An illustration of the influence of the First Nations on Quebec’s identity, which has long been obscured and even denied.

At the end of the sixties, a visionary Inuit, dreaming that his people should govern their own territory, helps create Nunavut.

For one year, in a high school in Gasp

The history of negotiations between the Canadian government and Aboriginal peoples.

Documentary on the phenomenon of early puberty.

The research of animation filmmaker Martine Chartrand in preparation for a short film inspired by a song by F

From the United States to France, via India, Morocco and Quebec, a director visits five slums and gives a voice to those who live there.

A native of Verdun, the director paints an impressionist portrait of this Montreal borough and its inhabitants, interspersed with reflections on life and the passing of time.

A singular vision of America takes shape through the images and sounds collected over a period of 10 years by Canadian photographer Pierre Guimond.

The filmmaker Pierre Goupil talks about his difficulties living with bipolar disorder, as well as his friendships with other artists, socially committed like him.

In the wake of the visits of John Paul II and Michael Jackson to Montreal, film-makers are examining the impact of media discourse on crowds.

Under international supervision since the earthquake of 2010, Haiti is seeking to take the appropriate means to rebuild itself.

An intimate portrait of Rae Spoon, a transgender singer-songwriter who has been working in Alberta for several years.

In order to better understand the natives living in Quebec, the co-directors set out to meet them by cycling along the North Shore.

After both of his legs amputated after a work accident, an Argentinean electromechanical technician sets out to create hydraulic prosthetics adapted to his needs.

The daily life and rituals of the Yaka, pygmies living in the Congolese rainforest, now threatened by commercial deforestation.

Fifty men and women confide in Danic Champoux’s camera, addressing a multitude of subjects, some amusing and light-hearted, others serious and very intimate.

Filmmaker Jennifer Baichwal and photographer Edward Burtynsky travel the globe to examine its most important resource: water.

During the student crisis of spring 2012 in Quebec, the co-directors had behind-the-scenes access to the CLASSE.

The interrelated fates of a bookseller with schizophrenia, her sister, a singer with a brain tumor, and her new lover, a German neurosurgeon.

In order to understand the feelings she has towards her mother afflicted with Alzheimer’s disease, the filmmaker meets people who are confronted with the phenomenon of absence.

Through the life of a Nunavik bush pilot, a look at the history and challenges faced by the inhabitants of this immense territory in Quebec’s far north.

Field investigation challenging the myth that the Jewish people went into exile after the destruction of the second temple in Jerusalem in 70 AD.

Meetings with citizens from the western provinces and Newfoundland who are openly separatist and are angry at Ottawa and Quebec.