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Cinema of Canada

Cinema in Canada dates back to the earliest known display of film in Saint-Laurent, Quebec, in 1896. The film industry in Canada has been dominated by the United States, which has utilized Canada as a shooting location and to bypass British film quota laws, throughout its history. Canadian filmmakers, English and French, have been active in the development of cinema in the United States.

Cinema of Canada
No. of screens3,114 (2015)[1]
 • Per capita9.6 per 100,000 (2015)[1]
Main distributorsUniversal 20.9%
Disney 18.7%
Warner Bros. 13.3%[2]
Produced feature films (2015)[3]
Total103
Fictional77 (74.8%)
Documentary26 (25.2%)
Number of admissions (2015)[4]
Total118,000,000
Gross box office (2015)[4]
TotalC$986 million
National filmsC$18.8 million (1.9%)

Films by Thomas A. Edison, Inc. were some of the first to arrive in Canada and early films made in the country were produced by Edison Studios. Canadian Pacific Railway and other railways supported early filmmaking including James Freer, whose Ten Years in Manitoba was the first known film by a Canadian. Evangeline is the earliest recorded Canadian feature film. George Brownridge and Ernest Shipman were major figures in Canadian cinema in the 1920s and 1930s. Shipman oversaw the production the most expensive film up to that point. Brownridge's career led to Carry on, Sergeant! and its failure caused a decline in the film industry.

The Canadian Government Motion Picture Bureau was formed in 1918, and expanded to sound and 16 mm film in the 1930s before merging into the National Film Board of Canada. The NFB expanded under the leadership of John Grierson. The Canadian Cooperation Project between the government and Motion Picture Association of America from 1948 to 1958, negatively affected Canadian filmmaking. Internal divisions between English and French Canadians within the NFB starting in the 1940s led to the creation of an independent branch for French language productions by the 1960s. The government provided financial support to the film industry through the Capital Cost Allowance and Telefilm Canada.

History edit

Film edit

Arrival of film edit

 
 
 
A film showing by Andrew M. Holland and George C. Holland was incorrectly viewed as the first in Canadian history until 1984. Their showing was conducted in West End Park, Ottawa (pictured 1892).

The first time a film was displayed in Canada, and one of the first times in North America, was at an event organized by Louis Minier and Louis Pupier using a cinematograph in Saint-Laurent, Quebec, on 27 June 1896. Prior to the discovery of the Saint-Laurent showing by Germain Lacasse in 1984, it was believed that a showing conducted by Andrew M. Holland and George C. Holland, where films by Thomas A. Edison, Inc. such as The Kiss were shown, in Ottawa, from 21 July to 28 August 1896, was the first. The Saint-Laurent showing was overlooked as English researchers did not search through French sources. Léo-Ernest Ouimet stated that he attended the showing and he was used as evidence of it until Lacasse found newspaper coverage of the event in La Presse.[5][6][7][8] R.A. Hardie and F.H. Wall also presented films in Winnipeg from 18 to 25 July 1896.[9][10]

The development of a Canadian film industry was hampered by the country's low population density, it had six million inhabitants and only Toronto and Montreal had more than 100,000 people in 1905, and the lack of domestic vaudeville as most of the acts came from the United States, United Kingdom, and France.[11] Andrew Holland was critical of Canada as a place for the film industry due to the quality of its films, distance between major urban areas, and different electrical systems.[12] Early films were used to as promotional material for companies, promote immigration, or displays of scenic locations including Niagara Falls.[13][14][15] The Edison Company created some of the first films in Canada by documenting the Klondike Gold Rush, Canadian soldiers leaving to fight in the Second Boer War, and George V, the Duke of York, arriving in Canada in 1902.[14]

 
Charles Urban's Bioscope Company of Canada in 1903

James Freer is believed to have been the first Canadian to produce films. He purchased an Edison camera and projector and started filming agriculture activates and Canadian Pacific Railway trains in 1897, and toured the United Kingdom with the sponsorship of the CPR in 1898, and a second less successful tour was sponsored by Clifford Sifton in 1901.[16] His second tour was the first time that the government was directly involved with film.[17] British and American filmmakers were selected as they could guarantee the distribution of their films unlike Canadian filmmakers.[18] The CPR enlisted Charles Urban and his company, in order to allow the distribution of the films to the United Kingdom, to travel and film Canada to promote settlement in the western areas. This group, the Bioscope Company of Canada, conducted filming in Quebec to Victoria from 1902 to 1903. The film, Living Canada, was premiered at the Palace Theatre in 1903, with High Commissioner Donald Smith in attendance. A total of thirty-five Living Canada films were released by 1904, and was reedited into Wonders of Canada in 1906. Urban success led to him gaining contracts with the government of British Columbia and the Northern Railway Company. The Grand Trunk Railway entered the industry by hiring Butcher's Film Service in 1909.[19] The CPR hired the Edison Company to film in Canada and they sent nine people, including J. Searle Dawley, Henry Cronjager, and Mabel Trunnelle, in 1910. They were provided a specialized train and the RMS Empress of India and produced thirteen films.[20]

Creating an independent film industry edit

 
Evangeline is the earliest recorded feature film in Canadian history.

Silent films used intertitles in English and French, but sound films were mostly produced in English.[21] The first recorded feature film created in Canada was Evangeline.[22][23] The Palace was the first theatre to transition to showing sound films when it presented Street Angel on 1 September 1928.[24] There were multiple attempts to create an independent film industry in Canada in the early 20th century.[25] Thirty-six companies meant for film production were created between 1914 and 1922, but the majority of the companies did not produce any films.[26]

 
The title card of British Canadian Pathe News as presented by Léo-Ernest Ouimet's Specialty Film Import.

In 1914, Canadian Animated Weekly by Universal Pictures became one of the first newsreels in Canada.[27] Ouimet, who was a pioneer for Canadian newsreels, created Specialty Film Import in 1915, as a distributor, but his newsreel and distribution companies were sold in 1923, and he unsuccessfully worked in the United States in the 1920s.[28] At the peak of Ouimet's career 1.5 million Canadians were watching his newsreels twice per week.[29] Domestic newsreel companies were unsuccessful after branches of American companies, Fox Canadian News and Canadian Kinograms, were established.[28]

Ernest Shipman established multiple film companies in cities and would produce a limited amount of films using local money before moving to another area.[28] Unlike other Canadian filmmakers he sought financial support from the American market.[30] In 1919, incorporated Canadian Photoplays with a financial capital of $250,000 in Alberta. He started production on Wapi, the Walrus, but retitled it to Back to God's Country to capitalize God's Country and the Woman, starring his wife Nell Shipman. The film was a critical and financial success, with it grossing over $500,000 in its first year, and Shipman's investors saw a 300% return on investment. Despite the success of the film Canadian Photoplays did not produce another film and went into voluntary liquidation.[31][32] He signed a contract with Ralph Connor in 1919, and formed Dominion Films, based in New York, to produce films in Winnipeg. Winnipeg Productions was formed to adapt twelve of Connor's stories, but only five were filmed.[32][33] Shipman created five companies across Canada in 1922, but only three produced films. He incorporated New Brunswick Films on 23 August 1922, but the failure of Blue Water ended Shipman's career.[34][35][36]

Trenton, Ontario, despite its small size, was a major film production area and had one of the few studios to last longer than a few years. Canadian National Features, founded by George Brownridge, construction a studio in the town and raised a financial capital of $500,000, with $278,000 coming within the first week, in 1916. However, the company suspended production after spending $43,000 on its first two films, The Marriage Trap and Power, and declared bankruptcy with $79,000 in assets. The studio in Trenton was taken over by the Pan American Film Corporation in 1918, but only released one film before closing. Brownridge founded Adanac Producing Company and released the two Canadian National Features films in 1918. Brownridge shifted production towards corporate sponsorships by displaying products in dramatized films. Brownridge sought a sponsorship from the CPR and John Murray Gibbon saw Power and asked Brownridge to make anti-Bolshevik films during the First Red Scare. Adanac was reorganized in 1919, with Brownridge as its managing director and Denis Tansey, a member of parliament, as its president. The Great Shadow was released in 1920, after being filmed in Canada rather than New York as Brownridge wanted to create a domestic film industry, and was a critical and financial success although the CPR pulled its public support before its release. However, the company went bankrupt with Brownridge balming Harley Knoles's wastefulness and Selznick Pictures's distribution policy.[37] Brownridge sold the Trenton studio to the Ontario Motion Picture Bureau in 1924, and it continued to be used, with Carry on, Sergeant! as the sole fictional work filmed there, until Mitchell Hepburn ordered its closure in 1934, and it was turned into a community centre.[25][38][39]

Motion Skreenadz, incorporated in 1920, conducted the majority of film production in western Canada and brought colour film production to British Columbia. Leon C. Shelly gained control over Motion Skreenadz and Vancouver Motion Pictures from 1936 to 1937. He extended the company to Toronto in 1945, but relocated the company entirely to Toronto in 1946. The company was reorganized into Shelly Films, but production of non-newsreels was ended in favor of focusing on film laboratories.[40]

British Columbia's government agencies used promotional films from 1908 to 1919, before the creation of the British Columbia Patriotic and Educational Picture Service.[41] It was headed by A. R. Baker and mainly distributed films produced under contract by Arthur D. Kean.[42] The provincial legislature passed legislation requiring the display of at least one ten-minute education film or travelogue during all of the programs.[43] The Motion Picture Branch of the Bureau of Publications was created by Saskatchewan in 1924, to produce education films.[44]

The Ontario Motion Picture Bureau was established in 1917, but did not produce its own films until 1923. S.C. Johnson, who worked in the Ontario Agriculture Department, was its first director.[45][44] The victory of the United Farmers of Ontario in the 1919 election resulted in Peter Smith reorganized film production under the Amusement Branch with Otter Elliott heading it. He changed the focus of filmmaking from agricultural training towards quality productions.[46] By 1925, the bureau had 2,000 films in its library, distributed 1,500 reels of film per month, and made one feature-length documentary, Cinderella of the Farms in 1931, but the bureau was dissolved after the Ontario Liberal Party won in the 1934 Ontario general election.[44][47][48]

Albert Tessier and Maurice Proulx produced large amounts of films in French at a time when it was uncommon.[49] Joseph Morin, the Quebec Minister of Agriculture, used film for education purposes and the Service de ciné-photographie was established in 1941.[44]

The War Office Cinematographic Committee, one of the first times the national government was involved in filmmaking, was formed in 1916, and was led by Max Aitken, 1st Baron Beaverbrook. The committee contracted the Topical Film Company before buying a controlling share. The committee aided in the production of distribution of D. W. Griffith's Hearts of the World. The committee was dissolved after World War I and its shares in Topical Film Company were sold, which were donated to war charities.[50]

The Associated Screen News of Canada was founded by Bernard Norrish in 1920, and the CPR held a majority control of its stock. The company grew from two employees in 1920, to over one hundred by 1930, and focused on the production of newsreels, theatrical shorts, and sponsored films.[41][51] It was the largest Canadian film company until the growth of Crawley Films in the 1950s.[52] It was one of Canada's longest lasting film production companies with Crawley Films and the National Film Board of Canada being one of the few to outlast it. Before ASN constructed a film laboratory all of the film print distributed in Canada were processed in the United States. The company was processing twenty-two million feet of film in per year by 1929.[53] ASN constructed a sound stage in 1936, and produced House in Order, which was its only feature film in the 1930s.[54]

 
Carry on, Sergeant! was a major film production in the late 1920s. Its failure resulted in a decline of the Canadian film industry that it did not recover from until after World War II.

Brownridge was sent to New York in 1925 by the Ontario Motion Picture Bureau to gain a distribution contract, but only negotiated one with Cranfield and Clarke after a year of high expenses.[55] Treasurer William Herbert Price criticized Brownridge stating that his "travelling expenses are very high and I do not see there was very much result from anything he has done".[56] George Patton, the bureau's head, supported the deal as Cranfield and Clarke had no Jews in its company. W.F. Clarke, who was later blamed for the company's financial failure, pushed for Canadian film production and came up with an idea of a film about "a dramatic story written by an eminent authority around the part played by the Canadians in the World War". Clarke incorporated British Empire Films of Canada in June 1927. The film adaption of The Better 'Ole was released in Canada under the name Carry On! and was financially success. Clarke's film was named Carry on, Sergeant! to help raise funds.[55] It received financial backing from influential people, including prime ministers Arthur Meighen and Bennett.[38] The film started production, by the recently created subsidiary Canadian International Films, in 1926, and Bruce Bairnsfather was hired to direct with an expensive contract, but his inexperience with film led to production troubles that increased the cost of the budget.[57][58] The production difficulties led to internal company problems and Clarke was removed as general manager although he remained vice-president.[59]

The film was released in 1928, to mixed-to-negative reviews and was only distributed in Ontario before the company went bankrupt in 1929. Brownridge attempted to recut and release the film in 1930, stating that it "would gross at least $200,000", but it did not happen. The Ontario government was still interested in attempting to create a large film studio by 1932, along with Edward Wentworth Beatty and Herbert Samuel Holt, but the recent failure of Canadian International Films and Great Depression led to its not receiving investments.[57][60] The Canadian film industry would not recover until after World War II.[61]

National Film Board edit

 
A group of cameramen who worked for the Canadian Government Motion Picture Bureau in 1925. Frank Badgley, the bureau's director from 1927 to 1941, is in the background.

The Exhibits and Publicity Bureau was founded on 19 September 1918, and was reorganized into the Canadian Government Motion Picture Bureau on 1 April 1923.[62][63][64] Its films were theatrically released in the United States by Bray Productions.[65] The organization's budget stagnated and declined during the Great Depression.[66] The organization was led by Bernard Norrish from 1917 to 1920, Raymond Peck from 1920 to 1927, and Frank Badgley from 1927 to 1941.[50] Badgley stated that the bureau needed to transition to sound films or else it would lose its access to theatrical releases, but the organization did not gain the equipment until 1934, and by then it had lost its theatrical distributors.[67][68] Badgley was able to get a 16 mm film facility for the bureau in 1931.[67] The organization's budget fell from $75,000 in 1930, to $65,000 in 1931, and $45,000 in 1932.[69] However, its budget was increased to $70,000 in 1933.[70] The bureau was reorganized into the National Film Board of Canada in 1941, following John Grierson's recommendation.[71][72]

 
John Grierson was the first commissioner of the National Film Board of Canada.

