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  #61  
Old Posted Oct 9, 2025, 6:00 PM
neutroniks neutroniks is offline
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^^^ Had a friend that worked on this production. He said the summers were absolutely bruuuutal, and they said that the actors probably had walked 260 miles by the end of production because of the numerous takes they had to do of them walking. They would shoot the entire scene walking, then would have to go alllllll the way back to the start if someone messed up a line, or the director didn't like the take, or the angle of the shot. But he did say when they got the shot, he called it and was like, "yup, thats the one, moving on".

They said there was also a paramedic on site, constantly changing the wraps on the actors feet because they didn't always have the most comfortable footwear and were standing and walking continuously. They're lucky they shot that film when Westjet still had direct flights, because the staff liked to go home on Fridays to their families in LA.



In other news, looks like the old HBC at Polo Park is being put to good use, as it looks like Violent Night 2 moved their production. there's a ton of Christmas decorations on the west entrance of the former HBC, and a ton of sky jacks and tractors to hold up lighting equipment.
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  #62  
Old Posted Nov 29, 2025, 8:06 AM
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Hamm about town
Winnipeg works at being a welcoming but low-key location for actors shooting projects in the city

Behind the Scenes By: Eva Wasney
Posted: 5:10 PM CST Friday, Nov. 28, 2025

Jon Hamm has spent the last month acting like a real Winnipegger.

While the Mad Men star hasn’t missed a Winnipeg Transit bus (as far as we know) or experienced a bone-chilling winter day (yet), he has become something of a regular at local restaurants and sporting events this fall.

Hamm, 54, is in town filming American Hostage, an eight-part series based on a true crime podcast of the same name. In both, the Golden Globe-winning actor plays Fred Heckman, a real-life Indianapolis radio reporter who in 1977 helped defuse an active hostage situation after interviewing kidnapper Tony Kiritsis on air.

The crime drama also stars Giovanni Ribisi (Sneaky Pete), Mireille Enos (The Killing) and William Jackson Harper (The Good Place) — all of whom have been spotted doing their own civic exploring.

Which raises the question: how do celebrities find out where to go and what to do in Winnipeg?

The process, it turns out, is a mix of targeted recommendations and word of mouth that highlights the symbiotic relationship between the local movie industry and other cultural sectors.

While generous tax credits make Manitoba an attractive filming locale, its dining and entertainment options also play a major role in helping woo productions, says Lynne Skromeda, the province’s film commissioner and the CEO of Manitoba Film and Music.

“First and foremost, we’re showing off what they might need for their work — locations, facilities and meeting crew members — but then we’ll always go out with them for a meal and they ask, ‘What’s it like to live here? What are the neighbourhoods like? What can you do at night?’ If you’re going to be here for a while, you want to know that you have things to do,” she says.


NHL / ANDREW MAHON PHOTO
Jon Hamm takes in a Winnipeg Jets home game against the Pittsburgh Penguins in November.

When a prospective producer comes to town, Skromeda will plan an itinerary based on the needs and interests of their cast and crew. Extracurricular highlights can include private tours of art galleries, museums and concert venues, or a list of popular spas and specialty grocery stores.

If a project does land in Winnipeg, those curated recommendations may trickle down to the talent, while other suggestions might arise from local crew members.

American Hostage began shooting in early November and is set to wrap in February. Hamm, a sports lover, has already attended a Winnipeg Jets game and the 2025 Grey Cup, where he met Prime Minister Mark Carney and reportedly had high praise for the outing.

“If Jon Hamm said he had a good day, I know that we did our job,” says Kenny Boyce, the City of Winnipeg’s manager of film and special events, who works closely with Skromeda to entertain visiting producers and actors.

Part of the job is partnering with “film-friendly” amenities that can handle big-name guests, whether that be hotels with separate entrances or restaurants with private rooms, Boyce says.

One such restaurant is 529 Wellington. The high-end steakhouse has a separate staircase and upstairs dining room, where Brad Pitt, Jennifer Lopez, Richard Gere and John Travolta have eaten.

“We try to make it as low-key as possible. We want them to experience true hospitality without having everybody stumble all over them,” says Doug Stephen, founder of WOW! Hospitality Concepts, which operates the steakhouse (and several other restaurants) and has a formal partnership with Manitoba Film and Music to sponsor client meals during scouting visits.


