DISTRIBUTION HIGHLIGHTS: MAY  2025

Upcoming Screenings:

black and white image of cherries with text repeating winnipeg underground film festival

Revival (dir. Heidi Phillips) will be screening at the Winnipeg Underground Film Festival on June 6th at the Dave Barber Cinematheque

Check out more info about the program here

plain graphic with text and shapes reading Les sommets du cinema d'animation

a beaten path (dirs. Natalie Baird and Toby Gillies) will be screening at Les Sommets du Cinéma D'Animation in Montreal

Check out more info about the program here

A promotional image for imagineNATIVE’s 25th edition, featuring a flower with Indigenous portraits on its petals. The festival runs in Toronto from June 3–8, 2025, and online from June 9–15. Bold text and lush greenery frame the details.

Evening Escapades (dirs. Chantal Rousseau and Darcy Tara McDiarmid) will be screening at the 25th edition of imagineNATIVE this June

check out more info about the program here

A retro-style poster for the Toronto Outdoor Picture Show’s 15th anniversary, themed “When We Were Young at Christie Pits.” Illustrated clouds, skyline, and a vintage TV set create a nostalgic summer vibe in soft greens and blues.

Starlight Sojourn (dirs. Chantal Rousseau and Darcy Tara McDiarmid) is screening at the Toronto Outdoor Picture Show (TOPS) on August 187th at Christie Pitts

Click here for more details

Recently Added Titles in Catalogue:

multiple exposures of statues including Abraham Lincoln

Monument (dir. Jeremy Drummond)

Monument pairs hand-processed and chemically altered Super 8mm film footage of the decaying monuments of Presidents Park (Croaker, VA) with original and appropriated community video footage captured at Marcus-David Peters Circle (Richmond, VA) during the Covid-19 pandemic and the George Floyd/Black Lives Matter protests of 2020. Themes of registration and re-calibration, and metaphor and analogy, are explored through form and content and the distinct features of the historic and contemporary media employed.

Presidents Park was once a ten-acre sculpture park (originally located in Williamsburg, VA) that contained 18- to 20-ft tall white busts of 42 U.S. presidents, from George Washington to George W. Bush. The park was foreclosed in 2010 due to financial troubles and the busts were relocated to nearby Croaker, where the crumbling statues still sit, abandoned in an overgrown acreage.

Marcus-David Peters was a Virginia man who was shot and killed by police officer Michael Nyantakyi on May 14, 2018, while Peters, unarmed, was having a mental health crisis. In 2020, during the George Floyd and Black Lives Matter protests, Peters’s death was a focus of local Virginia protests. That summer in Richmond, Virginia, the greenspace surrounding the approximately 60-ft tall Robert E. Lee statue became a vibrant community gathering space. Over several weeks, the statue of Robert E. Lee was reclaimed by protesters and activists and neighbors who collectively transformed it into a living monument. It became a public work of art, a mutual aid center, a place for kids to shoot hoops, a memorial to people who were killed by police, and a space for communal organization and celebration symbolizing positive change and transformation. The circle that held the statue, and this blossoming community vision, was renamed Marcus-David Peters Circle in his honor. That year, The New York Times named the Robert E. Lee monument — in its revised state — as the most influential form of American protest art since World War II. The site of this monument has since been leveled and transformed into an unnamed, non-pedestrian garden.

triptych of the same image of a peach and a hand reaching for it against a black backdrop

The Fruit Machine: A Space Opera (dirs. Lorri Millan & Shawna Dempsey) 

When a queer little space alien crashes to Earth and looks for survival tips, she finds what she needs on television, a ready-made guide to the ins and outs of 20th-century conformity. This tale is set against the true history of the Fruit Machine, a test for aberrant sexuality developed by the Canadian government in the 1960s.

If you're interested in inquiring about bringing your work into our catalogue please contact madeline@videopool.org