Ross McLean was working as the secretary to High Commissioner Vincent Massey when he met Grierson, and asked for Grierson to come to Canada to aide in the governmental film policy. Grierson made a report on the Canadian film industry in 1938, and the National Film Act, which he drafted, was passed in 1939 causing the creation of the NFB. Grierson became the first Film Commissioner of the NFB and served until the end of World War II. Employment rose from fifty to over seven hundred from 1941 to 1945, although it was cut by 40% after the war ended.[73][74][75][76] Grierson selected McLean to work as assistant commissioner and Stuart Legg to oversee the productions.[72]

Lest We Forget, Canada's first feature-length war documentary with sound, was released in 1935.[77] Grierson made efforts to increase the theatrical distribution of NFB films, primarily its war-related films, as he was coordinating wartime information for the United Kingdom in North America. Famous Players aided in distribution and the Canadian Motion Picture War Services Committee, which worked with the War Activities Committee of the Motion Pictures Industry, was founded in 1940. NFB productions such as The World in Action was watched by 30-40 million people per month in the United Kingdom and United States in 1943, and Canada Carries On was watched by 2.25 million people by 1944. The audience for NFB newsreels reached 40-50 million per week by 1944.[78]

Grierson opposed feature film production as he believed that Canada did not have a large enough market for an independent feature film industry. He supported working with American film companies and stated that "the theatre film business is an international business, dependent when it comes to distribution on an alliance or understanding with American film interests". He travelled to Hollywood in 1944, and the NFB sent scripts to American companies for consideration.[79]

Grierson lacked strong support in the Canadian government and some of his films received opposition from members of the government. Inside Fighting Russia was criticized for its support of the Russian Revolution and Balkan Powderkeg for criticizing the United Kingdom's policy in the Balkans. Grierson and the NFB were attacked during the onset of the Cold War. The Federal Bureau of Investigation created a file on Grierson in 1942, due to the World in Action newsreel being considered too left-wing. Leo Dolan, an ally of Hepburn and the head of the Canadian Government Travel Bureau, accused Grierson of being Jewish and a Co-operative Commonwealth Federation supporter. The Gouzenko Affair implicated Freda Linton, one of Grierson's secretaries, and the organization was criticized by the Progressive Conservative Party for subversive tendencies, financial waste, and being a monopoly. Grierson was also accused of being involved, but was proven not to be although he resigned as commissioner in 1945.[74][80]

McLean was ordered to assist the Royal Canadian Mounted Police screen NFB employees and the RCMP requested him to fire a list of employees. McLean, who refused to fire any employees without their disloyalty being proven, was not reappointed as commissioner and replaced by William Arthur Irwin in 1950. Irwin also refused to fire employees without proven disloyalty and reduced the demand and only three of the thirty-six requested were fired.[81][82][83]

The Royal Commission on National Development in the Arts, Letters and Sciences, with Massey as its chair, was formed in 1949. The NFB submitted a brief asking to have a headquarters constructed, budget increases, and to become a Crown corporation.[84] Robert Winters, whose ministry oversaw the NFB, stated that its brief did not represent government policy.[85] The Association of Motion Picture Producers and Laboratories of Canada submitted a brief criticizing a government monopoly, with the NFB's crown corporation request being referred to as an "expansionist, monopolistic psychology", and that they were unable to compete with the NFB as it paid no taxes and was exempt from tariffs.[86] The commission's report supported the NFB and its requests for Crown corporation status and a headquarters were accepted.[87]

 
The financial success of Royal Journey, depicting Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip's tour of Canada, aided the NFB and was one of the reasons that John Grierson said that William Arthur Irwin "saved the Film Board".

A Canadian tour by Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip was filmed and was initially meant to be two reels, worth twenty minutes, but grew to five reels as they could not determine what to cut. Irwin met with Harvey Harnick, the NFB's Columbia theatrical distributor, and J.J. Fitzgibbons, the president of Famous Players, and Fitzgibbons told Irwin that he would screen all five reels if the film was completed for a Christmas release. Royal Journey opened in seventeen first-run theatres and over course of the next two years it was screened in 1,249 Canadian theatres where it was watched by a record two million people and the film was also screened in forty other countries. The film cost $88,000, but the NFB gained a profit of $150,000 and the film's success was one of the reasons Grierson stated that Irwin "saved the Film Board".[88]

The Canadian Government Motion Picture Bureau and Associated Screen News of Canada had no French-Canadian employees. Vincent Paquette became the NFB's first French-Canadian filmmaker in 1941, and directed La Cité de Notre-Dame, the board's first in-house French-language film, in 1942. The number of French-Canadian employees grew to seventeen by 1945, and a quarter of the board's budget was spent on French productions. The Massey Commission and Gratien Gélinas, a member of the NFB's Board of Governors, called for an improvement in French-language productions, but Premier Maurice Duplessis opposed it.[89]

French-language media, including Le Devoir, criticized the NFB after it removed Roger Blais in 1957. NFB francophone directors Denys Arcand, Gilles Carle, Jacques Godbout, Gilles Groulx, and Clément Perron criticized the organization for its censorship policies, refusal to produce feature films, and its colonial treatment of Quebec. Michel Brault, Carle, Bernard Gosselin, Groulx, and Arthur Lamothe left following reprimands. Guy Roberge became the first French-Canadian to serve as the NFB's commissioner. Duplessis died in 1959, and Quebec Liberal Party gained control while the Liberal Party won in the 1963 Canadian federal election. The Liberals supported a policy of bilingualism and biculturalism. A French-language branch of the NFB that was independent of its English-language productions was formed in 1964, under the leadership of Pierre Juneau.[90]

Drylanders, the organization's first English language feature-length fiction film, was released in 1963.[91]

Kathleen Shannon organized Studio D, the first publicly funded feminist film-production unit in the world, in 1974, and produced 125 films before its closure in 1996. However, there would be no French version of Studio D until the formation of Studio B in 1986.[92][93][94]

Governmental financial involvement edit

Starting in 1954, the Capital Cost Allowance was able to be used for a 60% tax write-off for film investment and the amount was increased to 100% in 1974.[95][96] $1.2 billion was invested in Canadian film and television in the thirteen years following the increase. The average film budget rose from $527,000 to $2.6 million in 1979, and $3.5 million in 1986.[95][97] From 1958 to 1967, private film investment accounted for 18% of film investments and it declined to 13.5% in 1968, while the CFDC accounted for 37.5%. Following the tax write-off increase private investment rose to account for 47% of film investment between 1975 and 1978 while the CFDC declined to 15%.[98] Silence of the North was the first film with American backing to receive CCA certification.[99] The Film and Video Production Tax Credit replaced the Capital Cost Allowance in 1995.[100]

In 1962, Roberge proposed the creation of an organization to aid in film finance based on the National Film Finance Corporation and Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée.[101]

 
Norman Jewison founded the Canadian Film Centre

The Interdepartmental Committee on the Possible Development of a Feature Film Industry in Canada, under the leadership of NFB commissioner Roberge, was formed by the secretary of state. The committee submitted a report to the 19th Canadian Ministry for the creation of a loan fund to aid the development of the Canadian film industry. The proposal was approved in October 1965, and legislation, the Canadian Film Development Corporation Act of 1966-67, for its creation was introduced in June 1966, before being approved on 3 March 1967.[102] The Canadian Film Development Corporation was established with a budget of $10 million in 1967. In February 1968, Spender was appointed as its director along with a five-member board. Canada lack of a film school leading to the creation of the Canadian Film Centre by Norman Jewison. The CFDC started investing up to 50% of its budget into films that cost less than $500,000.[95][103][104][105][106]

Explosion was the first film to receive financial support from the CFDC. Valérie by Denis Héroux, which was not financially supported by the CFDC, was made at cost of $70,000 and made over $1 million in Quebec. The CFDC financially supported Héroux's other films Here and Now (L'Initiation), Love in a Four Letter World, Virgin Lovers, and Two Women in Gold (Deux Femmes en or).[107] Deux Femmes en or was financially successful, with its two million ticket sales remaining the highest in Canadian history, and became the highest grossing Canadian film.[108][109][110]

The $10 million budget was used by October 1971, after the CFDC invested $6.7 million into 64 films with an average cost of $250,000 per film. The CFDC was not financially successful as only three of those films made a profit and the organization recovered $600,000 of its investments. After 1970 the CFDC focused on investing in smaller budgeted films and ended its work with American theatrical distributors to them hiding profits.[111] Another $10 million budget was given to the CFDC in November 1971, and a new investment strategy in which $600,000 per year would be invested into productions, with its creative and technical crew being Canadian, budgeted below $100,000, and $3 million per year on films with guaranteed distribution.[112] It took the CFDC five years to recover its first $1 million investment, but recovered $1 million in 1977 alone. From 1977 to 1978, the CFDC invested $1.6 million into twenty films and its investments rose to $10.8 million into 34 films from 1979 to 1980.[113][114] Between 1968 and 1978, the organization funded 103 English-language films, but only Black Christmas, Death Weekend, Heart Farm, Shivers, and The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz were profitable to the CFDC.[115]

The Toronto Filmmakers' Coop, an organization with 150 filmmakers, sent a letter with the endorsement of 200 filmmakers to Gérard Pelletier asking for the creation of a content quota that required distributors to have 15% of their films be Canadian.[116] Pelletier announced the creation of a theatre in the National Capital Region that exclusively showed Canadian films in 1972.[117] A study published by the Secretary of State reported that a content quota would not work as a 50% quote would generate less revenue than a 5% sales increase for foreign films. The study stated that new tax regulations and investments by the CFDC could make the Canadian film industry internationally competitive.[118]

The budget for the CFDC was limited to a few million and its budget from 1982 to 1983 was $4.5 million. However, the organization had its role expanded to include television in 1983, and administered the Canadian Broadcast Program Development Fund. The television fund was initially given an annual budget of $60 million. An annual budget of $30 million through the Feature Film Fund was created in 1986, and an annual budget of $17 million through the Feature Film Distribution Fund was created in 1988. The organization's combined budget grew to $146 million by 1989.[119][120]

A report was written by a task force in 1985, and it stated that foreign domination of film and video distribution, chronic undercapitalization of production companies, and concentration of theatre ownership and distribution and exhibition vertical integration hurt the development of the film industry. They recommended legislation to increase the control of Canadian-owned companies over distribution and Minister of Communications Flora MacDonald proposed a film licensing system based on their recommendations.[121] American distributors opposed the policy and lobbied the American government through the MPAA and its president, Jack Valenti. Valenti met with President Ronald Reagan at least twice and Reagan criticized the legislation of a US-Canadian economic summit. 54 members of the United States Congress signed a letter to Prime Minister Brian Mulroney opposing the legislation. The legislation was not tabled and it failed.[122][123]

Post-Carry on, Sergeant! edit

F. R. Crawley, who was involved in filmmaking for a decade, and Judith Crawley created Île d'Orléans in 1938, and its success led to a $3,000 loan from F. R. Crawley's father that created Crawley Films. It employment rose from 6 in 1946, 33 in 1949, and around 100 by the 1950s. One-sixth of the $3 million worth of films produced by the Canadian film industry in 1952 came from Crawley Films.[124]

France Film and other companies started creating French film productions in the 1930s. Maria Chapdelaine is commonly, although incorrectly, regarded as the first French-Canadian sound movie.[21] Étienne Brûlé gibier de potence was the first colour feature film made in Quebec and the first Canadian colour film shot in English and French.[125][126] Joseph-Alexandre DeSève monopolized the distribution of French-language films through France-Film. France-Film arose from the distribution of Maria Chapdelaine which sold 70,000 tickets in Canada. He also aided in the production of Notre-Dame de la Mouise in response to the papal encyclical Vigilanti Cura. DeSève purchased Renaissance Films following the success of The Music Master.[127] DeSève produced four films through Renaissance Films Distribution.[128] Paul L'Anglais formed Quebec Productions filmed Whispering City in English and French, under the title La Forteresse. It was seen by over 100,000 people in Quebec over the course of six weeks.[129]

The papal encyclical Vigilanti Cura in 1936, changed the Catholic attitude towards movies and the church became a part of Quebec movie production in the 1940s. Most of the nineteen movies, fifteen in French and four in English, produced in Quebec from 1944 to 1953 were made by Renaissance Films or Quebec Productions.[130][131] Those were the only French-language feature films produced in Canada in that period.[132]

Bush Pilot was the only English-language feature film created by a Canadian company in the 1940s.[133]

Modern industry edit

Canadians had to import colour 35 mm film until 1967, as Canada did not produce any internally.[134]

By the 1960s Nat Taylor, a theatre owner, controlled the largest private film studio in Canada, Toronto International Film Studios, two distribution companies, International Film Distributors and Allied Artists Pictures, a television station, CJOH-DT, and multiple production companies. He entered film production with The Mask in 1961.[135] Taylor, unlike other members of the AMPPLC, supported state involvement in feature film production.[136]

Bryant Fryer founded one of the first animation companies in Canada and made six silhouette films from 1927 to 1935. Norman McLaren was brought to Canada from Scotland by Grierson in 1941. McLaren recruited English-Canadian animators from OCAD University, including George Dunning, Evelyn Lambart, Grant Munro, and Robert Verrall.[137] McLaren recruited French-Canadian animators from École des beaux-arts de Montréal, including René Jodoin. Jodoin created a French animation unit in 1966, which included Laurent Coderre and Bernard Longpré.[138] Le village enchanté was the first recorded animated feature film in Canadian history and Return to Oz which was based on Tales of the Wizard of Oz, the first recorded Canadian animated television series, was the second recorded animated feature film.[139]

In the 1960s filmmakers came from universities throughout Canada. David Cronenberg, Clarke Mackey, and David Secter graduated from the University of Toronto.[140] John Hofsess, Ivan Reitman, and Peter Rowe graduated from McMaster University. Jack Darcus and Larry Kent graduated from the University of British Columbia.[141] Cronenberg received financial support from the CFDC and Shivers was their most successful investment, with a budget of $150,000 ($75,000 from the CFDC) and gross of $5 million.[142] 708 feature films, over twice the amount made in the past fifty years, were made during the 1970s.[143]