CFL commissioner Stewart Johnston was all smiles while hanging out with Jon Hamm at the Grey Cup in Winnipeg.

Hamm has dined at 529 several times and recently stopped by WOW!’s Prairie’s Edge alone and unannounced, where he ordered a classic breakfast and a Caesar to drink. Later, the American actor was seen walking down Sherbrook Street with a coffee in hand.

“It appears that he’s really embraced life in Winnipeg,” Stephen says, adding the Landman and Fargo star was very friendly during encounters with staff.

While many celebrities stay at fancy hotels such as the Fort Garry and Fairmont, others choose to bask in the relative anonymity available in Winnipeg — another of the city’s selling points.

“A lot of people end up getting a place to live and can just be a normal person for a while,” Skromeda says.

There are no paparazzi here and playing it cool is an unwritten rule among business owners and the general public.

Boyce has hosted many famous people during his nearly 30-year career and, more often than not Winnipeggers will leave them alone, he says.

“(They’ll) save their moment to say hi or take a picture until the end of the meal, which is wonderful. It’s just a Prairie thing, I think.”


Actors Jared Harris and Joe Pantoliano with Vera Pizza owner Terik Cabildo

Vera Pizza owner Terik Cabildo has almost gotten used to seeing celebrities in his restaurant on a regular basis. Almost.

“When they walk in, it’s a bit surreal,” Cabildo says, adding he’s not sure how his casual South Osborne pizzeria has landed on the radar of stars filming in town.

“Winnipeg’s small and there’s lots of good restaurants and local businesses that all of us enjoy, and I think they must get the same information.”

In September, actors Joe Pantoliano and Jared Harris — in town filming Violent Night 2, alongside stars David Harbour and Kristen Bell — popped in for a slice of pie.

Earlier this month Vera hosted a private dinner for the cast and crew of American Hostage. Cabildo served some of his classic pizzas, along with a burrata cheese appetizer; a snap pea, pancetta and dill salad; grilled zucchini; and vegan coconut-vanilla ice cream. Afterward Hamm and Giovanni Ribisi posed for a photo with staff.


Giovanni Ribisi at Vera

Mireille Enos must have enjoyed the meal because she returned with husband Alan Ruck (Succession) several weeks later.

“It’s fun to see these people in real life, and it’s a cool acknowledgement that they wanted to eat at your place and that someone recommended it,” Cabildo says.

The American Hostage cast aren’t just wining and dining in Winnipeg; they’re also shopping local.

Clothing designer Jill Sawatzky had a surprise encounter with William Jackson Harper during a First Fridays event in November.

She was hosting a pop-up of her Tony Chestnut brand at Public General Store’s Arthur Street studio when in walked an “objectively absolutely gorgeous” man with a nice hat and a dazzling smile.

“He was so hot,” she says with a laugh. “It was like, ‘Oh, of course you’re a celebrity.’”

Harper, who appeared on the most recent season of The Morning Show, had just finished filming for the day and was walking around the Exchange District. He popped into Clothing Bakery, a vintage shop on the building’s main floor, before making his way upstairs where he purchased some candles and incense from Public.

“The thing that was remarkable about it is actually how unremarkable it was; he was really nice and chill and unassuming,” Sawatzky says. “And the fact that he put the energy into checking out this local installation is just so neat.

“Winnipeg is a really cool city with a great art scene and stuff going on, and the more people that catch onto it, the better.”

And celebrities are beginning to catch on. Winnipeg has received some positive public buzz from A-list actors who seem to have genuinely enjoyed their time here. See: Henry Winkler’s glowing review of his meal at Deer + Almond last year, and Bob Odenkirk’s assessment of Winnipeg as “amazing” and “interesting” on Seth Meyers’ podcast earlier this summer.

The things that make this hard-on-itself city a great place to live — its celebrated restaurants, world-class cultural institutions, sports teams and small-town vibe — are the same things that have helped it become a northern Hollywood hub.

“He wouldn’t come back over and over again if there wasn’t a good reason to,” Skromeda says of Odenkirk, who filmed Nobody, Nobody 2 and the upcoming Normal in Winnipeg.

“We have an established industry, we have the facilities and we have benefits, like the culinary scene, that makes it worthwhile.”


