A feature-length documentary portrait of Québécoise painter Johanne Corno, who has lived and worked in New York City for more than 20 years. Ignored by the art intelligentsia in Québec, she settled abroad to escape that creative constraint, and built an enviable international career. Today, she casts a lucid eye on her work and describes the resources she draws on to survive in the jungle of the contemporary art world.

Departing from peripheral details of some paintings of the Bilbao Fine Arts Museum, a female narrato...

The history of New York’s Meatpacking District, told from the perspective of transgender sex workers...

Shere Hite’s 1976 bestselling book, The Hite Report, liberated the female orgasm by revealing the mo...

Fashion revolutionary Bethann Hardison looks back on her journey as a pioneering Black model, modeli...

While navigating daily discrimination, a filmmaker who inhabits and loves her unusual body searches ...

Since 1987, and for almost three decades, New York cinephiles had access to a vast treasure trove of...

Four Black transgender sex workers in Atlanta and New York City break down the walls of their profes...

Set in New York City, the epicenter of a phenomenon cropping up in communities across the United Sta...
This feature documentary studies the different faces of Montreal’s Greek community in 1969. Instead ...

In this special documentary that inspired a two-season television series, scientists and other exper...

The new Longueuil police chief, Fady Dagher, is aware of the challenges he faces. Well positioned fo...
This early work from Pierre Perrault, made in collaboration with René Bonnière, chronicles summer ac...

Alanis Obomsawin, a North American Indian who earns her living by singing and making films, is the m...

Astor Piazzolla revolutionized the tango. By breaking with the codes of traditional tango, he brough...

This pioneering documentary film depicts the lives of the indigenous Inuit people of Canada's northe...