Can't Miss BC Films at VIFF This Year
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Recent Videos
Here's Why You Should Support Independent Journalism
Come swim with the feisty fish.
How 'Fake News' Is Weaponized on Instagram
Inside Instagram's "fake news" war.
You're Invited To The "Pacific Celebration." No, Not You
Where did all of the non-white people go?
‘Edge of the Knife’: An Epic Film Performed Entirely in an Endangered Language
Making a film in a language that very few people speak.
1953 Film Depicts the Herring Hunting Days of Old
Understand herring's present and future by looking to its past.
‘We Need To Be Better’: A Rallying Cry From First Call Keynote
Be fearless. Support families. I dare you.
A Pollution Crisis Is Quietly Unfolding in the Elk Valley
The Elk Valley has a selenium pollution crisis that nobody seems to be talking about.
Tech Critics Parody IBM Oscars Ad
A searing response to IBM's "unreflective" Oscar ad.
Vancouver Asahi Memorialized in New Heritage Minute
Baseball helped some of the Vancouver Asahi get through one of the darkest periods in Canada's history.
Children of God, Called ‘Must-See Theatre,’ Returns to Vancouver’s the Cultch
Don’t miss your chance to see Corey Payette’s award-winning musical, Children of God.
Megaphone's Speakers Bureau Is Changing the Way We Talk about Drug Use
Megaphone Speaker's Bureau is changing the way we talk about drug use.
Hagfish Slime Is Revolting, but I Can't Look Away
Hagfish slime is revolting, but I can’t look away.
Blight! A Horror Movie
Blight! A horror movie: Vancouver made a film in 1964 cheering bulldozed neighbourhoods.
The Secret Lives of Cougars, Coyotes and Bears
The secret lives of cougars, coyotes and bears.
Tyee Critic’s Choice: Pastoring a Shrinking Church in ‘First Reformed’
Tyee Critic’s Choice: Pastoring a shrinking church in First Reformed.
From the cultural and economic transformation of Vancouver's Chinatown to British Columbia's declining fish populations, the Vancouver International Film Festival's lineup points a lens at many local stories.
Running from September 25 to October 10, the festival's B.C. spotlight includes over a dozen full-length documentaries and features. Scott Renyard's The Pristine Coast profiles the research of biologist Alexandra Morton, while award-winning director Julia Kwan observes the lives of Chinatown's changing residents in Everything Will Be.
The festival is asking audiences to vote on their homegrown favourites beginning Sept. 11 -- read up on the films here.