Carle, Groulx, Claude Jutra, and Jean Pierre Lefebvre, who were inspired by the French New Wave, made their directorial debuts from 1963 to 1965, and all won the Grand Prix at the Montreal International Film Festival throughout the 1960s.[144] Jean-Claude Lauzon's Night Zoo won the most Genie Awards in history, with thirteen awards.[145]

Dream Life by Mireille Dansereau was the first privately produced feature film in Canada to be directed by a woman.[146]

Porky's became the first Canadian film to gross more than $100 million.[147] The Decline of the American Empire was the most successful Quebec film released in France with 1,236,322 viewers.[148] The Care Bears Movie, by Nelvana, was the highest-grossing non-Disney animated film at the time of its release.[149] Six of the ten highest-grossing films in Canada between 1991 and 2001 were made in Quebec.[150]

Film investment in British Columbia rose from $188.5 million in 1990 to over $1 billion in 1999.[151] Feature film production rose from 16 films to 56 films with the total amount of productions rising from 50 to 192.[152]

Theatres edit

In the 1890s and 1900s films were shown by travelling showmen. John C. Green, a magician who presented for the Holland brothers at their first showing, travelled throughout eastern Canada and New England until the establishment of movie theatres.[153] John Albert Schuberg was credited with bringing movies to Vancouver and Winnipeg, and the provinces of British Columbia and the Canadian Prairies.[154] Schuberg established Canada's first permanent movie theatre, the Electric Theatre, in Vancouver, in October 1902, with its first movie played being The Eruption of Mount Pelee.[155][156] He opened additional theatres in Winnipeg, and later gained the license for First National Pictures in western Canada. He had one of the largest theatre chains and sold it to Jay and Jules Allen for around $1 million in 1919, before returning in 1921, and then selling it to Famous Players in 1924.[155][157]

Jay and Jules Allen established their first theatre in Brantford in 1906. The established Allen Amusement Corporation, a film exchange, in 1908. Their chain was worth over $20 million by 1920, and had fifty-three theatres by 1923, when they declared bankruptcy and it was acquired by Famous Players.[5][158][159][160] The Allens owned the distribution rights for Pathé and Paramount Pictures.[161] In 1916, they rejected an offer by Paramount president Adolph Zukor to create an equal partnership. The Allens informed Nathan Nathanson of this attempt and Nathanson convinced Zukor to give him their distribution rights in 1920, for twenty years after creating his own theatre chain.[162]

 
Nathan Nathanson founded Famous Players and Odeon Theatres. These companies controlled the theatre industry in Canada.

Nathanson's Famous Players started an expansion campaign in the 1920s that led to its gaining control of all first run theatres in the major cities.[163] Zukor and Paramount forced Nathanson out of Famous Players after buying a large amount of the stock in 1930.[164] Famous Players also controlled the distribution industry in Canada, accounting for at least 40% of distribution, due to its connections to Paramount Pictures. Paul Nathanson managed Regal Films, which was controlled by Paramount, and distributed films from British International Pictures, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and Pathé, and Famous Players also distributed films from Columbia Pictures. Fox Film, RKO Pictures, Tiffany Pictures, and Warner Bros. were the other main distributors in Canada in the 1930s.[165] A study conducted by United Artists in 1931 showed that 67% of rental revenue in Canada came from nineteen theatres in Canada's main cities while the remainder came from the rest.[166]

Block booking by major studios, that were from outside Canada, prevented independent theatre owners from obtaining films at a reasonable price. R. B. Bennett, who invested into the film industry, made investigating the film industry an issue in the 1930 election. Peter White was appointed to investigate Famous Players' monopolistic control of theatres under the Combines Investigation Act. White concluded that "a combine exists and has existed at least since the year of 1926" and Famous Players was detrimental to the public interest in 1931, but no action was taken against the company.[163][167] Bennett supported taking action and the attorney generals of Alberta, British Columbia, Ontario, and Saskatchewan would prosecute Famous Players. Fifteen companies and three people, including Nathan Nathanson, were charged, but the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in favor of the companies.[168]

After losing control over Famous Players Nathanson created Odeon Theatres in April 1941, and resigned from his position at Famous Players in May. He built the company using Regal Films, which was managed by his brother and distributed MGM films, and gaining the business of companies whose contracts with Famous Players were expiring. Odeon did not gain a MGM distribution contract, but did gain ones for all of Columbia Pictures' films, two-thirds of Universal's films, and one-third of Fox's films. Nathanson died in 1943, and was succeeded by his son Paul. Films released in Famous Players and Odeon theatres, both foreign owned after Paul sold his stock to J. Arthur Rank in 1946, accounted for over 60% of the Canadian box office by 1947. [169]

Taylor, who declined to become the general manager of Odeon in 1941, founded Twentieth Century Theatres in the 1930s and the Famous Players-aligned company grew to own sixty-five theatres by the 1960s. He opened the International Theatre in Toronto which was the first theatre in Canada dedicated towards screening art films.[135] Taylor and Garth Drabinsky created the Cineplex Odeon Corporation in 1979, and by 1987 it was the largest theatre chain in North America with 1,500 theatres, with two-thirds of them in the United States.[170]

The deaths of seventy-eight children from the Laurier Palace Theatre fire in 1927, and opposition to film from the Catholic Church led to a ban on minors attending movie theatres until 1961.[171][130] In the 1930s Quebec was the only province that allowed for theatres to be open on Sundays.[171] The Quebec Cinema Act, passed in 1983, required that English-language films in Quebec must be translated into French within sixty days. However, films from the United States were unaffected as their distribution ended before the deadline and the NFB was exempted from the requirements.[172]

The Canadian box office increased following World War II. In 1934, there were 796 theatres which admitted 107 million people to earn $25 million and that grew to 1,229 theatres admitting 151 million people to make $37 million in 1940. By 1950, the amount of theatres increased to 2,360 earning $86 million with 245 million people attending.[173] However, during the 1950s Canadian film attendance declined with the nation falling from the fifth-highest in film attendance to twenty-fifth by the 1960s and the amount of films the average Canadian saw per year dropped from seventeen in 1950 to eight in 1960.[174] Ticket sales in Quebec fell from 60 million in 1952, to 19 million in 1969.[175] The amount of theatres in Canada declined from 1,635 in 1962, to 1,400 in 1967, to 1,116 in 1974, and to 899 in 1984. [176][177]

International edit

Many native-born Canadians, such as Al Christie, Allan Dwan, Louis B. Mayer, Sidney Olcott, Mack Sennett, and Jack L. Warner, aided in the creation and development of the American film industry.[11]

In the early 1900s Canada was used as a shooting location for dramatic productions with Hiawatha, the Messiah of the Ojibway being one of the first in 1903.[178] The Kalem Company was one of the first American companies to conduct location shooting in Canada in 1909.[179][180] Two of the films D. W. Griffith made in his first year as a director, The Ingrate and A Woman's Way, were made in Canada.[180] British American Film Company, Canadian Bioscope Company, Conness Till Film Company of Toronto, and the All-Red Feature Company, the four Canadians companies that produced fictional films prior to World War I, had their invested come from Americans, but all of them were financially unsuccessful and closed within a few years with Conness Till suffering a fire that destroyed their $50,000 studio.[181][182]

Canadians were hostile to American filmmakers and provincial film review boards instituted censorship policies in 1915, which included a ban on the gratuitous display of the flag of the United States.[183] Fifty reels of film were banned in British Columbia in 1914, due to "an unnecessary display of U.S. flags" which put it as the third most common reason behind infidelity and seduction.[184] In 1927, the United Kingdom created a quota limiting the amount of foreign films that could be shown in the country, but productions that were produced within the British Empire and was mostly made by British subjects were excluded from the quotas. American financers produced low-budget B movies within Canada to exploit the loophole before the legislation was changed in 1938 to exclude the Dominion. Nanook of the North and The Viking exploited the loophole.[178][185] From 1928 to 1938, twenty-two feature films, the majority of Canada's film production, meant solely for the British market were filmed.[186]

American companies made $17 million in profits from Canada in 1947. Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King's government sought to reduce the general trade imbalance between Canada and the United States. McLean called for the reinvestment of this money into Canadian film production and requiring the American distribution of Canadian shorts. The Motion Picture Association of America proposed the Canadian Cooperation Project and it was accepted by the Canadian government on 14 January 1948. The government would not restrict revenue to American companies in exchange for productions being filmed in Canada and mentions of Canada in those scripts to promote tourism. The project was considered unsuccessful and stifled Canadian filmmaking, with only eight Canadian feature films being made during the CCP's existence, before it ended in 1958. McLean was critical of the agreement as there was a lack of Canadian films distributed in the United States. Michael Spencer stated that the agreement was "allowed to die of embarrassment".[187][188][189]

Gilbert Agar attended the Fourth National Motion Picture Conference of the Motion Picture Council in America in 1926, and reported that 95% of films released in Canada were from the United States.[190] Eric Johnston stated that "outside the U.S. itself, Canada ranks as the second largest market in the world for Hollywood films."[191] The amount of films in Canada of American origin declined to 68% by 1954, and 41% in 1962.[174]

Canadian directors, such as Norman Jewison, left Canada to work in the United States.[192] Raoul Barré worked as a cartoonist in Canada before moving to the United States and working as an animator at Barré Studio. Stephen Bosustow and other animators left Walt Disney Animation Studios during the Disney animators' strike and founded United Productions of America.[193]

Seven Arts Productions, while being listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange and having a majority of its investors be Canadians, had the majority of its productions done by its American subsidiary. It spent $25 million on ten American film productions, including Dr. Strangelove and What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?.[194] Canadian 3D animation companies, such as Softimage and Alias Research, had their software used for American films, such as Jurassic Park.[195]

Reception edit

Productions from the NFB received 64 Academy Award nominations and ten victories by 2000.[196] The Crawleys produced 2,500 films and won over 200 awards during their careers, including the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Film for The Man Who Skied Down Everest.[197]

Churchill's Island, If You Love This Planet, and Neighbours were awarded the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Film.[198][87][199] The Sand Castle, Special Delivery, and Every Child were awarded the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.[200][199] I'll Find a Way was awarded the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film.[199]

David Bairstow's Royal Journey won the BAFTA Award for Best Documentary in 1952.[201]

Colin Low's The Romance of Transportation in Canada was awarded the Prix du Film d'Animation at the Cannes Film Festival in 1953.[201] Brault won the Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Director for Orders. [202]

Censorship and preservation edit

Censorship edit

Ouimet's fine of $10 in February 1908, for having the Ouimetoscope open on Sundays was a test case to establish the power to close places of amusement on Sundays.[203] In 1920, Pierre-François Casgrain opposed an attempt to remove a 15¢ per reel per day tax on film exhibitors stating that "Pictures that are shown are an invitation to the people of the poorer classes to revolt, and they bring disorder into the country".[204] Fees implemented by the censorship boards earned the government large amounts of money with Alberta's two censorship boards making $12,275 in 1927.[205] By 1921, New Brunswick had the lowest fee at $0.50 per reel while Ontario had the highest at $3 per reel, $1 per reel license for each copy. Appeals cost $5 in Quebec and $10 in Ontario.[206] Variety reported in 1950 that censorship fees were costing the film industry over $1,450,000 per year, with $600,000 of the expense coming from Canada.[207]

Censorship boards were established in Manitoba, Ontario, and Quebec in 1911, in Alberta and British Columbia in 1913, and in Nova Scotia in 1915.[184] 5,500 reels of film were censored in the United Kingdom in 1925, compared to 6,639 reels in Quebec, 5,518 reels in Manitoba, and 5,013 reels in Alberta.[208] Maclean's reported that the amount of films banned in Canada fell from one hundred one in 1932, to nineteen in 1940, with nine being banned in Quebec and none in Ontario. Three hundred of the six hundred films examined by censors in 1940 were censored. Quebec censors rejected all films the dealt with divorce. Multiple Russian films were banned due to "suspected Communist propaganda" and during World War II all foreign films, with the exception of France, were banned.[209]

Ontario banned all war films in 1914. The Canadian Militia initially ordered censorship boards in very province to condemn war films, but later created its own war films by 1915.[210] In 1950, All Quiet on the Western Front was banned in Nova Scotia as there was a military recruitment drive happening.[211][212]

 
 
Damaged Goods, a film about sexually transmitted infection, was banned, but censorship policies changed after a government campaign was launched to reduce sexually transmitted diseases. The End of the Road was initially banned, but it and similar movies were later allowed.

Damaged Goods, a film about sexually transmitted infection, was banned in Ontario in 1916. Mutual Film screened the film to a selected audience, as a private showing it was exempt from the provincial censorship laws, and asked them if the film should be released. The audience approved of the film and Mutual Film appealed the ruling, but were unsuccessful. To combat the spread of sexual diseases a government campaign was initiated in the late 1910s. The Canadian National Council for Combating Venereal Disease, which was led by William Renwick Riddell and Gordon Bates, sought to distribute The End of the Road in Ontario in 1919. The censorship board was conflicted over maintaining its earlier ruling or allowing a government campaign to continue. The board rejected the film and the ruling was maintained on appeal. However, the ruling was reversed in 1920, and over 20,000 people saw the film within five days of its release and 40,000 by 1932. Other films about sexual diseases were allowed to be shown as well.[213]

 
Minister of Finance Mitchell Hepburn banned The March of Time due to a Time article about him that he did not like.

