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- 19641h 35mPG8.4 (518K)97MetascoreAn unhinged American general orders a bombing attack on the Soviet Union, triggering a path to nuclear holocaust that a war room full of politicians and generals frantically tries to stop.
- The crew of the USS Enterprise explores the furthest reaches of uncharted space, where they encounter a new ruthless enemy, who puts them, and everything the Federation stands for, to the test.
- Ten survival "experts" attempt to survive alone. The winner receives $500,000.
- A journalist seeks a fresh start in Alaska working for a newspaper in Anchorage.
- Series set in Yellowknife portrays renegade bush pilots at work and play in northern Canada.
- The treacherous job of driving trucks over frozen lakes, also known as ice roads, in Canada's Northwest Territories and Alaska's improved but still remote Dalton Highway, which is mainly snow-covered solid ground.
- Focuses on life and the environment in both the Arctic and Antarctic.
- In Canada's North during the 1930s, a young Inuit kills a White trader and is pursued by the police but his father is determined to protect his fugitive son at any cost.
- Ice Pilots NWT is a reality television documentary series that portrays Buffalo Airways, an airline based in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada. Buffalo flies WWII-era propeller planes year-round in the Canadian North.
- When separated from his mother on a family camping trip, a young boy meets a fantastical creature that helps him find his way back home.
- Explorer Adam Shoalts embarks on an estimated 4000 km journey across the Canadian Arctic by canoe and on foot, alone.
- Filmed at the Arctic Circle, "The Sun at Midnight" tells the story of an unexpected friendship between a hunter obsessed with finding a missing caribou herd and a teenage rebel who gets lost while on the run.
- After a Gwich'in-Canadian soldier is captured by the Taliban, he finds himself reflecting on the death of his cousin.
- Based on the biography of Olive Fredrickson, It tells of her life as a girl, then a trapper's wife and later a widow with three small children surviving under rugged pioneer conditions in northern Alberta Canada from the early 1900's through to the Depression.
- The film tells the story of three couples on the road between the Atlantic coast and the Northwest Territories in Canada.
- Sequel to Lucio Fulci's first 'White Fang' has the wolf-dog once again trying to stop the villainous Beauty Smith from claiming a recently discovered gold mine in 1899 Yukon, Canada.
- Expedition Overland embarks on their dream to see the last frontier, Alaska and the Yukon. Learn the history of the team and follow their preparations for the adventure of their lives. Join the crew as they build their 2013 Tacoma, learn driving skills, take a wilderness first aid class, and go on a shakedown trip to finalize their prep for Alaska.
- For 20 years, Oliver, a Frenchman, has lived alone and on his own on a small island that belongs to First Nations people. One day, three visitors land on the island and disrupt his peace.
- The historic race between Admiral Peary and Dr. Cook for the first to reach the North Pole.
- Diamond Road is a three-part series and 96 minute feature documentary exploring the historical, cultural and socio-political facets of the world's most intriguing gem. Boring deep into the diamond world, the series seeks to understand the multiple meanings of an object that is as old as the earth itself. Diamond Road is an intimate and broad-ranging picture of a complex and historically rich world. Key to the series are the people who represent the different stages on the diamond pipeline. They are our guides, our window into a fascinating industry that spans continents and centuries and the deep shifts of history. We journey to Canada's North with a geologist seeking diamonds in a harsh land. We meet top dealers and jewelers of New York, centre of the trade in high-end goods and gateway to the US market. We travel to India, the massive engine of the cutting and polishing industry and now a burgeoning retail market. We journey to Sierra Leone where diamonds are slowly morphing into a tool for development. In South Africa, we meet black diamond entrepreneurs and others who are intent on rewriting their country's troubled history. We travel to Antwerp, heart of the rough trade where an old Jewish master cutter works his magic, and we learn how so many Jewish people were given a second chance at life through diamonds. We meet the passionate collectors willing to pay a small fortune for a stone born at the stroke of creation. And we meet the influential decision-makers who keep the diamond world turning.
