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  #21  
Old Posted May 14, 2025, 8:05 PM
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Considering the high number of Hallmark and similar lower tier projects that film here it is best to just reference the ACTRA site.

https://actramanitoba.ca/whats-filming
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  #22  
Old Posted May 26, 2025, 5:42 AM
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‘Little House on the Prairie’ to start filming in Winnipeg next month

Published: May 24, 2025

The reboot of a classic TV show is set to start filming in Winnipeg and the surrounding area next month.

Netflix and CBS TV are bringing ‘Little House on the Prairie’ to Manitoba with filming going from June to October.

The series, described as a new adaptation of Laura Ingalls Wilder’s semi-autobiographical novels, will be directed by Sara Adina Smith.


Kari Casting, an extras casting team in Manitoba that is involved with the production, describes it as “part hopeful family drama, part epic survival tale and part origin story of the American West.”

The TV series will follow the Ingall family who live and work on a farm in the midwestern U.S. during the late 19th century, according to a description from IMDb.

Luke Bracey, Alice Halsey, Skywalker Hughes and Crosby Fitzgerald are all set to star in the reboot.
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  #23  
Old Posted May 26, 2025, 7:17 AM
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Silent Night, Deadly Night Cineverse (2025 film) Release date: December 12, 2025



Filming: Directed by Mike P. Nelson, location scouting began in February 2025 in Selkirk, Carman, Stonewall, and Steinbach, while casting was underway in Winnipeg. Production commenced on April 14, 2025 in Winnipeg and wrapped May 12 2025. Silent Night, Deadly Night is scheduled to release on December 12, 2025 by Cineverse. The film is produced by Scott Schneid and Dennis Whitehead, executive producers of the original 1984 film.

Cast:
Premise: Horror film where a child witnesses his parents' murder by a man in a Santa suit. Years later, as an adult, he dons a Santa costume himself and embarks on a violent quest for retribution against those responsible for the traumatic event from his childhood.

Media:

Rohan Campbell As Killer Protagonist

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  #24  
Old Posted May 27, 2025, 3:52 AM
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Always with You (2024 film) ODEON MEDIA/Julijette Inc. Release date: - TBA




Natalie Brown stars in the drama Always With You

Filming: Directed and written by Ian Hui, production commenced on October 31, 2024 in Winnipeg and wrapped November 22 2024. The film is also known under the working title A Mother.

Cast:
Premise: In small-town America, a struggling single mother faces the harsh reality of her teenage son's terminal leukemia diagnosis. As she navigates emotional and financial challenges, she reflects on the past 17 years, seeking redemption and forgiveness for her choices.

Media:


On set, Natalie Brown, Ian Hui, Kowen Cadorath


Natalie Brown and Gabriel Daniels in Always with You
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In The Future Every Building Will Be World-Famous For Fifteen Minutes.

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  #25  
Old Posted May 27, 2025, 3:55 AM
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Match, Meet, Murder (2025 film) Lifetime Release date: January 26 2025



Filming: Directed by Nicholas Treeshin, and produced by Black Watch Entertainment for Lifetime TV, production commenced on September 09, 2024 in Winnipeg and wrapped September 29, 2024. The film formally went by the working title The Millionaire Murderer. “Match, Meet Murder” aired Sunday, January 26 at 8:00 PM on Lifetime.

Cast:
Premise: A dating app connects Ruby with a handsome stranger who's smart, successful--and a former dating-show contestant. She soon discovers that the show wasn't the only secret he left off his profile.

Media:
Lifetime’s “Match, Meet, Murder” Premieres Sunday, January 26-MEMORABLE TV


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  #26  
Old Posted May 27, 2025, 3:58 AM
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Many Wounds (2025 film) Release date: TBA




Sera Lys Mcarthur, Kiowa Gordon and Skye Pelletier.

Filming: Filming began on February 26, 2024 in Winnipeg and wrapped March 27, 2024. Many Wounds is written and directed by Jeremy Torrie, and produced by White Bear Films in association with Super Channel and Hollywood Suite.

Cast:
Storyline: An Ojibwe teen learns how to be a warrior so he may protect his family. Set in contemporary North End Winnipeg, home of Canada's largest Indigenous population, Many Wounds is an unflinching exploration of survival of the human spirit. The film is a modern-day re-imagining of Lee Tamahori's ground-breaking 1994 Maori film 'Once Were Warriors' set in Canada.