Censors were criticized starting in the 1950s for their abuse of power. Minister of Finance Hepburn banned all of The March of Time newsreels in 1942, without the board watching it, due to a Time article about him that he did not like. J. Bernard Hughes, the chief censor in British Columbia, banned Diary of a Nazi stating that it was "purely Russian propaganda" that depicted "the Nazis at their worst". Ernest Manning believed that the film industry in the United States was dominated by communists and sought to ban multiple films including Frank Sinatra's The House I Live In.[211][212][214] The advent of television made it difficult for censors as they could not control the content being broadcast to Canada from the United States and had limited control over internal television broadcasts, with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation showing films that were banned in provinces in those provinces.[215] Henry McLeod, a censor from Nova Scotia, stated that "What's the point of banning a film when the trade can turn around and sell it to the CBC?".[216]

The Canadian Federation of Film Societies, an organization with 25,000 members, called for the replacement of censorship boards with a rating system.[217] In 1961, George Enos, who served as New Brunswick's censor for thirty years, stated that censorship "is very undesirable" and that "Ninety percent of the worry is needless. Respectable people will condemn a bad picture. I don't like the idea of setting up one man to say what his neighbour shall see or not see. He would have to be a superman." By the 1960s the Quebec censorship board was one of the largest with eighteen full-time staff employed compared to other provincial boards which had two to five full-time staff.[218][216] By the 1970s the censorship boards were being transitioned to classification boards with the companies having to recut their films rather than the boards.[219]

The Hicklin test was used as the standard for film censorship until 1959, when the Criminal Code was amended and the Supreme Court of Canada overruled a ruling by the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal that held that the Hicklin test was still in effect.[220] The Columbus of Sex by John Hofsess was the first film in Canada charged with obscenity.[141][221] The film was ordered to be destroyed following the trial, but the film's producers, Reitman and Daniel Goldberg, sold the rights to an American company that recut the film into My Secret Life.[141]

Last Tango in Paris was banned in Nova Scotia in 1974. Gerard McNeil, the editor of the Dartmouth Free Press, opposed the film's censorship and he filed a lawsuit in which he argued that the censors were acting illegally when they banned the film, citizens have a right to view uncensored films regardless of its content, and that the taxes and fees collected by the Amusements Board was to continue its illegal activities. The censors argued that McNeil had no standing to sue as he had no direct interest in the case, but the Nova Scotia Supreme Court stated that "there could be a large number of persons with a valid desire to challenge". The court ruled on 2 February 1976, that the provinces had no power to censor films under the British North America Acts.[222] However, the Supreme Court of Canada overruled the court on 19 January 1978, in a five to four decision.[223]

Preservation edit

The University of Alberta created a film library in 1917, and Quebec was the first province to utilize film in schools.[224] The rights to Carry on, Sergeant! were acquired by the National Film Archive of Canada and reconstructed the film with Gordon Sparling, who worked on it as an assistant director, to show on television in 1968.[57] The Canadian Film Archives was formed by the NFB in 1951.[225]

In 1924, the majority of Ouimet's Specialty Film Import's collection was destroyed by fire.[226][227] The rising costs for the construction of the NFB's headquarters in Montreal resulted in the Department of Public Works cancelling the construction of film vaults. 13.1 million metres of archival footage worth $4.8 million (equivalent to $37,551,381 in 2021) was instead stored in Kirkland, Quebec, and were destroyed in a fire in July 1967.[228][229]

Financial edit

Box office revenue
Year Revenue Reference(s)
1930 $38,479,500 [230]
1933 $24,954,200 [230]
1934 $25,338,100 [230]
1935 $27,173,400 [230]
1936 $29,610,300 [230]
1937 $32,499,300 [230]
1938 $33,635,052 [230]
1939 $34,010,115 [230]
1940 $37,858,955 [230]
1941 $41,369,259 [230]
1942 $46,461,097 [230]
1943 $52,567,989 [230]
1944 $53,173,325 [230]
1945 $55,430,711 [230]
1946 $59,888,972 [230]
1947 $62,865,279 [230]
1948 $69,657,248 [230]
1949 $78,559,779 [230]
Theatre admissions
Year Revenue Reference(s)
1934 107,354,509 [231]
1935 117,520,795 [231]
1936 126,913,547 [231]
1937 133,668,450 [231]
1938 137,381,280 [231]
1939 137,898,668 [231]
1940 151,590,799 [231]
1941 161,677,731 [231]
1942 182,845,765 [231]
1943 204,677,550 [231]
1944 208,167,180 [231]
1945 215,573,267 [231]
1946 227,538,798 [231]
1947 221,528,177 [231]
1948 224,055,171 [231]
1949 236,017,859 [231]
1950 240,824,982 [231]
1951 250,547,499 [231]
1952 261,475,867 [231]
1953 257,965,182 [231]
1954 236,158,824 [231]
1955 201,247,408 [231]
1956 177,615,767 [231]
1957 156,701,458 [231]
1958 146,483,741 [231]
1959 128,859,395 [231]
1959 117,734,361 [232]
Timeline of the highest-grossing domestic film record
Established Title Record setting gross Reference(s)
1970 Two Women in Gold (Deux Femmes en or) $2.5-4 million [110][233]
1982 Porky's $11.2 million [234]
2006 Bon Cop, Bad Cop $12.2 million [235]
Timeline of the most expensive films
Year Production Cost (est.) Refs and notes
1914 Evangeline $30,000 [23]
1919 Back to God's Country $165,000 [236]
1928 Carry on, Sergeant! $350,000 [237]
1947 Whispering City[a] $750,000 [238]
1971 Snowballin' $800,000 [239]
1973 Kamouraska $905,000 [240]
1973 The Neptune Factor $2,500,000 [241]
1978 Angela $3,000,000 [242]
1979 Murder by Decree $5,000,000 [243]
City of Fire $5,300,000 [244]
Bear Island $12,100,000 [245][246]
1981 Quest for Fire $12,500,000 [247]
1983 Spacehunter: Adventures in the Forbidden Zone $14,400,000 [248]
1984 Louisiana $15,000,000 [249]
1990 Bethune: The Making of a Hero $20,000,000 [250]
1992 Shadow of the Wolf $31,000,000 [251]
Telefilm revenue and expenditure
Year Revenue Production expenditure Marketing expenditure Other expenditure Total Expenditure Reference(s)
1985 $51 million $38 million $3 million $8 million $49 million [252][253]
1986 $80 million $66 million $4 million $8 million $78 million [252][253]
1987 $96 million $74 million $6 million $13 million $93 million [252][253]
1988 $128 million $100 million $8 million $18 million $126 million [252][253]
1989 $144 million $101 million $23 million $19 million $143 million [252][253]
1990 $161 million $116 million $27 million $21 million $164 million [252][253]
1991 $163 million $109 million $29 million $24 million $162 million [252][253]
1992 $164 million $107 million $28 million $25 million $160 million [252][253]
1993 $157 million $102 million $25 million $24 million $151 million [252][253]
1994 $150 million $101 million $24 million $23 million $148 million [252][253]
1995 $152 million $97 million $26 million $21 million $144 million [252][253]

See also edit

References edit

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  253. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Juneau 1996, p. 265.

Works cited edit

Books edit

Journals edit

  • Brégent-Heald, Dominique (2012). "Vacationland: Film, Tourism, and Selling Canada, 1934-1948". Canadian Journal of Film Studies. University of Toronto Press. 21 (2): 27–48. doi:10.3138/cjfs.21.2.27. JSTOR 24411793.
  • Constantinides, Zoë (2014). "The Myth of Evangeline and the Origin of Canadian National Cinema". Film History. Indiana University Press. 26 (1): 50–79. doi:10.2979/filmhistory.26.1.50. JSTOR 10.2979/filmhistory.26.1.50. S2CID 191465275.
  • Gaudreault, André (1996). "The Introduction of the Lumière Cinematograph in Canada". Canadian Journal of Film Studies. SAGE Publishing. 5 (2): 113–123. doi:10.3138/cjfs.5.2.113. JSTOR 24402139.
  • MacKenzie, David (2013). "An early effort in cultural diplomacy: The Canadian Co-operation Project and Canadian tourism". International Journal. SAGE Publishing. 68 (4): 576–590. JSTOR 24709360.

Press edit

  • Mattison, David (1985). "The British Columbia Government's first Film Unit". Reel West Magazine. Vol. 1, no. 4.
  • Klady, Leonard (1998). "Telefilm Celebrates 30 Years" (Press release). Variety.

Notes edit

  1. ^ La Forteresse, a French version of the film that was shot simultaneously, was also budgeted at $750,000. Producer Paul L'Anglais stated that the initial budget was $600,000 for both films, but later increased to $1,000,000 with 80% being spent on Whispering City and 20% spent on La Forteresse.

Further reading edit

  • Knelman, Martin (23 September 1980), "Hollywood North: Canada's Struggle to Build a Film Industry", The Boston Phoenix, vol. 9, no. 39
  • Knelman, Martin (1977), This Is Where We Came In: The Career and Character of Canadian Film, McClelland & Stewart, ISBN 978-0771045332