- Flinch, Bryce, and Rupert have been sent by their Elders to live nine months on the land. There, the young men learn to take responsibility for their actions and acquire the humility required to return home.
- Ghost Town music video for Fort Smith's Geronimo Paulette. The first single off his debut album "Hard Road out of Hell", which was nominated for Best Instrumental CD at the 2015 Indigenous Music Awards.
- As a promotion of their new "ice beer" Molson sponsored a promotional event, the "Polar Beach Party", on the shore of the Arctic Ocean. 500 contest winners, across North America, would be Molson's guests for a private rock concert featuring free beer, and a lineup of big rock bands. The combined visitors, gate-crashers, bands, roadies and Molson hosts were comparable in number to the citizens of Tuktoyaktuk. Tuktoyaktuk is a "dry" community. The visitors were insensitive. The film crew captured these tensions.
- The startling and intimate behavior of wolves both in the wilderness and in captivity are shown in this film which was years in the making.
- A story of hope that depicts the life of Assembly of First Nations regional Chief Roger Joseph Augustine; his lived experiences with the long assault against aboriginal people, and his near impossible climb to 45 years in leadership.
- An intimate portrait of LGBTQ2S+ pride and queer life in small towns, told through the stories of people from communities across Canada.
- Shut Up And Say Something follows acclaimed international spoken word artist Shane Koyczan on an emotional road trip to reconnect with the father he never knew. Seen and heard by millions worldwide, Shane's poignant and powerful poems tackle everything from bullying to body image - but behind his larger-than-life stage persona is a private and awkward man. As Shane unravels the story behind his troubled childhood, we get a powerful and intimate look at how a master wordsmith mines the scars of his past for truth, acceptance and the most important poem of his life.
- After the suicide of a snowboarder friend, his brother, Brandon, takes the depressed Nelson Nagarauk home to their tradition-conscious Inuit family at 69 degrees north. Brandon persuades him to accompany him on a ice-bear hunt, but Nelson changes his mind. On his way back, he finds a half-frozen Russian woman from a nearby weather station. He warms her up, but she seems to be very sick, otherwise. The next day, the woman is taken away by helicopter without a word of thanks. Later, on TV, a different, healthy woman is shown. What really happened? With Nelson's help, the ambitious journalist Virginia Ranks starts an investigation in which Nelson is not only confronted with a military intrigue but also with his traditional roots that he ridiculed before.
- Gil Cardinal searches for his natural family and an understanding of the circumstances that led to his becoming a foster child.
- Five astrophotographers armed with hi-tech cameras and telescopes capture the night sky in spectacular images of sparkling constellations, blazing comets and shadowy eclipses for the viewers to experience the stars as never seen before.
- Heart pounding, fingers hot on the bow, breath is still and body frozen, hair slowly rising on your neck. The entire journey through the wild, all the anticipation of the hunt, has delivered you right here, to this moment...to the EDGE. Follow Ryan "Koko" Kohler, Steve "Kill Shot" Ecklund, and the perpetual Helgie "Hard Luck" Eymundson on their unparalleled explorations to the EDGE of ultimate adventure. You're invited along to meet the wild people, to live their stories, connect to the untouched land and unspoiled nature - the remarkable things you never knew such a journey could entail. From stalking bighorn sheep in the Rockies, competing with the wolves for caribou in the high Arctic, and run-ins with massive moose in Newfoundland...if the challenge is there, so is The EDGE. The EDGE is a hunter's ultimate pursuit to push his limits to conquest over nature or face defeat.
- A social documentary that details the traditional Inuit (Eskimo) life on the land in the Mackenzie Delta of Canada's Northwest Territories. Traveling with a traditional Inuit family, the filmmakers depict the full variety of activities during the yearly rounds from camp to camp through all seasons.
- A reclusive web-programmer is forced to confront the threatening concept of change when the food packages he receives in the mail each day from Syria mysteriously stop arriving.
