Thanks to Adam Sandler, an alien movie and a strange loophole in traffic law, you can now boldly park where no man has parked before. A film shoot on Adelaide St. has removed all “no parking” signs between Yonge and York Sts. to disguise the area as New York City,[…]
The Great Plains industrial area will be the new home of Calgary’s own film studio. At the Banff World Media Festival Monday, Calgary Economic Development announced it has secured a 8.53 acre piece of land at 5750 76 Ave. S.E. for construction of the $22.8 million Calgary Film Centre. “The[…]
Ontario’s Liberal government continued to give out hundreds of millions of dollars a year in tax subsidies to TV and film productions despite a scathing internal assessment that questioned whether the money was the best way to help the industries.
Canadians annually gripe about not being able to watch the glitzy TV ads that are as much a part of the Super Bowl spectacle as the game itself. Now, CTV wants to fix that – but not necessarily by showing those ads. On Thursday, CTV parent company Bell Media announced a contest designed to convince Canada’s advertising community to step it up a notch when it comes to their big-game ads.
The Open Roof Festival has never screened a film on a roof. It takes its name and personality from a New York film fest held on top of buildings, but the nearly 50 film screenings here in Toronto have been held in parking lots and on patios. There just isn’t[…]
Thanks to Adam Sandler, an alien movie and a strange loophole in traffic law, you can now boldly park where no man has parked before. A film shoot on Adelaide St. has removed all “no parking” signs between Yonge and York Sts. to disguise the area as New York City,[…]
The Great Plains industrial area will be the new home of Calgary’s own film studio. At the Banff World Media Festival Monday, Calgary Economic Development announced it has secured a 8.53 acre piece of land at 5750 76 Ave. S.E. for construction of the $22.8 million Calgary Film Centre. “The[…]
Ontario’s Liberal government continued to give out hundreds of millions of dollars a year in tax subsidies to TV and film productions despite a scathing internal assessment that questioned whether the money was the best way to help the industries.
Canadians annually gripe about not being able to watch the glitzy TV ads that are as much a part of the Super Bowl spectacle as the game itself. Now, CTV wants to fix that – but not necessarily by showing those ads. On Thursday, CTV parent company Bell Media announced a contest designed to convince Canada’s advertising community to step it up a notch when it comes to their big-game ads.
The Open Roof Festival has never screened a film on a roof. It takes its name and personality from a New York film fest held on top of buildings, but the nearly 50 film screenings here in Toronto have been held in parking lots and on patios. There just isn’t[…]
Thanks to Adam Sandler, an alien movie and a strange loophole in traffic law, you can now boldly park where no man has parked before. A film shoot on Adelaide St. has removed all “no parking” signs between Yonge and York Sts. to disguise the area as New York City,[…]
The Great Plains industrial area will be the new home of Calgary’s own film studio. At the Banff World Media Festival Monday, Calgary Economic Development announced it has secured a 8.53 acre piece of land at 5750 76 Ave. S.E. for construction of the $22.8 million Calgary Film Centre. “The[…]
Ontario’s Liberal government continued to give out hundreds of millions of dollars a year in tax subsidies to TV and film productions despite a scathing internal assessment that questioned whether the money was the best way to help the industries.
Canadians annually gripe about not being able to watch the glitzy TV ads that are as much a part of the Super Bowl spectacle as the game itself. Now, CTV wants to fix that – but not necessarily by showing those ads. On Thursday, CTV parent company Bell Media announced a contest designed to convince Canada’s advertising community to step it up a notch when it comes to their big-game ads.
The Open Roof Festival has never screened a film on a roof. It takes its name and personality from a New York film fest held on top of buildings, but the nearly 50 film screenings here in Toronto have been held in parking lots and on patios. There just isn’t[…]