External links edit

cinema, canada, this, article, about, english, language, cinema, canada, french, language, cinema, canada, cinema, quebec, cinema, canada, dates, back, earliest, known, display, film, saint, laurent, quebec, 1896, film, industry, canada, been, dominated, unite. This article is about the English language cinema in Canada For the French language cinema in Canada see Cinema of Quebec Cinema in Canada dates back to the earliest known display of film in Saint Laurent Quebec in 1896 The film industry in Canada has been dominated by the United States which has utilized Canada as a shooting location and to bypass British film quota laws throughout its history Canadian filmmakers English and French have been active in the development of cinema in the United States Cinema of CanadaNo of screens3 114 2015 1 Per capita9 6 per 100 000 2015 1 Main distributorsUniversal 20 9 Disney 18 7 Warner Bros 13 3 2 Produced feature films 2015 3 Total103Fictional77 74 8 Documentary26 25 2 Number of admissions 2015 4 Total118 000 000Gross box office 2015 4 TotalC 986 millionNational filmsC 18 8 million 1 9 Films by Thomas A Edison Inc were some of the first to arrive in Canada and early films made in the country were produced by Edison Studios Canadian Pacific Railway and other railways supported early filmmaking including James Freer whose Ten Years in Manitoba was the first known film by a Canadian Evangeline is the earliest recorded Canadian feature film George Brownridge and Ernest Shipman were major figures in Canadian cinema in the 1920s and 1930s Shipman oversaw the production the most expensive film up to that point Brownridge s career led to Carry on Sergeant and its failure caused a decline in the film industry The Canadian Government Motion Picture Bureau was formed in 1918 and expanded to sound and 16 mm film in the 1930s before merging into the National Film Board of Canada The NFB expanded under the leadership of John Grierson The Canadian Cooperation Project between the government and Motion Picture Association of America from 1948 to 1958 negatively affected Canadian filmmaking Internal divisions between English and French Canadians within the NFB starting in the 1940s led to the creation of an independent branch for French language productions by the 1960s The government provided financial support to the film industry through the Capital Cost Allowance and Telefilm Canada Contents 1 History 1 1 Film 1 1 1 Arrival of film 1 1 2 Creating an independent film industry 1 1 3 National Film Board 1 1 4 Governmental financial involvement 1 1 5 Post Carry on Sergeant 1 1 6 Modern industry 1 2 Theatres 1 3 International 2 Reception 3 Censorship and preservation 3 1 Censorship 3 2 Preservation 4 Financial 5 See also 6 References 7 Works cited 7 1 Books 7 2 Journals 7 3 Press 8 Notes 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editFilm edit Arrival of film edit nbsp nbsp nbsp A film showing by Andrew M Holland and George C Holland was incorrectly viewed as the first in Canadian history until 1984 Their showing was conducted in West End Park Ottawa pictured 1892 The first time a film was displayed in Canada and one of the first times in North America was at an event organized by Louis Minier and Louis Pupier using a cinematograph in Saint Laurent Quebec on 27 June 1896 Prior to the discovery of the Saint Laurent showing by Germain Lacasse in 1984 it was believed that a showing conducted by Andrew M Holland and George C Holland where films by Thomas A Edison Inc such as The Kiss were shown in Ottawa from 21 July to 28 August 1896 was the first The Saint Laurent showing was overlooked as English researchers did not search through French sources Leo Ernest Ouimet stated that he attended the showing and he was used as evidence of it until Lacasse found newspaper coverage of the event in La Presse 5 6 7 8 R A Hardie and F H Wall also presented films in Winnipeg from 18 to 25 July 1896 9 10 The development of a Canadian film industry was hampered by the country s low population density it had six million inhabitants and only Toronto and Montreal had more than 100 000 people in 1905 and the lack of domestic vaudeville as most of the acts came from the United States United Kingdom and France 11 Andrew Holland was critical of Canada as a place for the film industry due to the quality of its films distance between major urban areas and different electrical systems 12 Early films were used to as promotional material for companies promote immigration or displays of scenic locations including Niagara Falls 13 14 15 The Edison Company created some of the first films in Canada by documenting the Klondike Gold Rush Canadian soldiers leaving to fight in the Second Boer War and George V the Duke of York arriving in Canada in 1902 14 nbsp Charles Urban s Bioscope Company of Canada in 1903James Freer is believed to have been the first Canadian to produce films He purchased an Edison camera and projector and started filming agriculture activates and Canadian Pacific Railway trains in 1897 and toured the United Kingdom with the sponsorship of the CPR in 1898 and a second less successful tour was sponsored by Clifford Sifton in 1901 16 His second tour was the first time that the government was directly involved with film 17 British and American filmmakers were selected as they could guarantee the distribution of their films unlike Canadian filmmakers 18 The CPR enlisted Charles Urban and his company in order to allow the distribution of the films to the United Kingdom to travel and film Canada to promote settlement in the western areas This group the Bioscope Company of Canada conducted filming in Quebec to Victoria from 1902 to 1903 The film Living Canada was premiered at the Palace Theatre in 1903 with High Commissioner Donald Smith in attendance A total of thirty five Living Canada films were released by 1904 and was reedited into Wonders of Canada in 1906 Urban success led to him gaining contracts with the government of British Columbia and the Northern Railway Company The Grand Trunk Railway entered the industry by hiring Butcher s Film Service in 1909 19 The CPR hired the Edison Company to film in Canada and they sent nine people including J Searle Dawley Henry Cronjager and Mabel Trunnelle in 1910 They were provided a specialized train and the RMS Empress of India and produced thirteen films 20 Creating an independent film industry edit nbsp Evangeline is the earliest recorded feature film in Canadian history Silent films used intertitles in English and French but sound films were mostly produced in English 21 The first recorded feature film created in Canada was Evangeline 22 23 The Palace was the first theatre to transition to showing sound films when it presented Street Angel on 1 September 1928 24 There were multiple attempts to create an independent film industry in Canada in the early 20th century 25 Thirty six companies meant for film production were created between 1914 and 1922 but the majority of the companies did not produce any films 26 nbsp The title card of British Canadian Pathe News as presented by Leo Ernest Ouimet s Specialty Film Import In 1914 Canadian Animated Weekly by Universal Pictures became one of the first newsreels in Canada 27 Ouimet who was a pioneer for Canadian newsreels created Specialty Film Import in 1915 as a distributor but his newsreel and distribution companies were sold in 1923 and he unsuccessfully worked in the United States in the 1920s 28 At the peak of Ouimet s career 1 5 million Canadians were watching his newsreels twice per week 29 Domestic newsreel companies were unsuccessful after branches of American companies Fox Canadian News and Canadian Kinograms were established 28 Ernest Shipman established multiple film companies in cities and would produce a limited amount of films using local money before moving to another area 28 Unlike other Canadian filmmakers he sought financial support from the American market 30 In 1919 incorporated Canadian Photoplays with a financial capital of 250 000 in Alberta He started production on Wapi the Walrus but retitled it to Back to God s Country to capitalize God s Country and the Woman starring his wife Nell Shipman The film was a critical and financial success with it grossing over 500 000 in its first year and Shipman s investors saw a 300 return on investment Despite the success of the film Canadian Photoplays did not produce another film and went into voluntary liquidation 31 32 He signed a contract with Ralph Connor in 1919 and formed Dominion Films based in New York to produce films in Winnipeg Winnipeg Productions was formed to adapt twelve of Connor s stories but only five were filmed 32 33 Shipman created five companies across Canada in 1922 but only three produced films He incorporated New Brunswick Films on 23 August 1922 but the failure of Blue Water ended Shipman s career 34 35 36 Trenton Ontario despite its small size was a major film production area and had one of the few studios to last longer than a few years Canadian National Features founded by George Brownridge construction a studio in the town and raised a financial capital of 500 000 with 278 000 coming within the first week in 1916 However the company suspended production after spending 43 000 on its first two films The Marriage Trap and Power and declared bankruptcy with 79 000 in assets The studio in Trenton was taken over by the Pan American Film Corporation in 1918 but only released one film before closing Brownridge founded Adanac Producing Company and released the two Canadian National Features films in 1918 Brownridge shifted production towards corporate sponsorships by displaying products in dramatized films Brownridge sought a sponsorship from the CPR and John Murray Gibbon saw Power and asked Brownridge to make anti Bolshevik films during the First Red Scare Adanac was reorganized in 1919 with Brownridge as its managing director and Denis Tansey a member of parliament as its president The Great Shadow was released in 1920 after being filmed in Canada rather than New York as Brownridge wanted to create a domestic film industry and was a critical and financial success although the CPR pulled its public support before its release However the company went bankrupt with Brownridge balming Harley Knoles s wastefulness and Selznick Pictures s distribution policy 37 Brownridge sold the Trenton studio to the Ontario Motion Picture Bureau in 1924 and it continued to be used with Carry on Sergeant as the sole fictional work filmed there until Mitchell Hepburn ordered its closure in 1934 and it was turned into a community centre 25 38 39 Motion Skreenadz incorporated in 1920 conducted the majority of film production in western Canada and brought colour film production to British Columbia Leon C Shelly gained control over Motion Skreenadz and Vancouver Motion Pictures from 1936 to 1937 He extended the company to Toronto in 1945 but relocated the company entirely to Toronto in 1946 The company was reorganized into Shelly Films but production of non newsreels was ended in favor of focusing on film laboratories 40 British Columbia s government agencies used promotional films from 1908 to 1919 before the creation of the British Columbia Patriotic and Educational Picture Service 41 It was headed by A R Baker and mainly distributed films produced under contract by Arthur D Kean 42 The provincial legislature passed legislation requiring the display of at least one ten minute education film or travelogue during all of the programs 43 The Motion Picture Branch of the Bureau of Publications was created by Saskatchewan in 1924 to produce education films 44 The Ontario Motion Picture Bureau was established in 1917 but did not produce its own films until 1923 S C Johnson who worked in the Ontario Agriculture Department was its first director 45 44 The victory of the United Farmers of Ontario in the 1919 election resulted in Peter Smith reorganized film production under the Amusement Branch with Otter Elliott heading it He changed the focus of filmmaking from agricultural training towards quality productions 46 By 1925 the bureau had 2 000 films in its library distributed 1 500 reels of film per month and made one feature length documentary Cinderella of the Farms in 1931 but the bureau was dissolved after the Ontario Liberal Party won in the 1934 Ontario general election 44 47 48 Albert Tessier and Maurice Proulx produced large amounts of films in French at a time when it was uncommon 49 Joseph Morin the Quebec Minister of Agriculture used film for education purposes and the Service de cine photographie was established in 1941 44 The War Office Cinematographic Committee one of the first times the national government was involved in filmmaking was formed in 1916 and was led by Max Aitken 1st Baron Beaverbrook The committee contracted the Topical Film Company before buying a controlling share The committee aided in the production of distribution of D W Griffith s Hearts of the World The committee was dissolved after World War I and its shares in Topical Film Company were sold which were donated to war charities 50 The Associated Screen News of Canada was founded by Bernard Norrish in 1920 and the CPR held a majority control of its stock The company grew from two employees in 1920 to over one hundred by 1930 and focused on the production of newsreels theatrical shorts and sponsored films 41 51 It was the largest Canadian film company until the growth of Crawley Films in the 1950s 52 It was one of Canada s longest lasting film production companies with Crawley Films and the National Film Board of Canada being one of the few to outlast it Before ASN constructed a film laboratory all of the film print distributed in Canada were processed in the United States The company was processing twenty two million feet of film in per year by 1929 53 ASN constructed a sound stage in 1936 and produced House in Order which was its only feature film in the 1930s 54 nbsp Carry on Sergeant was a major film production in the late 1920s Its failure resulted in a decline of the Canadian film industry that it did not recover from until after World War II Brownridge was sent to New York in 1925 by the Ontario Motion Picture Bureau to gain a distribution contract but only negotiated one with Cranfield and Clarke after a year of high expenses 55 Treasurer William Herbert Price criticized Brownridge stating that his travelling expenses are very high and I do not see there was very much result from anything he has done 56 George Patton the bureau s head supported the deal as Cranfield and Clarke had no Jews in its company W F Clarke who was later blamed for the company s financial failure pushed for Canadian film production and came up with an idea of a film about a dramatic story written by an eminent authority around the part played by the Canadians in the World War Clarke incorporated British Empire Films of Canada in June 1927 The film adaption of The Better Ole was released in Canada under the name Carry On and was financially success Clarke s film was named Carry on Sergeant to help raise funds 55 It received financial backing from influential people including prime ministers Arthur Meighen and Bennett 38 The film started production by the recently created subsidiary Canadian International Films in 1926 and Bruce Bairnsfather was hired to direct with an expensive contract but his inexperience with film led to production troubles that increased the cost of the budget 57 58 The production difficulties led to internal company problems and Clarke was removed as general manager although he remained vice president 59 The film was released in 1928 to mixed to negative reviews and was only distributed in Ontario before the company went bankrupt in 1929 Brownridge attempted to recut and release the film in 1930 stating that it would gross at least 200 000 but it did not happen The Ontario government was still interested in attempting to create a large film studio by 1932 along with Edward Wentworth Beatty and Herbert Samuel Holt but the recent failure of Canadian International Films and Great Depression led to its not receiving investments 57 60 The Canadian film industry would not recover until after World War II 61 National Film Board edit Main article National Film Board of Canada nbsp A group of cameramen who worked for the Canadian Government Motion Picture Bureau in 1925 Frank Badgley the bureau s director from 1927 to 1941 is in the background The Exhibits and Publicity Bureau was founded on 19 September 1918 and was reorganized into the Canadian Government Motion Picture Bureau on 1 April 1923 62 63 64 Its films were theatrically released in the United States by Bray Productions 65 The organization s budget stagnated and declined during the Great Depression 66 The organization was led by Bernard Norrish from 1917 to 1920 Raymond Peck from 1920 to 1927 and Frank Badgley from 1927 to 1941 50 Badgley stated that the bureau needed to transition to sound films or else it would lose its access to theatrical releases but the organization did not gain the equipment until 1934 and by then it had lost its theatrical distributors 67 68 Badgley was able to get a 16 mm film facility for the bureau in 1931 67 The organization s budget fell from 75 000 in 1930 to 65 000 in 1931 and 45 000 in 1932 69 However its budget was increased to 70 000 in 1933 70 The bureau was reorganized into the National Film Board of Canada in 1941 following John Grierson s recommendation 71 72 nbsp John Grierson was the first commissioner of the National Film Board of Canada Ross McLean was working as