Jon Hamm at Vera Pizza


Succession star Alan Rock with Kitchen staff at Vera pizza
Free Press
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  #63  
Old Posted Nov 29, 2025, 2:16 PM
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My favourite quote from the above article:

“Winnipeg is a really cool city with a great art scene and stuff going on, and the more people that catch onto it, the better.”
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  #64  
Old Posted Dec 1, 2025, 3:03 PM
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Don't post this on Instagram and WinnipegWildin'. The usual internet trolls hate to hear anything good about Winnipeg, let alone a Celebrities going out and about like a local, having a great time lol
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  #65  
Old Posted Dec 12, 2025, 9:35 AM
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Santa slasher quick, dirty, but also top-notch
Randall King
By: Randall King
Friday, Dec. 12, 2025

A few decades back, the movie Silent Night, Deadly Night was a creature that stirred controversy all through December of 1984.

While somewhat nastier and sleazier than the usual ’80s slasher, its downfall — that is, being removed from theatres before it had even begun its wide release — was contained within its Christmas trimmings. The idea of a psycho Santa was too much for Reagan-era audiences in the U.S., even though an axe-wielding psycho Santa was highlighted some 12 years earlier in the 1972 holiday release Tales from the Crypt. But despite its abbreviated run, it would achieve cult status, spawning two sequels and two reboots.

The new iteration of Silent Night, shot in Manitoba earlier this year, redeems the source material with a fresh take that, uncomfortably, compels the audience to be more sympathetic to its designated psycho.

Billy Chapman (Rohan Campbell of Halloween Ends and The Hardy Boys) is an itinerant young man who arrives by bus into a small Midwestern town with apparently evil intent. Dream flashbacks tell the story of his early childhood trauma: As a little boy, he witnessed the brutal slaying of his parents by a shotgun-brandishing Santa.

He rents a room and finds a job with kindly gift-shop owner Mr. Sims (Winnipeg’s David Lawrence Brown). He also meets Sims’ daughter Pamela (Ruby Modine of the series Shameless) and finds the two share common ground when it comes to a certain volatility of temper.

Even as star-crossed romance is blooming, Billy will not be put off by his compulsion to kill seemingly random people and take Dexter-esque mementos of his crimes to preserve in the world’s gnarliest advent calendar.

Most of those elements were in the original 1984 film. But director-screenwriter Mike P. Nelson (who likewise reinvented an existing franchise with his 2021 film Wrong Turn) takes some pretty clever liberties with the source material, which won’t be revealed here.

Suffice to say, Nelson has made a film better than it has a right to be, given a tight schedule and a tighter budget. In the quick-and-dirty realm in which he is working, the film is top-notch.



He even shoots for a Roger Corman-esque sense of social satire in some elements, in which the small town isn’t the wholesome place it appears.

He deviates from the Corman school by eschewing some of exploitation elements, such as sex and nudity, of which there is little. And as much as the film is advertised as coming from the producers of Terrifier 3, it is nowhere near as gory and sadistic as that franchise, to its credit.

But sometimes, it’s apparent that Nelson’s ambitions are bigger than his capabilities. For example, the film is divided into chapters in much the same way as Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill movies, or, to use a more recent frame of reference, Jalmari Helander’s 2021 Finnish bloodbath Sisu. But the film’s violence is not as creatively realized, a function of the aforementioned budget/schedule constraints.
Winnipeg Free Press

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  #66  
Old Posted Dec 12, 2025, 9:43 AM
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Malia Baker Fights for Survival in Thriller ‘Hair of the Bear’ Trailer (Exclusive)
The coming-of-age tale marks the narrative feature debuts for Alexandre Trudeau, brother of former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and co-writer and director James McLellan.
October 23, 2025


By Etan Vlessing


The Babysitter’s Club star Malia Baker discovers her inner animal to survive a deadly hide-and-seek wilderness pursuit in the trailer for the Hair of the Bear thriller, which dropped on Thursday.

The coming-of-age film, shot northeast of Winnipeg, Manitoba, in a frozen, wintry setting, marks the narrative feature debut of Alexandre Trudeau, brother of former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and fellow writer and director James McLellan.

Hair of the Bear, which has a world premiere Thursday night at the Windsor International Film Festival, sees Baker play Tori, an anxious 16-year-old girl who, after self-harming and refusing to go to school, finds herself in a remote wintry cabin with her grandfather, Ben, played by Roy Dupuis.

