North of 60 is a TV show set in a remote Canadian community, where the residents face challenges related to crime, drama, and mystery. The series explores the complexities of life in a rugged and isolated environment, highlighting the struggles and triumphs of the characters.
Set in the pre-Columbian era, Pathfinder follows the story of a young American boy who embarks on a dangerous journey to save his tribe from brutal marauders. Armed with his Viking ship, sword, and shield, he must navigate treacherous landscapes, face deadly enemies, and confront his own fears. Along the way, he encounters challenging obstacles such as a shipwreck, a cave, a chase, a whipping, and a waterfall. Through courage, determination, and self-sacrifice, he discovers the true path to success.
Follow the lives of the Ingalls family as they face challenges and build a home in the American frontier. Experience the joys, hardships, and triumphs of life on the prairie.
In the year 1815, two sisters find themselves plagued by a werewolf curse after stumbling upon a Canadian forest. As they fight to survive, they must face their own transformation and confront the secrets of their past. Can they break the curse before it consumes them?
In this horror-western sequel, a man is brought back to life to settle unfinished business and seek revenge in the town of Tombstone, Arizona. As he navigates a dangerous world of brothels, stagecoach robberies, and a female villain, he must also confront his own mother-son relationship and face off against a powerful relic that has the power to raise the dead.
Moose TV is a Canadian television sitcom, airing on Showcase in the 2007-08 television season. The show stars Adam Beach as George Keeshig, a Cree from the fictional community of Moose in northern Quebec, who returns home after a decade living in Toronto to become manager of the local community television station. The cast also includes Gary Farmer, Jennifer Podemski, Nathaniel Arcand, Michelle Latimer, Diane Flacks and Billy Merasty. The show's head writer is Paul Quarrington. The series was directed by Tim Southam. Produced by Rezolution Pictures for the Showcase network in Canada, the series received the Indie Award for Best Comedy Series from the Canadian Film and Television Producers Association in 2008.
Speaking of Sex is a hilarious comedy that delves into the complexities of human sexuality and relationships. The film follows the lives of various characters as they navigate through extramarital affairs, neurosis, erectile dysfunction, and other challenges. With its witty dialogue and relatable situations, Speaking of Sex offers a comedic and thought-provoking take on the universal topic of sex.
Grey Owl, a trapper in 1930s Canada, becomes an activist for forest and animal conservation. He transforms from a man who kills animals to one who protects them, guided by his love for the wilderness and his Iroquois wife.
The Baker's Son is a heartwarming comedy about a young man who works in his father's bakery but dreams of being a painter. When he falls in love with a ballerina and a cafe owner, he must navigate the complexities of love, family, and pursuing his passions in a small town.
In a post-apocalyptic future, a man known as The Northlander embarks on a perilous journey through a hostile desert. With his survival skills and the guidance of an Aboriginal matriarch, he must navigate treacherous traps and confront the dangers of the wasteland. Along the way, he discovers ancient knowledge and unlocks the secrets of Aboriginal mythology, ultimately finding redemption in the process.
This version takes a look at the character in the years before he became a legend. It all begins with the introduction of Luke Hartman, a 20-year old Boston law student who witnesses the murder of his brother, a Texas Ranger. He himself is wounded in the midst of the chaos, but is rescued by the Apache Tonto... and subsequently becomes smitten by Tonto's sister Alope. He then devotes his life to avenging the death of his brother and fighting injustice, and in the process becoming a worldwide legend.
When a group of friends goes camping in the woods, they encounter a terrifying Sasquatch that seeks revenge for past wrongs. The creature goes on a blood-spattered rampage, leaving a trail of terror and destruction in its wake.
An Indigenous teenage boy fights through distorting realities as a family secret unravels.
Skins (2002) tells the story of two Lakota Sioux brothers, Rudy and Mogie, who are trapped in a cycle of violence and addiction on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. As they navigate through issues like terminal illness, police vigilantism, and the struggles of Native American life, their bond is tested in ways they never imagined. Through a series of tragic events, they must confront their past and find a way to break free from the cycle that threatens to consume them.
After their father's sudden death, three half-sisters who have never met are forced to live together on their family's ranch in Montana. As they navigate their complicated family dynamics, they uncover their father's secrets and learn to work together to save the ranch from sabotage. Along the way, they find love, face danger, and discover the true meaning of family.
100 Days in the Jungle tells the amazing true story of Canadian oil workers who were kidnapped by Colombian rebels and marched through the Ecuadorian jungle for 100 days.
A Cherokee boy is a haemophiliac in a culture obsessed with blood identity.
Five hundred miles north of Vancouver is Kitamaat, an Indian reservation in the homeland of the Haisla people. Growing up a tough, wild tomboy, swimming, fighting, and fishing in a remote village where the land slips into the green ocean on the edge of the world, Lisamarie has always been different. Visited by ghosts and shapeshifters, tormented by premonitions, she can't escape the sense that something terrible is waiting for her. She recounts her enchanted yet scarred life as she journeys in her speedboat up the frigid waters of the Douglas Channel. She is searching for her brother, dead by drowning, and in her own way running as fast as she can toward danger. Circling her brother's tragic death are the remarkable characters that make up her family: Lisamarie's parents, struggling to join their Haisla heritage with Western ways; Uncle Mick, a Native rights activist and devoted Elvis fan; and the headstrong Ma-ma-oo (Haisla for "grandmother"), a guardian of tradition.
Two brothers, disinherited and desperate for cash, journey into the Canadian wilds to find themselves, their people and their fortune.
A surrealistic allergory on the loss of language and identity in the city from an indigenous perspective.