Media:
Outlander,’ ‘Dark Winds’ Actors Join Indigenous Drama ‘Many Wounds’-The Hollywood Reporter
Ojibwe filmmaker returns to Winnipeg's North End to tell story of hope and healing-CBC/Radio-Canada



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  #27  
Old Posted May 27, 2025, 4:04 AM
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Hair of the Bear (2025 film) Release date: October 23, 2025 (Windsor International Film Festival)




Malia Baker (of the Netflix series The Baby-Sitters Club), Roy Dupuis (The Barbarian, Invasions)

Filming: Filming began on February 05, 2024 in Lac Du Bonnet, Manitoba and wrapped March 06, 2024. Hair of the Bear is co-written and co-directed by the son of the late former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, Alexandre Trudeau and James McLellan, produced by julijette inc. and Same Adventure Productions in association with levelFILM.

Cast:
Storyline: In this chilling action thriller set in the frigid Canadian outdoors, anxious sixteen year old Tori refuses to go to school, and is driven by her mother to her grandfather's rustic cabin in Eastern Manitoba on the remote American-Canadian border. Tori struggles to adapt to the woodsman ways of her French Canadian grandfather, Benoit, but ultimately must embrace the outdoors if she is to survive the deadly game of cat and mouse she is thrust into, after witnessing a murder.

Media:

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  #28  
Old Posted May 27, 2025, 4:09 AM
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Don't F**k with Ghosts (2024 film) Release date: October 10, 2024




Stone (left) and Rodness utilized local haunted locations in Winnipeg.

Filming: Filming began on October 19, 2023 in Winnipeg, Manitoba and wrapped November 03, 2023. Don't F**k with Ghosts is written, directed & starring Stuart Stone & Adam Rodness, produced by 5’7 Films in association with Farpoint Films.

Cast:
Storyline: In this mockumentary, filmmaking duo, Stone and Rodness play fictional versions of themselves filming a documentary. They are convinced they need to capitalize on the next paranormal phenomenon, the pair travel to Winnipeg attempting to prove that ghosts are real.

Media:


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  #29  
Old Posted May 27, 2025, 8:30 AM
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The Sexiest Man in Winnipeg (2025 Documentary) Prime Video Release date: May 9, 2025



Filming: Set to premiere on Prime Video in Canada on May 9, Canadian Will Arnett’s Electric Avenue is attached to produce, alongside Vespucci. Arnett (who also narrates) executive producers on the doc. The story is based on an unpublished article, written by Jordan Michael Smith, who is also a co-producer on the film. The documentary is directed by Acadamy Award-nominated filmmaker Charlie Siskel (Finding Vivian Maier) and Ben Daughtrey, who also edited the film.

Cast
  • Steve Vogelsang

Storyline: When a polite robber carries out a series of odd bank heists, the police investigation takes a sharp turn, pointing to Steve Vogelsang, a garrulous former broadcaster once known as "The Sexiest Man in Winnipeg."

Media:

Vogelsang is seen on the job, during his time with CKY in Winnipeg. (CKY)

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  #30  
Old Posted May 27, 2025, 4:32 PM
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A behind-the-scenes look at bringing film and special events to Winnipeg
Kenny Boyce has been leading our Film & Special Events Office for decades



Is it Hollywood or Charleswood? With a little bit of movie magic, Winnipeg has played a supporting role in countless productions that have filmed here.

Whether it’s a film shoot, a sporting event, festival, or a royal visit, Kenny Boyce and his Film & Special Events team are a part of them all.

As our Manager of Film & Special Events, Boyce is a tireless promoter of Winnipeg. He took time out of his busy schedule to join Our City, Our Podcast this month.


Getting his start

It’s no surprise he ended up working in the industry. Sociable from a young age, Boyce grew up in the North End. His free time was spent at the movie theatre, sitting outside of concert venues, or watching the colour tv his uncle won.

“It was shocking we had a colour tv, no one in our street had a colour TV,” said Boyce. “I thought I could monetize by having my friends come over and give me money or candy to be able to watch Disney on Sunday night.”

Boyce would later go on to essentially set up the City’s Film & Special Events office. He’s been with the City for almost 30 years now.

Selling Winnipeg

Boyce has seen Manitoba’s film industry grow from just a few million dollars to currently around $400 million. Tax credits aside, Winnipeg has many sought after features that help lure productions here. These include tree-lined streets, housing from different eras, and the proximity to lakes and a desert.

“Sometimes the camera, as we say, can cheat, but we have really diverse neighbourhoods that are still intact,” he said.

