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Written in October 1968, the activist poem "Speak White" by Quebec poet Michèle Lalonde references the expression's derogatory use against French-speaking Canadians, and the work as a whole rejects the imposition of the English language and Anglo-American culture, and denounces the political and economic oppression of the French language and those who speak it. [1]
À la vie à l'amor; À tout prendre; Ababooned; About Memory and Loss; The Absence (1976 film) Absences (film) The Absent One; Acapulco Gold (2004 film) The Acrobat (2019 film) Adrien (2015 film) L'Affaire Dumont; After All (film) After Prison, What? After the Odyssey; Afterwards (2017 film) Afterwards (2023 film) Ahô: The Forest People; Ain ...
A Milk White Flag, a 1916 burlesque short, was refused by the Régie as "not in good taste from a military point of view". [1]The Régie du cinéma (French pronunciation: [ʁeʒi dy sinema]) was a provincial film classification organization responsible for the motion picture rating system within the Canadian province of Quebec.
Canada's Fighting Forces: D.J. Dwyer: Government of Canada World War I propaganda film [2] 1916: British Columbia for the Empire: A. D. Kean: Compilation Recruiting and training of British Columbia military units, and their departures for service in WWI. Self-Defence: Charles Roos: Albert Grupe: Docudrama: It depicts a fictitious German ...
Notable films of this period include The Music Master (Le Père Chopin, 1945), A Man and His Sin (Un homme et son péché, 1949), The Nightingale and the Bells (Le Rossignol et les cloches, 1952), Little Aurore's Tragedy (La petite Aurore l'enfant martyre, 1952), Tit-Coq (1953), and The Promised Land (Les brûlés, 1959).
This is a list of films produced and co-produced in Quebec, Canada ordered by year of release. Although the majority of Quebec films are produced in French due to Quebec's predominantly francophone population, a number of English language films are also produced in the province.
The first recorded feature film created in Canada was Evangeline. [24] [25] The Palace was the first theatre to transition to showing sound films when it presented Street Angel on 1 September 1928. [26] There were multiple attempts to create an independent film industry in Canada in the early 20th century. [27]
Films from across the French-speaking world are come to Ottawa for DiverCiné – les écrans de la Francophonie du monde film festival from March 8 to March 17, 2013, for its 11th annual run. Organized by the Embassy of France to Canada and the Department of Canadian Heritage, in partnership with the Canadian Film Institute.