Pixie Cram
Directing
Known For

Built at the height of the Cold War to withstand a five-megaton nuclear assault, the Diefenbunker is a massive underground, four-storey, 100,000-square-foot fortress designed and constructed entirely in secrecy in 1959. Inspired by the objects, rooms, and spaces of this Canadian Historic Site, the stop-animation film imagines the beginning of a nuclear war.
Emergency Broadcast

Set during WWII, the film is part live action and part stop-motion animation. It centres on the journey of two little girls as they travel across Ontario to visit someone dear to their hearts.
Pavilion
A fairy tale about a midwife, a young mother and a Witch Hunter.
Witch Woman
A 16mm film shot over 3 years of the filmmaker's daughter from the age of 15 months to the age of 4 years.
Passage
A split-frame collage of Super 8 footage pans and mirrors decaying tree trunks scattered along British Columbia’s shoreline.
Bones
Two young women journey from the outskirts of the city to a radioactive area deep in the woods. Along the way they encounter a young drifter. As they travel together they are forced to confront their new reality.
Pragmatopia
A 16mm live-action with stop-motion puppet animation of a fisherman making an odd discovery while cleaning his fish.
Coil

Based on filmmaker Dina Salha’s memory from her childhood in Lebanon of a socially rejected and reclusive artist Wadad Rawdah El-Balah, the film follows her to Lebanon to discover what happened to the artist after over thirty years of rumors surrounding her controversial life and the resurfacing of her long lost paintings in Canada