The Exchange District is one example. It boasts one of the largest collections of Chicago-style architecture in the world. It’s also where the Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford was filmed with Brad Pitt and around 300 background actors. Boyce worked to have everything electrical taken out for that production.

“(We took) out the light posts and the parking stations and put wood sidewalks down and soil,” he said. “We hoped it didn’t rain.”

There is one place Boyce won’t let a production film.

“Everyone wants to film at Portage and Main,” he said. “It's just awfully hard when you have tens of thousands of cars passing through every day.”

A thoughtful tour guide

When production staff come to Winnipeg to scout possible locations to film or for an event, Boyce is often the one meeting them at the airport.

“I’ll take them through neighborhoods that would exemplify what they're looking for and make sure they meet right people,” he said.

Depending on the weather, he also makes sure he has extra jackets and boots in a variety of sizes, water, Winnipeg-branded merchandise, and so on. He’ll confirm dietary restrictions so he knows what restaurants to go to. He even has a hand in where they stay.

“I’m making sure the accommodations are right for them,” Boyce said. “It they're East Coast, they might want to stay one place, if they are from West Coast, it’s another spot, but I’m always making sure they get what they need.”

Making those personal connections is a key part of how Boyce approaches his work. He also makes a point of going to bed every night with no texts or emails in his inbox.

“Everyone can sell and everyone has to close (a deal),” he said. “Closing can be problematic because they might be looking at other markets. So I always like to call at the end of the day and then when they're back in the office to say it was great to meet them.”

Balancing act

On top of film and tv productions, Boyce and his team in the Film and Special Events Office are involved in the logistics of events taking place in our city. Think the upcoming Grey Cup, Winnipeg Jets Whiteout Street Parties, marathons, parades, and everything in between.

“My team and I always try to start from a place of yes as long as we can and use common sense when we have to say no,” he said.

The office has a dual role of supporting the event or production and also supporting residents. Boyce and his team will deal with complaints, concerns, or requests for help they can get at all hours. Boyce also is a special constable and he works to preserve Winnipeg.

“I'll go out and inspect the location often to see that we're protecting our by-laws, that people can have a good, safe time, and help to ensure the universal design of an event,” he said. “We need to have a vibrant community, and safety is paramount in everything that we do.”

Respecting the community

Production companies want to keep filming in Winnipeg. That’s why Boyce said they know how important it is to be good visitors.

Productions will often donate left over items such as food or clothing to local organizations. Props have even been left behind to beautify parks or playgrounds that were filmed in. Boyce points to the gardens in Enderton Park, otherwise known as Peanut Park, as one place that has benefited.

“The film community tends to leave a planting behind every time we film there,” he said. “The gardens continue to grow, which is really nice for the neighbourhood.”

One special meeting

When you work in the industry Boyce does, you meet a lot of people. His office walls feature photos with Patrick Swayze, Philip Seymour Hoffman, and so many more.

While he uses discretion when sharing stories, there is one moment he beams with pride while talking about. It’s when he met Queen Elizabeth II in 2010 when he was the City’s lead for the royal tour.

“We had the opportunity to meet the Queen at Government House and were introduced to her, shook hands, and then did a photo,” recalled Boyce. “It was pretty cool and not bad for North End boy.”
Our City, Our Podcast

Boyce shares more behind the scene stories about bringing film productions and special events to Winnipeg on Our City, Our Podcast. This episode was released in April, 2025.

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  #31  
Old Posted May 31, 2025, 5:52 AM
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Wpg guy deserves a medal for these threads. They are amazing.
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  #32  
Old Posted May 31, 2025, 3:59 PM
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Wpg guy deserves a medal for these threads. They are amazing.
Glad to see you enjoy and appreciate them
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  #33  
Old Posted May 31, 2025, 5:39 PM
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I was driving down Inkster yesterday and was surprised to see how many cars were parked in the in the film production studio located in the former Nigard complex.
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  #34  
Old Posted May 31, 2025, 8:22 PM
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Originally Posted by cllew View Post
I was driving down Inkster yesterday and was surprised to see how many cars were parked in the in the film production studio located in the former Nigard complex.
Very cool! I remember when the conversion to a film studio was announced, but then there was nothing. I suppose film production facilities would rather just get on with their business and leave the promotion for the finished product.
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  #35  
Old Posted Jun 14, 2025, 7:09 PM
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Violent Night 2 Universal (2026 film) Release date: December 4th 2026



Filming: Directed by Tommy Wirkola, production will commence in Winnipeg, Manitoba on September 8th 2025 and Is scheduled to wrap on October 17th 2025. Kelly McCormick and David Leitch (co-creator of the John Wick franchise) of 87North are back as producers as are screenwriting team Pat Casey and Josh Miller. Violent Night, also filmed in Winnipeg proved to be a solid hit, gifting the studio a $50 million domestic haul on a budget of around $20 million. It took in an additional $25.9 million from international markets.