- A journey through Canada's Barren Lands, from Great Slave Lake, Yellowknife to Great Bear Lake and the Arctic Circle in a Range Rover Sport. Produced for the Land Rover One Life series of films.
- A dramatization of the true story of four men of the North West Mounted Police who, in 1910, set out on a patrol from Fort McPherson in Canada's Nortwest Territories to Dawson City, Yukon, 500 miles away - and who never reached their destination. In the history and legend of the Canadian North, the ill-fated party led by Inspector Francis Fitzgerald (George R. Robertson) became known as "The Lost Patrol''. Produced and directed by Peter Kelly, from a script George R. Robertson, with narration by Leslie Nielsen.
- Wild Kitchen is a 30-minute lifestyle documentary TV pilot about wild food, the people who harvest it, their unique stories that compel them to live off the land.
- A remarkable generation of established and emerging Indigenous musicians soars in a moment of cultural resurgence - from Idle No More to Standing Rock - channeling the pain of the past into a stirring, hopeful vision of the future.
- Meet the incredible people from across Canada who have shared their stories with you.
- Fly across northern Canada , meeting people along the way.
- This RKO-Pathe short film follows an expedition to study the musk ox in Northern Canada and to safely capture young calves for further study. In the past, the usual way to capture young musk ox was to surround a herd and simply kill all of the full-grown animals. On this expedition, however, they are forbidden to hurt any animals, so they must find a way to trap them, something no one thought could be done. Having captured three calves, they travel to a farm near Burlington, Vermont where the program of domestication begins.
- Long-time Buffalo Airways DC-3 pilot "Buffalo Joe" McBryan demonstrates how to start the radial engines of a Douglas DC-3 airplane, parked on the ramp at the Yellowknife airport in Canada's Northwest Territories (NWT). After Joe starts both engines, we then watch footage of him taxiing C-FLFR out to Runway 28 in preparation for takeoff.
- Arsenic Trioxide is a highly toxic contaminant that is currently buried underground on the Giant Mine Site. It is an invisible presence within the lives of the aboriginal communities of Dettah and N'dilo and the Northwest Territories capital city, Yellowknife. Eighty metres underground within Yellowknife city limits, on the traditional territory of the Yellowknives First Nations beside the 9th largest Lake in the world, sits 237,000 tons of arsenic trioxide. The Arsenic sits in the old mine workings of an aging, crumbling mine site within a porous rock that is permeable to water. The permafrost that once encased the poison has now melted. Once dissolved in water, it is colourless, tasteless and odourless, and an aspirin sized dose could kill you. Above ground, the city of Yellowknife and the aboriginal communities depend on the environmental monitoring by the federal government to assure that their water and the places where they live, are safe. They depend on a remediation plan that will, at best, refreeze the arsenic trioxide underground until a permanent solution can eventually, if ever, be found. And finally, they are left footing the bill of a financial cost that far exceeded any benefits that were seen by either the government of Canada or the communities around Yellowknife, and are left with the cultural and environmental harm that can never be undone. Shadow of a Giant tells the story of Giant Mine through the people who live on top of it and call it their home: From the remediation (clean up) team, that works to stabilize the arsenic before it further contaminates the surrounding environment; to the people who live and work in Yellowknife; to those who worked at the mine; from the proponents of the extraction industry in the north; to the Yellowknives Dene First Nations that lives hundreds of metres from the contaminated site. Their voices are the ones who tell the story of Giant from the perspective of the local community.
- Gerry Clemens and Roger Tilton tell the history of Canada's first bush pilots, those who risked their lives to end the isolation of remote and virtually uncharted territory.
- The story behind the most dangerous trucking routes in the world: hauling freight across the frozen lakes and rivers of Canada's Northwest Territories during the arctic winter.
- The Arctics is a never before seen look at the history and impacts of the Arctic Winter Games, an international biennial multi sport games that has been celebrating circumpolar sport and culture in the North since 1970.