the secretary to High Commissioner Vincent Massey when he met Grierson and asked for Grierson to come to Canada to aide in the governmental film policy Grierson made a report on the Canadian film industry in 1938 and the National Film Act which he drafted was passed in 1939 causing the creation of the NFB Grierson became the first Film Commissioner of the NFB and served until the end of World War II Employment rose from fifty to over seven hundred from 1941 to 1945 although it was cut by 40 after the war ended 73 74 75 76 Grierson selected McLean to work as assistant commissioner and Stuart Legg to oversee the productions 72 Lest We Forget Canada s first feature length war documentary with sound was released in 1935 77 Grierson made efforts to increase the theatrical distribution of NFB films primarily its war related films as he was coordinating wartime information for the United Kingdom in North America Famous Players aided in distribution and the Canadian Motion Picture War Services Committee which worked with the War Activities Committee of the Motion Pictures Industry was founded in 1940 NFB productions such as The World in Action was watched by 30 40 million people per month in the United Kingdom and United States in 1943 and Canada Carries On was watched by 2 25 million people by 1944 The audience for NFB newsreels reached 40 50 million per week by 1944 78 Grierson opposed feature film production as he believed that Canada did not have a large enough market for an independent feature film industry He supported working with American film companies and stated that the theatre film business is an international business dependent when it comes to distribution on an alliance or understanding with American film interests He travelled to Hollywood in 1944 and the NFB sent scripts to American companies for consideration 79 Grierson lacked strong support in the Canadian government and some of his films received opposition from members of the government Inside Fighting Russia was criticized for its support of the Russian Revolution and Balkan Powderkeg for criticizing the United Kingdom s policy in the Balkans Grierson and the NFB were attacked during the onset of the Cold War The Federal Bureau of Investigation created a file on Grierson in 1942 due to the World in Action newsreel being considered too left wing Leo Dolan an ally of Hepburn and the head of the Canadian Government Travel Bureau accused Grierson of being Jewish and a Co operative Commonwealth Federation supporter The Gouzenko Affair implicated Freda Linton one of Grierson s secretaries and the organization was criticized by the Progressive Conservative Party for subversive tendencies financial waste and being a monopoly Grierson was also accused of being involved but was proven not to be although he resigned as commissioner in 1945 74 80 McLean was ordered to assist the Royal Canadian Mounted Police screen NFB employees and the RCMP requested him to fire a list of employees McLean who refused to fire any employees without their disloyalty being proven was not reappointed as commissioner and replaced by William Arthur Irwin in 1950 Irwin also refused to fire employees without proven disloyalty and reduced the demand and only three of the thirty six requested were fired 81 82 83 The Royal Commission on National Development in the Arts Letters and Sciences with Massey as its chair was formed in 1949 The NFB submitted a brief asking to have a headquarters constructed budget increases and to become a Crown corporation 84 Robert Winters whose ministry oversaw the NFB stated that its brief did not represent government policy 85 The Association of Motion Picture Producers and Laboratories of Canada submitted a brief criticizing a government monopoly with the NFB s crown corporation request being referred to as an expansionist monopolistic psychology and that they were unable to compete with the NFB as it paid no taxes and was exempt from tariffs 86 The commission s report supported the NFB and its requests for Crown corporation status and a headquarters were accepted 87 nbsp The financial success of Royal Journey depicting Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip s tour of Canada aided the NFB and was one of the reasons that John Grierson said that William Arthur Irwin saved the Film Board A Canadian tour by Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip was filmed and was initially meant to be two reels worth twenty minutes but grew to five reels as they could not determine what to cut Irwin met with Harvey Harnick the NFB s Columbia theatrical distributor and J J Fitzgibbons the president of Famous Players and Fitzgibbons told Irwin that he would screen all five reels if the film was completed for a Christmas release Royal Journey opened in seventeen first run theatres and over course of the next two years it was screened in 1 249 Canadian theatres where it was watched by a record two million people and the film was also screened in forty other countries The film cost 88 000 but the NFB gained a profit of 150 000 and the film s success was one of the reasons Grierson stated that Irwin saved the Film Board 88 The Canadian Government Motion Picture Bureau and Associated Screen News of Canada had no French Canadian employees Vincent Paquette became the NFB s first French Canadian filmmaker in 1941 and directed La Cite de Notre Dame the board s first in house French language film in 1942 The number of French Canadian employees grew to seventeen by 1945 and a quarter of the board s budget was spent on French productions The Massey Commission and Gratien Gelinas a member of the NFB s Board of Governors called for an improvement in French language productions but Premier Maurice Duplessis opposed it 89 French language media including Le Devoir criticized the NFB after it removed Roger Blais in 1957 NFB francophone directors Denys Arcand Gilles Carle Jacques Godbout Gilles Groulx and Clement Perron criticized the organization for its censorship policies refusal to produce feature films and its colonial treatment of Quebec Michel Brault Carle Bernard Gosselin Groulx and Arthur Lamothe left following reprimands Guy Roberge became the first French Canadian to serve as the NFB s commissioner Duplessis died in 1959 and Quebec Liberal Party gained control while the Liberal Party won in the 1963 Canadian federal election The Liberals supported a policy of bilingualism and biculturalism A French language branch of the NFB that was independent of its English language productions was formed in 1964 under the leadership of Pierre Juneau 90 Drylanders the organization s first English language feature length fiction film was released in 1963 91 Kathleen Shannon organized Studio D the first publicly funded feminist film production unit in the world in 1974 and produced 125 films before its closure in 1996 However there would be no French version of Studio D until the formation of Studio B in 1986 92 93 94 Governmental financial involvement edit Starting in 1954 the Capital Cost Allowance was able to be used for a 60 tax write off for film investment and the amount was increased to 100 in 1974 95 96 1 2 billion was invested in Canadian film and television in the thirteen years following the increase The average film budget rose from 527 000 to 2 6 million in 1979 and 3 5 million in 1986 95 97 From 1958 to 1967 private film investment accounted for 18 of film investments and it declined to 13 5 in 1968 while the CFDC accounted for 37 5 Following the tax write off increase private investment rose to account for 47 of film investment between 1975 and 1978 while the CFDC declined to 15 98 Silence of the North was the first film with American backing to receive CCA certification 99 The Film and Video Production Tax Credit replaced the Capital Cost Allowance in 1995 100 In 1962 Roberge proposed the creation of an organization to aid in film finance based on the National Film Finance Corporation and Centre national du cinema et de l image animee 101 nbsp Norman Jewison founded the Canadian Film CentreThe Interdepartmental Committee on the Possible Development of a Feature Film Industry in Canada under the leadership of NFB commissioner Roberge was formed by the secretary of state The committee submitted a report to the 19th Canadian Ministry for the creation of a loan fund to aid the development of the Canadian film industry The proposal was approved in October 1965 and legislation the Canadian Film Development Corporation Act of 1966 67 for its creation was introduced in June 1966 before being approved on 3 March 1967 102 The Canadian Film Development Corporation was established with a budget of 10 million in 1967 In February 1968 Spender was appointed as its director along with a five member board Canada lack of a film school leading to the creation of the Canadian Film Centre by Norman Jewison The CFDC started investing up to 50 of its budget into films that cost less than 500 000 95 103 104 105 106 Explosion was the first film to receive financial support from the CFDC Valerie by Denis Heroux which was not financially supported by the CFDC was made at cost of 70 000 and made over 1 million in Quebec The CFDC financially supported Heroux s other films Here and Now L Initiation Love in a Four Letter World Virgin Lovers and Two Women in Gold Deux Femmes en or 107 Deux Femmes en or was financially successful with its two million ticket sales remaining the highest in Canadian history and became the highest grossing Canadian film 108 109 110 The 10 million budget was used by October 1971 after the CFDC invested 6 7 million into 64 films with an average cost of 250 000 per film The CFDC was not financially successful as only three of those films made a profit and the organization recovered 600 000 of its investments After 1970 the CFDC focused on investing in smaller budgeted films and ended its work with American theatrical distributors to them hiding profits 111 Another 10 million budget was given to the CFDC in November 1971 and a new investment strategy in which 600 000 per year would be invested into productions with its creative and technical crew being Canadian budgeted below 100 000 and 3 million per year on films with guaranteed distribution 112 It took the CFDC five years to recover its first 1 million investment but recovered 1 million in 1977 alone From 1977 to 1978 the CFDC invested 1 6 million into twenty films and its investments rose to 10 8 million into 34 films from 1979 to 1980 113 114 Between 1968 and 1978 the organization funded 103 English language films but only Black Christmas Death Weekend Heart Farm Shivers and The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz were profitable to the CFDC 115 The Toronto Filmmakers Coop an organization with 150 filmmakers sent a letter with the endorsement of 200 filmmakers to Gerard Pelletier asking for the creation of a content quota that required distributors to have 15 of their films be Canadian 116 Pelletier announced the creation of a theatre in the National Capital Region that exclusively showed Canadian films in 1972 117 A study published by the Secretary of State reported that a content quota would not work as a 50 quote would generate less revenue than a 5 sales increase for foreign films The study stated that new tax regulations and investments by the CFDC could make the Canadian film industry internationally competitive 118 The budget for the CFDC was limited to a few million and its budget from 1982 to 1983 was 4 5 million However the organization had its role expanded to include television in 1983 and administered the Canadian Broadcast Program Development Fund The television fund was initially given an annual budget of 60 million An annual budget of 30 million through the Feature Film Fund was created in 1986 and an annual budget of 17 million through the Feature Film Distribution Fund was created in 1988 The organization s combined budget grew to 146 million by 1989 119 120 A report was written by a task force in 1985 and it stated that foreign domination of film and video distribution chronic undercapitalization of production companies and concentration of theatre ownership and distribution and exhibition vertical integration hurt the development of the film industry They recommended legislation to increase the control of Canadian owned companies over distribution and Minister of Communications Flora MacDonald proposed a film licensing system based on their recommendations 121 American distributors opposed the policy and lobbied the American government through the MPAA and its president Jack Valenti Valenti met with President Ronald Reagan at least twice and Reagan criticized the legislation of a US Canadian economic summit 54 members of the United States Congress signed a letter to Prime Minister Brian Mulroney opposing the legislation The legislation was not tabled and it failed 122 123 Post Carry on Sergeant edit F R Crawley who was involved in filmmaking for a decade and Judith Crawley created Ile d Orleans in 1938 and its success led to a 3 000 loan from F R Crawley s father that created Crawley Films It employment rose from 6 in 1946 33 in 1949 and around 100 by the 1950s One sixth of the 3 million worth of films produced by the Canadian film industry in 1952 came from Crawley Films 124 France Film and other companies started creating French film productions in the 1930s Maria Chapdelaine is commonly although incorrectly regarded as the first French Canadian sound movie 21 Etienne Brule gibier de potence was the first colour feature film made in Quebec and the first Canadian colour film shot in English and French 125 126 Joseph Alexandre DeSeve monopolized the distribution of French language films through France Film France Film arose from the distribution of Maria Chapdelaine which sold 70 000 tickets in Canada He also aided in the production of Notre Dame de la Mouise in response to the papal encyclical Vigilanti Cura DeSeve purchased Renaissance Films following the success of The Music Master 127 DeSeve produced four films through Renaissance Films Distribution 128 Paul L Anglais formed Quebec Productions filmed Whispering City in English and French under the title La Forteresse It was seen by over 100 000 people in Quebec over the course of six weeks 129 The papal encyclical Vigilanti Cura in 1936 changed the Catholic attitude towards movies and the church became a part of Quebec movie production in the 1940s Most of the nineteen movies fifteen in French and four in English produced in Quebec from 1944 to 1953 were made by Renaissance Films or Quebec Productions 130 131 Those were the only French language feature films produced in Canada in that period 132 Bush Pilot was the only English language feature film created by a Canadian company in the 1940s 133 Modern industry edit Canadians had to import colour 35 mm film until 1967 as Canada did not produce any internally 134 By the 1960s Nat Taylor a theatre owner controlled the largest private film studio in Canada Toronto International Film Studios two distribution companies International Film Distributors and Allied Artists Pictures a television station CJOH DT and multiple production companies He entered film production with The Mask in 1961 135 Taylor unlike other members of the AMPPLC supported state involvement in feature film production 136 Bryant Fryer founded one of the first animation companies in Canada and made six silhouette films from 1927 to 1935 Norman McLaren was brought to Canada from Scotland by Grierson in 1941 McLaren recruited English Canadian animators from OCAD University including George Dunning Evelyn Lambart Grant Munro and Robert Verrall 137 McLaren recruited French Canadian animators from Ecole des beaux arts de Montreal including Rene Jodoin Jodoin created a French animation unit in 1966 which included Laurent Coderre and Bernard Longpre 138 Le village enchante was the first recorded animated feature film in Canadian history and Return to Oz which was based on Tales of the Wizard of Oz the first recorded Canadian animated television series was the second recorded animated feature film 139 In the 1960s filmmakers came from universities throughout Canada David Cronenberg Clarke Mackey and David Secter graduated from the University of Toronto 140 John Hofsess Ivan Reitman and Peter Rowe graduated from McMaster University Jack Darcus and Larry Kent graduated from the University of British Columbia 141 Cronenberg received financial support from the CFDC and Shivers was their most successful investment with a budget of 150 000 75 000 from the CFDC and gross of 5 million 142 708 feature films over twice the amount made in the past fifty years were made during the 1970s 143 Carle Groulx Claude Jutra and Jean Pierre Lefebvre who were inspired by the French New Wave made their directorial debuts from 1963 to 1965 and all won the Grand Prix at the Montreal International Film Festival throughout the 1960s 144 Jean Claude Lauzon s Night Zoo won the most Genie Awards in history with thirteen awards 145 Dream Life by Mireille Dansereau was the first privately produced feature film in Canada to be directed by a woman 146 Porky s became the first Canadian film to gross more than 100 million 147 The Decline of the American Empire was the most successful Quebec film released in France with 1 236 322 viewers 148 The Care Bears Movie by Nelvana was the highest grossing non Disney animated film at the time of its release 149 Six of the ten highest grossing films in Canada between 1991 and 2001 were made in Quebec 150 Film investment in British Columbia rose from 188 5 million