Cast:

David Harbour (Stranger Things) starred in Violent Night, released in 2022


(L-R) Daniela Melchior and Kristen Bell

Premise: Violent Night 2 is the sequel to it's Christmas-themed icepick-stabbing, skate-slashing Santa Claus action predecessor, Violent Night, released in 2022.

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

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  #36  
Old Posted Jun 18, 2025, 6:21 PM
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Professional audio lessons
‘Determined to prove that we could punch above our weight’: Precursor Productions to mark quarter-century in Winnipeg
By: Aaron Epp
Monday, Jun. 16, 2025

There’s a building in Winnipeg’s St. Boniface neighbourhood that celebrities such as Hilary Swank, Liam Neeson and Mark Hamill have all visited for work. But if you’re not looking for it carefully, there’s a good chance you’ll miss it.

Located on Marion Street between a dental office and strip mall — and mostly hidden from view by a massive spruce tree — is Precursor Productions.

Friends Andrew Yankiwski and Chris Wiebe started the recording studio as a dedicated space to work on their own music projects. Since then, it’s become a hub for audio post-production (the phase that occurs after the initial capturing of sound) for film and TV projects.



The business has worked with many of the world’s biggest entertainment brands, including Marvel Studios, HBO and World Wrestling Entertainment.

“It still is a bit of a stretch for most people here (in Winnipeg), I think, understanding this as a legitimate profession or a realistic one or a pragmatic one,” says Yankiwski, 54. “And I was definitely amongst the skeptical people back in the day.”

When Yankiwski and Wiebe started taking clients, the mostly self-taught recording engineers were producing, mixing and mastering music.

Today, music accounts for about 10 per cent of the company’s business. Training aspiring recording engineers accounts for another 10 per cent, recording audio for corporate projects (like voiceovers for training videos) accounts for 15 to 20 per cent and the rest of Precursor’s work is in film and TV.

Yankiwski is currently doing audio post-production on a docuseries about Adolf Hitler’s Nazi regime. That means editing dialogue and music, adding sound effects and mixing everything together into the final product people will eventually hear when they watch the series.

If you’re watching a movie or TV show and you recognize something’s wrong with it, but you can’t quite put your finger on what the problem is, it’s often in the post-production elements, says Adam Smoluk, executive director of Film Training Manitoba. Great post-production, whether it’s the sound or picture, is supposed to be seamless.

“The sound editing aspect of film is an absolutely critical element (for) the viewer or the audience taking in a project,” Smoluk says. “The fact that Andrew is such an experienced person and has so many clients that are high-end clientele says a lot about him and Precursor as a company.”

Yankiwski was a University of Manitoba student when got into audio production in the early 1990s. The drummer in his grindcore band moved out of province, so Yankiwski learned to program a drum machine prior to recording an EP in a local studio.



Around that time, Yankiwski met Wiebe. The two struck up a friendship, bonding over their interests in bodybuilding and music.

Wiebe received a $10,000 inheritance and spent it all on recording gear. The duo set up a makeshift studio in Wiebe’s childhood home in the Winkler-Morden area.

During the week, Yankiwski pursued a law degree at the U of M. On weekends, he and Wiebe headed for the Pembina Valley to record the industrial metal music they were writing.

Yankiwski recalls playing some of their recordings for a fellow student in between classes and the student asking him if he’d ever want to own a recording studio some day.

“I said, ‘You know, I would, but I have to be honest — I have no idea how you’d make money with that,’” Yankiwski recalls. “And if I’m honest with myself, I still don’t really know how I’d make money with it. But it seems to happen every month.”

By 1996, Yankiwski and Wiebe were releasing music independently and performing at raves, warehouse parties and club nights as the techno/house duo FLFK. Yankiwski had finished law school and was called to the Manitoba bar, but lost interest in working as a lawyer.

In 1999, he and Wiebe decided to create a space in Winnipeg — just for one year — where they could work on music. They had dreams of finding a hip loft in the Exchange District, but when Wiebe stumbled upon a building at 218 Marion St. he thought could be suitable, they rented it instead.

After converting the former hair salon into a recording studio, the friends soon realized the project might be worth pursuing beyond the one year they had given themselves. They opened Precursor to the public in September 2000.