“Who can say which moments will shape you into who you will become?,” Tori’s grandfather tells her at one point in the trailer as she learns hunting and survival skills along a frozen lake near the U.S. border. Soon, a crisis forces Tori into a deadly cat and mouse game where her despair gives way to defiance as guns are pointed and hands are bloodied.

Hair of the Bear also sees Baker, also known for roles in Nickelodeon’s horror anthology Are You Afraid of the Dark? and Descendants 4, step into a darker role in the Canadian indie drama, which she executive produces, while Juliette Hagopian produces.

Trudeau, who earlier directed the documentaries Embedded in Baghdad and The New Great Game, is also the son of the late Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. He met McLellan while both were in their youth in officer training in the Canadian Armed Forces and have stayed good friends since.

While Trudeau moved into making documentaries, McLellan eventually taught high school in Winnipeg, where the classroom anxiety he saw among his young students inspired the survival thriller he eventually made with Trudeau.

German cinematographer Stefan Ciupek, whose credits include Danny Boyle’s Slumdog Millionaire and Lars von Trier’s Antichrist, lensed Hair of the Bear.

The Hollywood Reporter
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  #67  
Old Posted Dec 12, 2025, 3:03 PM
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Oh wow thanks for sharing that Hair of the Bear article and trailer. I hadn't heard about that. As a former Oak Park film student it's cool to see Mr. (James) McLellan making his feature length film debut. Looks like a movie worth checking out when possible.

One thing that's always stuck with me from him was when I'd show him what I thought was a finished edit and he'd look over at me and say "Cool. But you're still working on it right?" Quietly muttering back something about yeah I just wanted to share my progress. I've made a career as a videographer and still hear his voice saying that every time I watch a video I've made haha.
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2025, 3:20 PM
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Some beautiful Manitoba winter imagery in that trailer - wow.
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  #69  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2026, 7:45 PM
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Here's your first look at LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE: filmed in Canada (Manitoba), coming to Netflix on July 9, 2026, and renewed for S2.



Netflix Canada
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  #70  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2026, 7:56 PM
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Here's your first look at LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE: filmed in Canada (Manitoba), coming to Netflix on July 9, 2026, and renewed for S2.



Netflix Canada
The town set is in the community I grew up in, Cooks Creek right by the Ukrainian church.
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Old Posted Mar 3, 2026, 8:57 PM
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It's good for the industry that the series has been renewed for a second season
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Old Posted Mar 4, 2026, 2:40 AM
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I believe that the interior scenes are filmed at the Big Sky Studio in the former Nygard International facility
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  #73  
Old Posted Mar 4, 2026, 2:06 PM
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I believe that the interior scenes are filmed at the Big Sky Studio in the former Nygard International facility
I was wondering how that studio was doing-thanks for posting this.
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  #74  
Old Posted Yesterday, 3:22 AM
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‘Free advertising for Winnipeg:’ stars put spotlight on city
Tyler Searle
By: Tyler Searle
Sunday, Mar. 8, 2026

Mad Men star Jon Hamm is again professing his love for Winnipeg — the latest unsolicited celebrity endorsement that travel officials call more effective than any marketing campaign for the city.

The Hollywood star, who spent weeks in Winnipeg filming an upcoming project, heaped praise on the city in a new interview, saying he enjoyed his time here despite experiencing the notoriously frigid weather.

“I had a blast in Winnipeg,” Hamm said during an interview that aired Friday on Global News’s The Morning Show, speaking alongside co-star Dave Franco about their new animated film, Hoppers.

“The people are so friendly, great food, and I love ice hockey, so you know it was always fun to go do that,” Hamm said, referring to attending several Winnipeg Jets games.

It’s the latest instance of the Golden Globe-winning actor supporting the city, where he worked on an unreleased true crime series called American Hostage, filmed locally between November and February.

Hamm wasted no time settling into his role as a temporary Winnipegger, spotted at local restaurants, sporting events and taking in the local arts scene.

“Winnipeg in the winter is daunting, as any Canadian can tell you. It got down to about minus 30 a few days… and that’s real, that’s real cold,” Hamm said.

Hamm joins a list of celebrities who have praised the city, including Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul star Bob Odenkirk, who has filmed multiple projects in Manitoba — including the action films Nobody and Nobody 2, and the soon to be released action-thriller Normal.