in 1990 to over 1 billion in 1999 151 Feature film production rose from 16 films to 56 films with the total amount of productions rising from 50 to 192 152 Theatres edit In the 1890s and 1900s films were shown by travelling showmen John C Green a magician who presented for the Holland brothers at their first showing travelled throughout eastern Canada and New England until the establishment of movie theatres 153 John Albert Schuberg was credited with bringing movies to Vancouver and Winnipeg and the provinces of British Columbia and the Canadian Prairies 154 Schuberg established Canada s first permanent movie theatre the Electric Theatre in Vancouver in October 1902 with its first movie played being The Eruption of Mount Pelee 155 156 He opened additional theatres in Winnipeg and later gained the license for First National Pictures in western Canada He had one of the largest theatre chains and sold it to Jay and Jules Allen for around 1 million in 1919 before returning in 1921 and then selling it to Famous Players in 1924 155 157 Jay and Jules Allen established their first theatre in Brantford in 1906 The established Allen Amusement Corporation a film exchange in 1908 Their chain was worth over 20 million by 1920 and had fifty three theatres by 1923 when they declared bankruptcy and it was acquired by Famous Players 5 158 159 160 The Allens owned the distribution rights for Pathe and Paramount Pictures 161 In 1916 they rejected an offer by Paramount president Adolph Zukor to create an equal partnership The Allens informed Nathan Nathanson of this attempt and Nathanson convinced Zukor to give him their distribution rights in 1920 for twenty years after creating his own theatre chain 162 nbsp Nathan Nathanson founded Famous Players and Odeon Theatres These companies controlled the theatre industry in Canada Nathanson s Famous Players started an expansion campaign in the 1920s that led to its gaining control of all first run theatres in the major cities 163 Zukor and Paramount forced Nathanson out of Famous Players after buying a large amount of the stock in 1930 164 Famous Players also controlled the distribution industry in Canada accounting for at least 40 of distribution due to its connections to Paramount Pictures Paul Nathanson managed Regal Films which was controlled by Paramount and distributed films from British International Pictures Metro Goldwyn Mayer and Pathe and Famous Players also distributed films from Columbia Pictures Fox Film RKO Pictures Tiffany Pictures and Warner Bros were the other main distributors in Canada in the 1930s 165 A study conducted by United Artists in 1931 showed that 67 of rental revenue in Canada came from nineteen theatres in Canada s main cities while the remainder came from the rest 166 Block booking by major studios that were from outside Canada prevented independent theatre owners from obtaining films at a reasonable price R B Bennett who invested into the film industry made investigating the film industry an issue in the 1930 election Peter White was appointed to investigate Famous Players monopolistic control of theatres under the Combines Investigation Act White concluded that a combine exists and has existed at least since the year of 1926 and Famous Players was detrimental to the public interest in 1931 but no action was taken against the company 163 167 Bennett supported taking action and the attorney generals of Alberta British Columbia Ontario and Saskatchewan would prosecute Famous Players Fifteen companies and three people including Nathan Nathanson were charged but the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in favor of the companies 168 After losing control over Famous Players Nathanson created Odeon Theatres in April 1941 and resigned from his position at Famous Players in May He built the company using Regal Films which was managed by his brother and distributed MGM films and gaining the business of companies whose contracts with Famous Players were expiring Odeon did not gain a MGM distribution contract but did gain ones for all of Columbia Pictures films two thirds of Universal s films and one third of Fox s films Nathanson died in 1943 and was succeeded by his son Paul Films released in Famous Players and Odeon theatres both foreign owned after Paul sold his stock to J Arthur Rank in 1946 accounted for over 60 of the Canadian box office by 1947 169 Taylor who declined to become the general manager of Odeon in 1941 founded Twentieth Century Theatres in the 1930s and the Famous Players aligned company grew to own sixty five theatres by the 1960s He opened the International Theatre in Toronto which was the first theatre in Canada dedicated towards screening art films 135 Taylor and Garth Drabinsky created the Cineplex Odeon Corporation in 1979 and by 1987 it was the largest theatre chain in North America with 1 500 theatres with two thirds of them in the United States 170 The deaths of seventy eight children from the Laurier Palace Theatre fire in 1927 and opposition to film from the Catholic Church led to a ban on minors attending movie theatres until 1961 171 130 In the 1930s Quebec was the only province that allowed for theatres to be open on Sundays 171 The Quebec Cinema Act passed in 1983 required that English language films in Quebec must be translated into French within sixty days However films from the United States were unaffected as their distribution ended before the deadline and the NFB was exempted from the requirements 172 The Canadian box office increased following World War II In 1934 there were 796 theatres which admitted 107 million people to earn 25 million and that grew to 1 229 theatres admitting 151 million people to make 37 million in 1940 By 1950 the amount of theatres increased to 2 360 earning 86 million with 245 million people attending 173 However during the 1950s Canadian film attendance declined with the nation falling from the fifth highest in film attendance to twenty fifth by the 1960s and the amount of films the average Canadian saw per year dropped from seventeen in 1950 to eight in 1960 174 Ticket sales in Quebec fell from 60 million in 1952 to 19 million in 1969 175 The amount of theatres in Canada declined from 1 635 in 1962 to 1 400 in 1967 to 1 116 in 1974 and to 899 in 1984 176 177 International edit See also Canadian pioneers in early Hollywood Many native born Canadians such as Al Christie Allan Dwan Louis B Mayer Sidney Olcott Mack Sennett and Jack L Warner aided in the creation and development of the American film industry 11 In the early 1900s Canada was used as a shooting location for dramatic productions with Hiawatha the Messiah of the Ojibway being one of the first in 1903 178 The Kalem Company was one of the first American companies to conduct location shooting in Canada in 1909 179 180 Two of the films D W Griffith made in his first year as a director The Ingrate and A Woman s Way were made in Canada 180 British American Film Company Canadian Bioscope Company Conness Till Film Company of Toronto and the All Red Feature Company the four Canadians companies that produced fictional films prior to World War I had their invested come from Americans but all of them were financially unsuccessful and closed within a few years with Conness Till suffering a fire that destroyed their 50 000 studio 181 182 Canadians were hostile to American filmmakers and provincial film review boards instituted censorship policies in 1915 which included a ban on the gratuitous display of the flag of the United States 183 Fifty reels of film were banned in British Columbia in 1914 due to an unnecessary display of U S flags which put it as the third most common reason behind infidelity and seduction 184 In 1927 the United Kingdom created a quota limiting the amount of foreign films that could be shown in the country but productions that were produced within the British Empire and was mostly made by British subjects were excluded from the quotas American financers produced low budget B movies within Canada to exploit the loophole before the legislation was changed in 1938 to exclude the Dominion Nanook of the North and The Viking exploited the loophole 178 185 From 1928 to 1938 twenty two feature films the majority of Canada s film production meant solely for the British market were filmed 186 American companies made 17 million in profits from Canada in 1947 Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King s government sought to reduce the general trade imbalance between Canada and the United States McLean called for the reinvestment of this money into Canadian film production and requiring the American distribution of Canadian shorts The Motion Picture Association of America proposed the Canadian Cooperation Project and it was accepted by the Canadian government on 14 January 1948 The government would not restrict revenue to American companies in exchange for productions being filmed in Canada and mentions of Canada in those scripts to promote tourism The project was considered unsuccessful and stifled Canadian filmmaking with only eight Canadian feature films being made during the CCP s existence before it ended in 1958 McLean was critical of the agreement as there was a lack of Canadian films distributed in the United States Michael Spencer stated that the agreement was allowed to die of embarrassment 187 188 189 Gilbert Agar attended the Fourth National Motion Picture Conference of the Motion Picture Council in America in 1926 and reported that 95 of films released in Canada were from the United States 190 Eric Johnston stated that outside the U S itself Canada ranks as the second largest market in the world for Hollywood films 191 The amount of films in Canada of American origin declined to 68 by 1954 and 41 in 1962 174 Canadian directors such as Norman Jewison left Canada to work in the United States 192 Raoul Barre worked as a cartoonist in Canada before moving to the United States and working as an animator at Barre Studio Stephen Bosustow and other animators left Walt Disney Animation Studios during the Disney animators strike and founded United Productions of America 193 Seven Arts Productions while being listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange and having a majority of its investors be Canadians had the majority of its productions done by its American subsidiary It spent 25 million on ten American film productions including Dr Strangelove and What Ever Happened to Baby Jane 194 Canadian 3D animation companies such as Softimage and Alias Research had their software used for American films such as Jurassic Park 195 Reception editSee also List of Canadian Academy Award winners and nominees Productions from the NFB received 64 Academy Award nominations and ten victories by 2000 196 The Crawleys produced 2 500 films and won over 200 awards during their careers including the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Film for The Man Who Skied Down Everest 197 Churchill s Island If You Love This Planet and Neighbours were awarded the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Film 198 87 199 The Sand Castle Special Delivery and Every Child were awarded the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film 200 199 I ll Find a Way was awarded the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film 199 David Bairstow s Royal Journey won the BAFTA Award for Best Documentary in 1952 201 Colin Low s The Romance of Transportation in Canada was awarded the Prix du Film d Animation at the Cannes Film Festival in 1953 201 Brault won the Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Director for Orders 202 Censorship and preservation editCensorship edit Main article Censorship in Canada See also List of films banned in Canada Ouimet s fine of 10 in February 1908 for having the Ouimetoscope open on Sundays was a test case to establish the power to close places of amusement on Sundays 203 In 1920 Pierre Francois Casgrain opposed an attempt to remove a 15 per reel per day tax on film exhibitors stating that Pictures that are shown are an invitation to the people of the poorer classes to revolt and they bring disorder into the country 204 Fees implemented by the censorship boards earned the government large amounts of money with Alberta s two censorship boards making 12 275 in 1927 205 By 1921 New Brunswick had the lowest fee at 0 50 per reel while Ontario had the highest at 3 per reel 1 per reel license for each copy Appeals cost 5 in Quebec and 10 in Ontario 206 Variety reported in 1950 that censorship fees were costing the film industry over 1 450 000 per year with 600 000 of the expense coming from Canada 207 Censorship boards were established in Manitoba Ontario and Quebec in 1911 in Alberta and British Columbia in 1913 and in Nova Scotia in 1915 184 5 500 reels of film were censored in the United Kingdom in 1925 compared to 6 639 reels in Quebec 5 518 reels in Manitoba and 5 013 reels in Alberta 208 Maclean s reported that the amount of films banned in Canada fell from one hundred one in 1932 to nineteen in 1940 with nine being banned in Quebec and none in Ontario Three hundred of the six hundred films examined by censors in 1940 were censored Quebec censors rejected all films the dealt with divorce Multiple Russian films were banned due to suspected Communist propaganda and during World War II all foreign films with the exception of France were banned 209 Ontario banned all war films in 1914 The Canadian Militia initially ordered censorship boards in very province to condemn war films but later created its own war films by 1915 210 In 1950 All Quiet on the Western Front was banned in Nova Scotia as there was a military recruitment drive happening 211 212 nbsp nbsp Damaged Goods a film about sexually transmitted infection was banned but censorship policies changed after a government campaign was launched to reduce sexually transmitted diseases The End of the Road was initially banned but it and similar movies were later allowed Damaged Goods a film about sexually transmitted infection was banned in Ontario in 1916 Mutual Film screened the film to a selected audience as a private showing it was exempt from the provincial censorship laws and asked them if the film should be released The audience approved of the film and Mutual Film appealed the ruling but were unsuccessful To combat the spread of sexual diseases a government campaign was initiated in the late 1910s The Canadian National Council for Combating Venereal Disease which was led by William Renwick Riddell and Gordon Bates sought to distribute The End of the Road in Ontario in 1919 The censorship board was conflicted over maintaining its earlier ruling or allowing a government campaign to continue The board rejected the film and the ruling was maintained on appeal However the ruling was reversed in 1920 and over 20 000 people saw the film within five days of its release and 40 000 by 1932 Other films about sexual diseases were allowed to be shown as well 213 nbsp Minister of Finance Mitchell Hepburn banned The March of Time due to a Time article about him that he did not like Censors were criticized starting in the 1950s for their abuse of power Minister of Finance Hepburn banned all of The March of Time newsreels in 1942 without the board watching it due to a Time article about him that he did not like J Bernard Hughes the chief censor in British Columbia banned Diary of a Nazi stating that it was purely Russian propaganda that depicted the Nazis at their worst Ernest Manning believed that the film industry in the United States was dominated by communists and sought to ban multiple films including Frank Sinatra s The House I Live In 211 212 214 The advent of television made it difficult for censors as they could not control the content being broadcast to Canada from the United States and had limited control over internal television broadcasts with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation showing films that were banned in provinces in those provinces 215 Henry McLeod a censor from Nova Scotia stated that What s the point of banning a film when the trade can turn around and sell it to the CBC 216 The Canadian Federation of Film Societies an organization with 25 000 members called for the replacement of censorship boards with a rating system 217 In 1961 George Enos who served as New Brunswick s censor for thirty years stated that censorship is very undesirable and that Ninety percent of the worry is needless Respectable people will condemn a bad picture I don t like the idea of setting up one man to say what his neighbour shall see or not see He would have to be a superman By the 1960s the Quebec censorship board was one of the largest with eighteen full time staff employed compared to other provincial boards which had two to five full time staff 218 216 By the 1970s the censorship boards were being transitioned to classification boards with the companies having to recut their films rather than the boards 219 The Hicklin test was used as the standard for film censorship until 1959 when the Criminal Code was amended and the Supreme Court of Canada overruled a ruling by the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal that held that the Hicklin test was still in effect 220 The Columbus of Sex by John Hofsess was the first film in Canada charged with obscenity 141 221 The film was ordered to be destroyed following the trial but the film s producers Reitman and Daniel Goldberg sold the rights to an American company that recut the film into My Secret Life 141 Last Tango in Paris was banned in Nova Scotia in 1974 Gerard McNeil the editor of the