is a series investigating the parks located in Prince George, British Columbia, Canada.
- Jason, a recent high school graduate, gets an unexpected visit from an old friend Michelle. After some heartbreaking news the day after Michelle's visit, something very strange happens.
- A small town promoter battles critics and the law on a journey to host a controversial prizefighting event featuring hockey enforcers battling on ice.
- As Pete, the amorphous bug, sets out on his journey to find lunch, he finds more than he was bargaining for when he finds love with a peach.
- Mark, a biologist, is working with local Indigenous groups in Northern British Columbia to help understand and save our largest land biomass - amphibians. Amphibians are a keystone species in the ecosystems Mark studies, and when the amphibians disappear the environment changes dramatically. We are losing these workhorses at an alarming rate. They survived the extinction of dinosaurs - what is putting them in peril now?
- ShortOn this infectious journey, a party goes wrong and turns into a zombie queens creation story.
- Josh May is out enjoying a nature hike with friends, taking photos. In order to get a picture of the nearby waterfall, Josh heads away from the group. This was his first mistake, his second was leaving behind his backpack.
- As friends on a car trip recall the road games they played as children, their reminiscence takes a sinister turn.
- 1. Prologue - "Shooting the Breeze": The scene is (sun)set. Features Lorne Cardinal, Bradley Moss and the music of Old Reliable. "A neat double-barreled moment of black humor that has something to say about the supremacy of image over text in film." - Edmonton Journal 2. "Café Utopia": Two men named Bob struggle with an uncomfortable intimacy after a random incident outside the urban, existential paradise of Café Utopia. 3. Epilogue - "The Street Lamp Flicker is not (para)Normal": Bob wanders the winter streets alone, his journey continually interrupted by street lamp interference. Random yet predictable, function and malfunction all from a first person perspective. A breakthrough is inevitable. On Incident 20 of Epilogue: "...où l'espace deviant éloquent..." - Séquences
- The Road Hockey Rumble crew travel north-westward to the Prince George, B.C., a city where most people make their living in the forestry industry. To Mark's dismay, he soon figures out why Calum is so keen on Prince George: he once lived in the town and his parents still live there, which gives him a clear advantage during the recruitment process. Mark recruits a team of tree choppers while Calum puts together one of tree planters. In the end there can only be one winner and the losing captain suffers a very colourful punishment.