Dont Tell Mom the Babysitters Dead 2024 - Movies (May 18th)
The Strangers Chapter 1 2024 - Movies (May 17th)
IF 2024 - Movies (May 17th)
Pandemonium 2023 - Movies (May 17th)
Nightwatch Demons Are Forever 2023 - Movies (May 17th)
Bad Romance The Vicky White Story 2023 - Movies (May 17th)
Faceless After Dark 2023 - Movies (May 17th)
The American Friend 2023 - Movies (May 17th)
You Cant Run Forever 2024 - Movies (May 17th)
End of the Rope 2023 - Movies (May 17th)
Thelma the Unicorn 2024 - Movies (May 17th)
Power 2024 - Movies (May 17th)
Mothers Instinct 2024 - Movies (May 17th)
Challengers 2024 - Movies (May 17th)
The Dead Dont Hurt 2023 - Movies (May 16th)
The Palace 2023 - Movies (May 16th)
Baghead 2023 - Movies (May 16th)
The Fall Guy 2024 - Movies (May 16th)
The Blackwell Ghost 8 2024 - Movies (May 15th)
Wicked Little Letters 2023 - Movies (May 15th)
The Last Kumite 2024 - Movies (May 15th)
The 11th Hour with Stephanie Ruhle - (May 18th)
100 Days to Indy - (May 18th)
Accomplice to Murder - (May 18th)
Crime Beat - (May 18th)
Cesar Millan- Better Human, Better Dog - (May 18th)
The Never Ever Mets - (May 18th)
20/20 - (May 18th)
Gutfeld! - (May 18th)
Hannity - (May 18th)
The Five - (May 18th)
The Ingraham Angle - (May 18th)
Whos Talking to Chris Wallace? - (May 18th)
WWE NXT- Level Up - (May 18th)
Blue Bloods - (May 18th)
Fire Country - (May 18th)
The Last Word with Lawrence ODonnell - (May 18th)
On Patrol- Live - (May 18th)
S.W.A.T. - (May 18th)
Beachfront Bargain Hunt- Renovation - (May 18th)
Best Bite in Town - (May 18th)
This documentary, set in the Lower East End of Vancouver's downtown core, is a pretty honest account of life on the streets in urban Canada. It is aimed at educating high school kids on the dangers of addiction to hard drugs and is the brainchild of a group of city police officers who videotape their interactions with local homeless personalities.
A feature documentary investigation into the colourful and sometimes controversial life of Vancouver lawyer, city councillor and socialist icon Harry Rankin.
Vancouver's wealth of beauty and culture has enchanted visitors from all over the world. In this video tour of British Columbia's peerless city, you'll visit all the major attractions including selected parts of the Lower Mainland, Stanley Park, the Vancouver Aquarium, the UBC Museum of Anthropology, Grouse Mountain, Gastown, Granville Island and many more fantastic sites.
Two women struggle to talk about their roots: one a daughter with her father, the other a teacher with her students.
This documentary, filmed over a 10-year period, centers on the debate over censorship as it follows Vancouver's Little Sister's Bookstore and its 20-year struggle with Canada Customs over the seizure of books. In the face of bigotry, bombings and repeated book seizures, it wages the most important legal battle in history against Canada Customs.
A film documenting work shortages during the Depression of the 1930s and the attempts to deal with the unemployed, in particular young men. The film discusses the establishment of relief camps and projects, where men were paid twenty cents per day; the founding of organizations such as the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF), Workers' Unity League, and Relief Camp Workers' Union; general unionization and protest of the unemployed, including the On To Ottawa Trek, Regina Riot, sit-in strike from May to June 1938 at the Vancouver Main Post Office, Vancouver Art Gallery and Hotel Georgia, and the resulting Bloody Sunday of June 19.
In the picture-postcard community of North Vancouver, filmmaker Murray Siple follows men who have turned bottle-picking, their primary source of income, into the extreme sport of shopping cart racing. Enduring hardships from everyday life on the streets of Vancouver, this sub-culture depicts street life as much more than stereotypes portrayed in mainstream media. The films takes a deep look into the lives of the men who race carts, the adversity they face, and the appeal of cart racing despite the risk.
Canadian Pacific I is made up of a series of slowly dissolved shots done from the same framing over several months. The camera frames a window with a railway yard in the foreground, a bay in the space behind it, and misty mountains in the extreme distance. Trains occasionally pass by in the foreground. Huge ships move across the bay. Blue mists hover over the mountain heads.
Canadian Pacific II is designed as a companion piece to Canadian Pacific I. Shot from a window two storeys higher and in the building adjacent to the artists’s studio of the previous year, one enters into a dream state… an involvement with a vocabulary of seeing and feeling by subtle transitions of the passage of time