Flashback Films: Black Christmas Review
Flashback Film Fridays is our new bi-weekly series, where great classic Canadian movies will be reviewed. Through this series we will be showcasing the Canadian film industry’s vast catalogue of...
View ArticleBuffer Festival 2015: Q&A with LaToya Forever
LaToya Forever is a bundle of energy. Born and raised in Scarborough, Ont., she entered the YouTube scene in early 2010. She has two channels, LaToya Forever and LaToya’s Life, and over 1.2 million...
View ArticleBuffer Festival 2015: Q&A with Timothy DeLaGhetto
Timothy DeLaGhetto, real name Tim Chantarangsu, is a Thai-American YouTube personality, comedian and rapper. Ever since 2006, he’s been hitting the YouTube and online social scene, bringing along a...
View ArticleBuffer Festival 2015: Q&A with Julie Vu
Julie Vu is a transgender Canadian YouTuber hailing from Vancouver. Her channel currently boasts over 300,000 subscribers. Vu has a passion for make-up artistry and fashion, which is more or less the...
View ArticleThe Antimatter Film Festival
An international array of innovative and independent media art can be found at the 18th annual Antimatter Film Festival. The event was filled with a variety of screenings, installations, live...
View ArticleFlashback Films: Mon Oncle Antoine
The 1971 French-Canadian film, Mon Oncle Antoine (My Uncle Antoine), is a modest yet authentic portrayal of a a young boy’s coming of age story, making it a Canadian classic. Director Claude Jutra set...
View ArticleFlashback Film: Iron Eagle
The ‘80s action film, Iron Eagle, directed by Canadian Sidney J. Furie is an easy to watch film packaged in a story about a cocky teen saving his fighter jet pilot father. The film revolves around a...
View ArticleFlashback Films: Les Boys
Les Boys is the perfect combination of comedy, hockey, crime and sex all mixed into a typical underdog story. The film revolves around a seemingly untalented amateur hockey team that is sponsored by a...
View ArticleFlashback Film: eXistenZ
When you believe that virtual reality is reality, confusion is inevitable. For the 1997 science fiction thriller eXistenZ, directed by David Cronenberg, a focus group for a video game goes terribly...
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