Dartmouth Free Press opposed the film s censorship and he filed a lawsuit in which he argued that the censors were acting illegally when they banned the film citizens have a right to view uncensored films regardless of its content and that the taxes and fees collected by the Amusements Board was to continue its illegal activities The censors argued that McNeil had no standing to sue as he had no direct interest in the case but the Nova Scotia Supreme Court stated that there could be a large number of persons with a valid desire to challenge The court ruled on 2 February 1976 that the provinces had no power to censor films under the British North America Acts 222 However the Supreme Court of Canada overruled the court on 19 January 1978 in a five to four decision 223 Preservation edit The University of Alberta created a film library in 1917 and Quebec was the first province to utilize film in schools 224 The rights to Carry on Sergeant were acquired by the National Film Archive of Canada and reconstructed the film with Gordon Sparling who worked on it as an assistant director to show on television in 1968 57 The Canadian Film Archives was formed by the NFB in 1951 225 In 1924 the majority of Ouimet s Specialty Film Import s collection was destroyed by fire 226 227 The rising costs for the construction of the NFB s headquarters in Montreal resulted in the Department of Public Works cancelling the construction of film vaults 13 1 million metres of archival footage worth 4 8 million equivalent to 37 551 381 in 2021 was instead stored in Kirkland Quebec and were destroyed in a fire in July 1967 228 229 Financial editBox office revenue Year Revenue Reference s 1930 38 479 500 230 1933 24 954 200 230 1934 25 338 100 230 1935 27 173 400 230 1936 29 610 300 230 1937 32 499 300 230 1938 33 635 052 230 1939 34 010 115 230 1940 37 858 955 230 1941 41 369 259 230 1942 46 461 097 230 1943 52 567 989 230 1944 53 173 325 230 1945 55 430 711 230 1946 59 888 972 230 1947 62 865 279 230 1948 69 657 248 230 1949 78 559 779 230 Theatre admissions Year Revenue Reference s 1934 107 354 509 231 1935 117 520 795 231 1936 126 913 547 231 1937 133 668 450 231 1938 137 381 280 231 1939 137 898 668 231 1940 151 590 799 231 1941 161 677 731 231 1942 182 845 765 231 1943 204 677 550 231 1944 208 167 180 231 1945 215 573 267 231 1946 227 538 798 231 1947 221 528 177 231 1948 224 055 171 231 1949 236 017 859 231 1950 240 824 982 231 1951 250 547 499 231 1952 261 475 867 231 1953 257 965 182 231 1954 236 158 824 231 1955 201 247 408 231 1956 177 615 767 231 1957 156 701 458 231 1958 146 483 741 231 1959 128 859 395 231 1959 117 734 361 232 Timeline of the highest grossing domestic film record Established Title Record setting gross Reference s 1970 Two Women in Gold Deux Femmes en or 2 5 4 million 110 233 1982 Porky s 11 2 million 234 2006 Bon Cop Bad Cop 12 2 million 235 Timeline of the most expensive films Year Production Cost est Refs and notes1914 Evangeline 30 000 23 1919 Back to God s Country 165 000 236 1928 Carry on Sergeant 350 000 237 1947 Whispering City a 750 000 238 1971 Snowballin 800 000 239 1973 Kamouraska 905 000 240 1973 The Neptune Factor 2 500 000 241 1978 Angela 3 000 000 242 1979 Murder by Decree 5 000 000 243 City of Fire 5 300 000 244 Bear Island 12 100 000 245 246 1981 Quest for Fire 12 500 000 247 1983 Spacehunter Adventures in the Forbidden Zone 14 400 000 248 1984 Louisiana 15 000 000 249 1990 Bethune The Making of a Hero 20 000 000 250 1992 Shadow of the Wolf 31 000 000 251 Telefilm revenue and expenditure Year Revenue Production expenditure Marketing expenditure Other expenditure Total Expenditure Reference s 1985 51 million 38 million 3 million 8 million 49 million 252 253 1986 80 million 66 million 4 million 8 million 78 million 252 253 1987 96 million 74 million 6 million 13 million 93 million 252 253 1988 128 million 100 million 8 million 18 million 126 million 252 253 1989 144 million 101 million 23 million 19 million 143 million 252 253 1990 161 million 116 million 27 million 21 million 164 million 252 253 1991 163 million 109 million 29 million 24 million 162 million 252 253 1992 164 million 107 million 28 million 25 million 160 million 252 253 1993 157 million 102 million 25 million 24 million 151 million 252 253 1994 150 million 101 million 24 million 23 million 148 million 252 253 1995 152 million 97 million 26 million 21 million 144 million 252 253 See also edit nbsp Film portal nbsp Canada portalHistory of Canadian animation Canadian pioneers in early Hollywood List of Canadian films List of Canadian actors Top 10 Canadian Films of All Time Documentary Organization of Canada Northern genre List of film festivals in Canada List of filming locations in Metro Vancouver List of films shot in Toronto Montreal in films World cinemaReferences edit a b Cinema Infrastructure Capacity UNESCO Institute for Statistics Archived from the original on January 15 2020 Retrieved May 8 2017 Share of Top 3 distributors Excel UNESCO Institute for Statistics Archived from the original on May 4 2017 Retrieved May 8 2017 Feature Film Production Genre UNESCO Institute for Statistics Archived from the original on July 13 2017 Retrieved May 8 2017 a b Exhibition Admissions amp Gross Box Office GBO UNESCO Institute for Statistics Archived from the original on July 13 2017 Retrieved May 8 2017 a b Clandfield 1987 p 1 Gaudreault 1996 p 113 119 The almost lost history of Canada s cinematic birthplace Canadian Broadcasting Corporation November 23 2016 Archived from the original on July 7 2022 Seiler 2013 p 48 Seiler 2013 p 44 Moore 2012 p 62 a b Morris 1978 p 28 Seiler 2013 p 54 Clandfield 1987 p 2 a b Morris 1978 p 29 Morris 1978 p 33 Morris 1978 p 30 31 Morris 1978 p 128 Morris 1978 p 46 Morris 1978 p 33 37 Morris 1978 p 42 a b Clandfield 1987 p 58 Morris 1970 p 1 a b Turner 1987 p 1 The Talkies Arrive Cinema parlant Quebec Archived from the original on July 7 2022 a b Clandfield 1987 p 4 Magder 1993 p 26 Morris 1978 p 58 a b c Clandfield 1987 p 5 7 Morris 1978 p 61 Morris 1978 p 96 Morris 1978 p 105 108 a b Morris 1978 p 110 Morris 1978 p 112 Morris 1978 p 117 Morris 1978 p 120 Morris 1978 p 123 Morris 1978 p 64 69 a b Morris 1978 p 71 Morris 1978 p 81 Duffy 1986 p 11 12 a b Clandfield 1987 p 10 Mattison 1985 p 9 Morris 1978 p 150 a b c d Clandfield 1987 p 9 Morris 1978 p 137 138 Morris 1978 p 146 Morris 1978 p 152 Morris 1978 p 158 Clandfield 1987 p 15 16 a b Backhouse 1974 p 4 5 Morris 1978 p 223 Duffy 1986 p 16 17 Morris 1978 p 222 223 Morris 1978 p 228 a b Morris 1978 p 72 74 Morris 1978 p 154 a b c Clandfield 1987 p 12 Morris 1978 p 75 Morris 1978 p 77 Morris 1978 p 78 80 Morris 1978 p 72 Bregent Heald 2012 p 30 Morris 1978 p 133 Backhouse 1974 p 10 Backhouse 1974 p 12 Magder 1993 p 50 a b Morris 1978 p 167 Frank C Badgley Toronto International Film Festival Archived from the original on July 7 2022 Backhouse 1974 p 20 Backhouse 1974 p 22 Morris 1978 p 161 a b Magder 1993 p 53 Clandfield 1987 p 17 a b Clandfield 1987 p 22 Morris 1978 p 233 234 Magder 1993 p 78 Brandon Laura 2021 War Art in Canada A Critical History Art Canada Institute ISBN 978 1 4871 0271 5 Magder 1993 p 56 58 Magder 1993 p 59 Magder 1993 p 59 60 Magder 1993 p 77 Magder 1993 p 80 81 Evans 1991 p 14 Magder 1993 p 76 77 Magder 1993 p 80 Magder 1993 p 79 a b Magder 1993 p 81 Evans 1991 p 22 23 Clandfield 1987 p 38 40 Clandfield 1987 p 41 42 Evans 1991 p 87 88 Evans 1991 p 211 Studio D The Women s Film Studio National Film Board of Canada Archived from the original on November 12 2022 Studio D Toronto International Film Festival Archived from the original on November 12 2022 a b c Klady 1998 p 124 128 Pendakur 1990 p 170 Pendakur 1990 p 173 Pendakur 1990 p 182 Pendakur 1990 p 185 Juneau 1996 p 199 Evans 1991 p 67 Pendakur 1990 p 146 148 Magder 1993 p 128 129 Pendakur 1990 p 148 Pendakur 1990 p 150 Melnyk 2004 p 147 Magder 1993 p 135 136 Movie masterpieces Maclean s September 15 1986 Archived from the original on December 3 2020 Retrieved July 20 2022 How Softcore Porn Kicked Off a Cultural Revolution in Quebec Vice Media October 8 2015 Archived from the original on November 8 2020 Retrieved July 20 2022 a b Magder 1993 p 136 Magder 1993 p 137 139 Magder 1993 p 142 143 Magder 1993 p 171 Magder 1993 p 184 Pendakur 1990 p 151 Magder 1993 p 144 Magder 1993 p 146 Magder 1993 p 161 163 Juneau 1996 p 194 Spencer 2003 p 174 Pendakur 1990 p 264 266 Pendakur 1990 p 270 271 Pendakur 1990 p 275 Melnyk 2004 p 92 93 Colour Cinema parlant Quebec Archived from the original on July 7 2022 Melnyk 2004 p 95 Melnyk 2004 p 79 80 Joseph Alexandre DeSeve The Canadian Encyclopedia December 16 2013 Archived from the original on November 30 2022 Melnyk 2004 p 80 81 a b Clandfield 1987 p 58 59 Melnyk 2004 p 126 Marshall 2001 p 18 Canadian Film History 1896 to 1938 The Canadian Encyclopedia November 28 2019 Archived from the original on September 29 2022 Hofsess 1975 p 13 a b Magder 1993 p 95 Magder 1993 p 105 106 Clandfield 1987 p 112 114 Clandfield 1987 p 117 Clandfield 1987 p 119 Clandfield 1987 p 100 101 a b c Clandfield 1987 p 103 Melnyk 2004 p 149 150 Melnyk 2004 p 113 Clandfield 1987 p 62 Melnyk 2004 p 201 Marshall 2001 p 220 Klady 1998 p 128 Marshall 2001 p 85 Melnyk 2004 p 248 Melnyk 2004 p 258 Gasher 2002 p 92 Gasher 2002 p 108 Morris 1978 p 12 13 Morris 1978 p 14 a b Morris 1978 p 19 20 Pendakur 1990 p 47 Seiler 2013 p 70 Morris 1978 p 22 Magder 1993 p 20 Pendakur 1990 p 62 Pendakur 1990 p 52 54 Pendakur 1990 p 56 58 a b Morris 1978 p 176 177 Magder 1993 p 43 Magder 1993 p 35 Pendakur 1990 p 72 Magder 1993 p 43 44 Magder 1993 p 45 48 Magder 1993 p 64 65 Magder 1993 p 204 205 a b Clandfield 1987 p 15 Evans 1991 p 312 Dean 1981 p 61 a b Dean 1981 p 71 Melnyk 2004 p 87 Melnyk 2004 p 107 Melnyk 2004 p 122 a b Clandfield 1987 p 13 14 Constantinides 2014 p 57 a b Morris 1978 p 40 Morris 1978 p 47 Morris 1978 p 54 Clandfield 1987 p 3 a b Morris 1978 p 55 Morris 1978 p 180 182 Morris 1978 p 182 Clandfield 1987 p 86 87 Canadian Cooperation Project 1948 1958 Toronto International Film Festival Archived from the original on June 30 2022 MacKenzie 2013 p 576 590 Dean 1981 p 31 Magder 1993 p 75 Clandfield 1987 p 96 Clandfield 1987 p 112 Magder 1993 p 96 Melnyk 2004 p 249 Beard amp White 2002 p 43 Clandfield 1987 p 33 Clandfield 1987 p 20 a b c Evans 1991 p 330 Clandfield 1987 p 116 a b Clandfield 1987 p 23 Clandfield 1987 p 70 Dean 1981 p 14 Dean 1981 p 28 Dean 1981 p 40 Dean 1981 p 42 Dean 1981 p 64 Dean 1981 p 41 Dean 1981 p 34 35 Morris 1978 p 58 59 a b Dean 1981 p 55 a b Dean 1981 p 57 58 Dean 1981 p 22 25 Dean 1981 p 177 Dean 1981 p 64 67 a b Dean 1981 p 80 Dean 1981 p 72 Dean 1981 p 78 Dean 1981 p 94 Dean 1981 p 189 190 Dean 1981 p 195 Dean 1981 p 198 200 Dean 1981 p 204 Morris 1978 p 151 New Nitrate Film Storage for Library and Archives Canada Library and Archives Canada Archived from the original on July 7 2022 Clandfield 1987 p 7 Dean 1981 p 20 Evans 1991 p 18 19 Evans 1991 p 130 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Bossin 1951 p 56 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Bossin 1961 p 28 Bossin 1963 p 25 Claude Fournier Toronto International Film Festival Archived from the original on 2021 05 07 Retrieved 2022 07 20 Bon Cop Bad Cop hits new high for Quebec box office Canadian Broadcasting Corporation September 25 2006 Archived from the original on July 1 2022 Cop hauls in Canada b o nod The Hollywood Reporter February 9 2007 Archived from the original on July 1 2022 Turner 1987 p 2 Turner 1987 p 10 Turner 1987 p 26 27 Turner 1987 p 97 Turner 1987 p 137 Turner 1987 p 150 Turner 1987 p 236 Turner 1987 p 271 Turner 1987 p 276 Turner 1987 p 294 Files 2015 p 35 Turner 1987 p 362 Turner 1987 p 400 Turner 1987 p 409 410 Wise 2001 p 20 Wise 2001 p 253 a b c d e f g h i j k Juneau 1996 p 259 a b c d e f g h i j k Juneau 1996 p 265 Works cited editBooks edit Backhouse Charles 1974 Canadian Government Motion Picture Bureau 1917 1941 Canadian Film Institute Beard William White Jerry eds 2002 North of Everything English Canadian Cinema Since 1980 The University of Alberta Press ISBN 0 88864 398 5 Bossin Hye ed 1951 1951 Year Book of the Canadian Motion Picture Industry Film Publications of Canada Bossin Hye ed 1961 Film Weekly 1961 62 Year Book Canadian Motion Picture Industry with Television Section Film Publications of Canada Bossin Hye ed 1963 Film Weekly 1963 64 Year Book Canadian Motion Picture Industry with Television Section Film Publications of Canada Clandfield David 1987 Canadian Film Oxford University Press ISBN 0195405811 Dean Malcolm 1981 Censored Only in Canada The History of Film Censorship the Scandal Off the Screen Virgo Press ISBN 0920528325 Duffy Dennis 1986 Camera West British Columbia on Film 1941 1965 British Columbia Archives ISBN 0771884796 Evans Gary 1991 In the National Interest A Chronicle of the National Film Board of Canada from 1949 to 1989 University of Toronto Press ISBN 0802027849 Files Gemma 2015 Experimental Film ChiZine Publications ISBN 9781771483490 Gasher Mike 2002 Hollywood North The Feature Film Industry in British Columbia University of British Columbia Press Hofsess John 1975 Inner Views Ten Canadian Film Makers Canadian Film Institute ISBN 0070821909 Juneau Pierre 1996 Making Our Voices Heard Canadian Broadcasting and Film for the 21st Century Minister of Public Services and Procurement ISBN 0662241053 Magder Ted 1993 Canada s Hollywood The Canadian State and Feature Films University of Toronto Press Marshall Bill 2001 Quebec National Cinema McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 0 7735 2103 8 Melnyk George 2004 One Hundred Years of Canadian Cinema University of Toronto Press ISBN 080203568X Moore Paul 2012 Mapping the Mass Circulation of Early Cinema Film Debuts Coast to Coast In Canada in 1896 and 1897 University of Toronto Press Morris Peter ed 1970 Canadian Feature Films 1913 69 Part 1 1913 40 Canadian Film Institute Morris Peter ed 1978 Embattled Shadows A History of Canadian Cinema 1895 1939 McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 9780773560727 Pendakur Manjunath 1990 Canadian Dreams amp American Control The Political Economy of the Canadian Film Industry Garamond Press ISBN 0920059937 Seiler Robert 2013 Reel Time Movie Exhibitors and Movie Audiences In Prairie Canada 1896 to 1986 Athabasca University Press ISBN 9781926836997 Spencer Michael 2003 Hollywood North Creating the Canadian Motion Picture Industry Cantos International Publishing ISBN 289594007X Turner D John ed 1987 Canadian Feature Film Index 1913 1985 Canadian Film Institute ISBN 0660533642 Wise Wyndham ed 2001 Take One s Essential Guide to Canadian film University of Toronto Press ISBN 0802035124 Journals edit Bregent Heald Dominique 2012 Vacationland Film Tourism and Selling Canada 1934 1948 Canadian Journal of Film Studies University of Toronto Press 21 2 27 48 doi 10 3138 cjfs 21 2 27 JSTOR 24411793 Constantinides Zoe 2014 The Myth of Evangeline and the Origin of Canadian National Cinema Film History Indiana University Press 26 1 50 79 doi 10 2979 filmhistory 26 1 50 JSTOR 10 2979 filmhistory 26 1 50 S2CID 191465275 Gaudreault Andre 1996 The Introduction of the Lumiere Cinematograph in Canada Canadian Journal of Film Studies SAGE Publishing 5 2 113 123 doi 10 3138 cjfs 5 2 113 JSTOR 24402139 MacKenzie David 2013 An early effort in cultural diplomacy The Canadian Co operation Project and Canadian tourism International Journal SAGE Publishing 68 4 576 590 JSTOR 24709360 Press edit Mattison David 1985 The British Columbia Government s first Film Unit Reel West Magazine Vol 1 no 4 Klady Leonard 1998 Telefilm Celebrates 30 Years Press release Variety Notes edit La Forteresse a French version of the film that was shot simultaneously was also budgeted at 750 000 Producer Paul L Anglais stated that the initial budget was 600 000 for both films but later increased to 1 000 000 with 80 being spent on Whispering City and 20 spent on La Forteresse Further reading editBidd Donald ed 1991 The NFB Film Guide The Productions of the National Film Board of Canada from 1939 to 1989 National Film Board of Canada ISBN 0660139871 Walz Gene ed 1986 Flashback People and Institutions in Canadian Film History Mediatexte Publications ISBN 0969177119 John Grierson and the NFB ECW Press 1984 ISBN 092080280X Jones David 1996 The Best Butler in the Business Tom Daly of the National Film Board of Canada University of Toronto Press ISBN 0802071333 Druick Zoe 2007 Projecting Canada Government Policy and Documentary Film at the National Film Board McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 9780773532595 Richard Valliere 1982 Norman McLaren Manipulator of Movement The National Film Board Years 1947 1967 University of Delaware Press ISBN 0874131928 Knelman Martin 23 September 1980 Hollywood North Canada s Struggle to Build a Film Industry The Boston Phoenix vol 9 no 39 Knelman Martin 1977 This Is Where We Came In The Career and Character of Canadian Film McClelland amp Stewart ISBN 978 0771045332External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cinema of Canada War Art in Canada A Critical History 2021 by Laura Brandon published by the Art Canada Institute Canadian Feature Film Database Canadian Film Encyclopedia Canadian Film Online The Toronto Film Map Map of full length feature films or television shows set in Toronto indicating availability at University of Toronto Libraries and Toronto Public Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cinema of Canada amp oldid 1189069783, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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