“Winnipeg is an amazing interesting place. It’s very quiet and calm and chill,” Odenkirk told television host Seth Meyers during an appearance on his podcast last year.

These unsolicited endorsements are among the most effective ways to build the reputation of Manitoba, which is increasingly becoming a destination for the film and travel industries, said Kathy Tarrant, a spokeswoman for Winnipeg Economic Development and Tourism.

“It is a significant benefit to us when someone with the stature and the reach of Jon Hamm takes the time to say that he found this to be a friendly and fun experience… We have not paid him to say these things, and so the authenticity of that kind of delivery is incredibly important and impactful,” Tarrant said.

“In marketing, we call that organic or earned media.”

Chuck Davidson, president of the Manitoba Chambers of Commerce, described celebrity endorsements as “free advertising for Winnipeg and Manitoba that we need to take advantage of.”

“We need to be better champions of ourselves,” he said. “There is so much to do, and the people are going to be terrific, and we are going to be welcoming… That’s just part of who we are and I think that’s the reality. We don’t need celebrities to tell us how great we are, but it’s great when they do.”

Manitobans should take pride whenever visitors — famous or otherwise — leave the province with a positive impression, said Louise Waldman, spokeswoman for Travel Manitoba.

“It helps support visitation and it helps support local pride,” Waldman said.

“It reaffirms the things that are special about us that we know… We sometimes love to be our own biggest critics, but we also love it when people from outside of Manitoba or Winnipeg talk about how great it is.”

Waldman said celebrities may be drawn to Manitoba because of its friendly and unassuming nature. Famous visitors can explore the city without fear of being hounded by fans or paparazzi.

“It’s a place that’s really liberating for celebrities if they’re used to being followed, chased and stalked,” she said. “We are really unexpected. I don’t think people have expectations of how great it’s going to be, so it’s kind of a gift to massively exceed people’s expectations.”

Loren Remillard, president of the Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce, said the significance of Hamm’s endorsement cannot be overstated.

“Somebody like Jon Hamm has filmed around the world. He doesn’t say that about every city or community he’s been in, he said it about Winnipeg,” he said. “Let’s chalk that one up to a nice feather in our cap, and let’s try to put a few more in there.”

He is not alone in his love for the city, Remillard said, noting the population of Winnipeg has increased by roughly 80,000 over the past four years — marking one of the largest periods of growth in its history.

“That is 80,000 people’s endorsements of this community, and endorsements of its economy, its quality of life.”

Franco, who has also spent time working in the city, quipped about the cold weather during the Global News interview, sharing an anecdote about his experience at the intersection of Portage Avenue and Main Street.

“I stayed on what they told me was the windiest corner in all of Canada, where you had to put your full weight just to walk forward,” he said, laughing.
Free Press
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Old Posted Yesterday, 4:12 AM
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Filmmakers’ first foray into fiction bares all in Manitoba
Randall King
Thursday, Mar. 5, 2026

Two years after shooting a movie in the wilds near Lac du Bonnet, co-directors James McLellan and Alexandre (Sasha) Trudeau finally unveiled the dramatic feature Hair of the Bear last Thursday in Toronto, with Alexandre’s brother Justin Trudeau on hand to celebrate the première in advance of its opening Friday. (The former prime minister even made a joke about the good/evil brother dynamic in the film’s designated antagonists.)


Co-directors James McLellan (left) and Alexandre (Sasha) Trudeau (Randall King photo)

While a little political star power never hurts a première, the film itself is not explicitly political. It’s a gritty survival story in which a troubled teen (Malia Baker, The Baby-Sitters Club), suffering social anxiety, is sent to live with her outdoorsman grandfather (Roy Dupuis, Rumours) where his survival lessons prove to be invaluable in the face of an outside threat.

It’s a scripted feature debut for both directors, who met while doing officer training in CTC Gagetown in New Brunswick in 1996.

The launch went well, says Winnipeg producer Juliette Hagopian, who was in attendance.

“I’m happy to see people enjoy films that are made by individuals who are taking a chance at creating their first feature. James and Sasha did a great job,” Hagopian says.

As in the film, the relationship between the filmmakers was formed under pressure, and turned fruitful.


