The second IMAX film made, commissioned by the Ontario Government, and produced by MultiScreen Corporation, later to become IMAX corporation. North of Superior is a Northern Ontario travelogue, and was the first short feature to be shown at the newly created Ontario government theme park, Ontario Place, in it's state of the art cinema, Cinesphere, the first permanent IMAX installation.

In the mid-1950s, lured by false promises of a better life, Inuit families were displaced by the Can...

Dark fears over the North Pole. Long sheltered from large-scale industrial exploitation, the Arctic ...

Jim Carrey exhibits his talent as a painter and reflects on the value and power of art.

A lonesome car. The wind is whistling. A door of an undefined building opens—is it a holiday bungalo...
A tour along the Dalmatian coast, presenting the history, landmarks and cultural significance of the...

The peaks, the valleys, and all the moments in between. Being a father is an extraordinary privilege...

With a team of the world's foremost historic and marine experts as well as friend Bill Paxton, James...

Every winter for decades, the Northwest Territories, in the Canadian Far North, changes its face. Wh...

Legendary kayaker Scott Lindgren attempts to complete an extreme, unprecedented whitewater expeditio...

Documentary about chimps in Gombe.

The social democrats of the sixties and seventies worked on their grand plan to build a highway netw...

LA CASA DELLE VEDOVE portrays a group of widows who, he thinks, lived in a constant ‘dialogue‘ with ...

There are children. There are those who abuse them. And there are those who know, but never tell.

Behind the scenes of Olaf Ittenbach's 2001 thriller

Can you be a virgin, gay and into girls? This film is an intimate study of six homosexual boys. In t...

A trip into grandma's intimate life shows the status of Slovenian women in the first half of the 20t...

After a big flood some Calabrian children are sent to Milan.

Drawing from never-before-seen footage that has been tucked away in the National Geographic archives...