FEEL IT.STREAM
?

Peter Campbell

Directing

Known For

No image
8.0

A 17-year-old has the summer of her life when she moves to a tiny Alberta resort and meets two new friends and a handsome lifeguard.

Sylvan Lake Summer

1990
Lies Like Truth
7.0

After a night of drinking, Victor's friend Danny suffers a nervous breakdown and wife Marna murdered. Danny's sister Kelly arrives to let slip a horrific family secret. Slowly Victor unravels the deception that unmasks his wife's killer.

Lies Like Truth

Rat Tales
N/A

While consuming several bottles of liquor, a veteran member of Alberta's Rat Patrol shows his younger colleague the ropes.

Rat Tales

1986
The Frank Crank Story
N/A

Can the Night Hoppers revive the jazz age at the Café Elegant?

The Frank Crank Story

1975
Synergy
N/A

ballet and industry

Synergy

No image
N/A

In "Killer Whale and Crocodile" carvers from two of the world's great carving traditions come together. A First Nations carver from Canada travels into the jungles of Papua New Guinea and a New Guinea carver travels to urban Canada. Together, they share each other's cultures and learn about the myths and legends that inform their individual artistic styles. In the Spring of 2006 John Marston, a young Coast Salish carver from Vancouver Island who has already gained a strong reputation for his innovative approach to traditional Coast Salish styles, visited Teddy Balangu, a carver from the Sepik River of Papua New Guinea. Teddy returned to Canada where he was the artist in residence at the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia for 5 months.

Killer Whale and Crocodile

2007
My Son the Pornographer
8.0

Art, a Victoria filmmaker, struggles with his conservative moral values when he visits his son Kole who works as a writer and actor in the pornography business in Prague.

My Son the Pornographer

No image
10.0

The Peace-Athabasca River Delta is a stunning habitat. Rivers converge in a rich, marshy wetland before draining into the Slave River. But the Delta is in trouble. Since the building of the WAC Bennett Dam in 1967, annual floodwaters--once the ecosystem's lifeblood--have become a thing of the past. The Delta is drying up, and lakes and wetlands are being replaced by brush. Species like the muskrat are disappearing. Footprints in the Delta explores the changes that have buffeted the region for several decades. Scientists, activists and Indigenous Peoples describe how lives have been fundamentally altered by the changes. And satellite images show the dramatic pace of degradation. Footprints in the Delta is essential viewing for anyone who cares about wetlands. It is a revealing account of the rapid change and environmental havoc humans can bring to a delicate ecosystem.

Footprints in the Delta

1999