Roy Dupuis plays an avid outdoorsman with lessons to teach. (Julijette Productions)

“We shared a barrack, and a lot of laughter through the incredible tribulations of basic officer training. And we stayed fast friends,” Trudeau says.

Trudeau is the one who pursued film first.

“We were both black sheep in the military context, but James stayed in the military for years after and I went to go produce documentary films,” Trudeau says.

The film’s heroine represents issues McLellan witnessed first-hand in the three decades teaching high school. (He currently teaches a film production course at Oak Park High School in Charleswood.)

“It was probably about six years ago that it just came in a wave where just all these kids started cutting up their arms and scratching themselves and obviously missing a lot of school,” he recalls.

“It was quite noticeable, after 25 years, to see the trend just kind of explode through these issues of debilitating anxiety.”


Malia Baker is sent to live with her grandfather, where his survival lessons prove valuable. (Julijette Productions)

Trudeau’s documentaries have dealt with big global issues, including the W5 documentary Embedded in Iraq in 2003, and The Fence (2004), a film about two families on either side of Israel/Palestinian territories around the West Bank.

“All my films are geopolitical,” Trudeau asserts.

“They are mostly character-based … human beings reflecting on human beings and what they’re facing in a war zone. It is not that far off from focusing on this teenager who’s in a personal crisis that in this story becomes a very dramatic crisis for her with external elements. She’s fighting for her life both in an internal way and an external way.


Roy Dupuis can live off the land. (Julijette Productions)

“So there’s parallels there to things I saw and did in the past, but I think it’s really a human story above all else.”

Trudeau says he would call himself a humanist filmmaker when it comes to his documentaries; that sentiment also applies to his debut feature.

“This is very much a humanist (film), looking at what makes us who we are, how we deal with extreme pressures, how we get to know ourselves when under incredible pressure, and how we find ways to survive in situations that were unimaginable to us before.”

Co-director James McLellan, producer Juliette Hagopian and actor Jonathan Lawrence will be in attendance at tonight’s 6:15 p.m. and 9:15 screenings of Hair of the Bear at Grant Park Cinemas.

Winnipeg Free Press
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Old Posted Yesterday, 4:33 AM
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Normal Official Trailer (2026)

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Normal (The film is slated to premiere on September 7, 2025 in the Midnight Madness program at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival.) Release date April 17, 2026



Filming: Directed by Ben Wheatley (Meg 2: The Trench, Free Fire), principal photography began on October 21, 2024 in Winnipeg , Manitoba, Canada with additional shooting in several Manitoba communities: Starbuck, Carberry, Selkirk, and West St. Paul. Filming wrapped December 13 2024, Amazon has taken rights in Canada, Scandinavia and Australia/NZ.

Cast:

Lena Headey (300, Game of Thrones), Bob Odenkirk ( Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul), Henry Winkler (Happy Days, Barry)

Premise: The 'Breaking Bad' star is returning to the big screen for another action movie following the success of 2021's 'Nobody' and he's re-teaming with the film's writer Derek Kolstad - who also worked on the 'John Wick' movies. Ulysses comes to the sleepy town of Normal to serve as the temporary sheriff after the passing of the original sheriff. But a bank robbery leads him down a trail of dark secrets hidden by the townsfolk, forcing him to face his demons and uncover the dangerous truth.

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https://www.normalthemovie.com/
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Old Posted Yesterday, 5:14 AM
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MIKE & NICK & NICK & ALICE Official Trailer (2026)

Quote:
Originally Posted by Wpg_Guy View Post
Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice 2025 film (20th Century Studios) Release date:
March 27, 2026



Filming: Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice is an upcoming American buddy action comedy film written and directed by BenDavid Grabinski. Principal photography began on September 3, 2024, in Winnipeg, Manitoba and filming wrapped by November 3, 2024. this film is also know under the working titles of Gilmore, and It Takes Two.

Cast:

James Marsden and Vince Vaughn

Premise: A buddy action comedy that develops in the underworld of criminals. Two friends navigate the dangerous world of organized crime, testing their loyalty and survival skills as they get deeper into the criminal underworld.

Media:

Video Link
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Winnipeg Act II - April 2024

Winnipeg Developments

In The Future Every Building Will Be World-Famous For Fifteen Minutes.

Last edited by Wpg_Guy; Yesterday at 5:36 AM.
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