Almost from the start, the duo were offering training courses to aspiring recording engineers. Although they were largely self-taught, they wanted to offer people the kind of hands-on training they wished they’d had access to.

In 2005, Wiebe decided to leave the business to live abroad. Yankiwski kept grinding, teaching LSAT prep classes on the side.

“It took until about 2009, I’m sad to say, until we were really profitable in any meaningful sense,” he says.

In 2012, he bought the property. In 2016, he completed an addition to the back of the building that includes a loft — finally giving him his dream space.

Yankiwski employs five assistants. They do the majority of their work remotely on laptops, but Yankiwski will typically ask one to come to the studio when he’s recording a celebrity to ensure everything runs smoothly.

Two-time Academy Award-winning actor Swank recorded the narration for the 2022 documentary Becoming Annika at the Winnipeg studio. Neeson (Schindler’s List, Taken) visited to re-record dialogue for his 2021 thriller The Marksman. Hamill (Star Wars) dubbed parts for his role as Mervyn Pumpkinhead in the Netflix adaptation of Neil Gaiman’s The Sandman comic book series.

Natalia Dyer re-recorded dialogue for a couple episodes of the fourth season of the hit series Stranger Things, and the wrestling tag team known as the Bella Twins stopped by to record speaking parts for a WWE app.

When he isn’t working, Yankiwski shares his expertise as a board member at both New Media Manitoba and Film Training Manitoba.



“He’s been a massive community-builder … He wants to see the industry flourish and grow and all his actions support that notion,” says Louie Ghiz, executive director of New Media Manitoba. “He’s someone that we’re definitely very lucky to have in Manitoba.”

Yankiwski says he never bought into the idea he had to leave Winnipeg to find success. “I was determined to prove that we could punch above our weight — that we could be as good as any jurisdiction.”

Precursor Productions will mark its 25th anniversary in a few months, and Yankiwski is looking forward to celebrating.

“It feels validating,” he says when considering the quarter-century milestone. “It feels validating to know that we could make a go of it.”
Winnipeg Free Press
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In The Future Every Building Will Be World-Famous For Fifteen Minutes.
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  #37  
Old Posted Jul 4, 2025, 1:50 AM
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By train to Hudson Bay | DW Documentary

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Old Posted Jul 17, 2025, 3:56 PM
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Winnipeg goes back in time for cinematic Mob job November 1963
By: Aileen Goos
Posted: Thursday, Jul. 17, 2025

Nicholas (Nicki) Celozzi didn’t grow up hearing Mob stories. They came later, in quiet conversations with his uncle Pepe.

Over time, Pepe began to open up, sharing memories of people who vanished without explanation, of coded conversations and family ties that ran deeper than most.

To the outside world, it was the stuff of true-crime headlines, but to Celozzi — grand-nephew of Mob boss Sam Giancana — it was personal. It was family.



Now, decades later, the screenwriter and producer is telling the story he was born into — the kind of story others have tried, and failed, to tell from the outside. His upcoming film November 1963, directed by two-time Academy Award nominee Roland Joffé (The Killing Fields, The Mission), doesn’t just revisit a moment in American history. It reclaims it.

“We got tired of people monetizing our family’s name. It won’t stop unless we put it out there ourselves,” Celozzi says.

Celozzi wrote the screenplay and is producing the film alongside veteran Canadian producer Kevin DeWalt of Mind’s Eye Entertainment.

Production of the independent film began in March, with Winnipeg standing in for 1960s Chicago and Dallas.

Post-production is being completed in Saskatchewan, making it a fully Prairie-made project.

The film, which unfolds over the 48 hours leading up to the assassination of U.S. president John F. Kennedy, centres not on JFK himself, but on the figures in the shadows — the mobsters, intermediaries and political players whose backdoor dealings helped shape one of the most debated events in modern history.

Celozzi doesn’t claim to offer a new theory. What he offers is something more elusive: a first-person account shaped by lived experience, family access and deep emotional insight.

“I’m not glorifying anyone, but they were human beings. They were smart, complicated, anxious, and I knew them,” he says.

At the heart of the story is Celozzi’s uncle Sam — Sam Giancana — head of the Chicago Outfit at its peak. One of the most powerful Italian-American criminal organizations in the U.S. during the 1950s and early ’60s, the Outfit, started by Al Capone, had strong links to the Kennedy family during JFK’s presidential campaign and presidency.

Giancana was the man the government kept tabs on, worked with and, some believe, eventually turned on.

“The Outfit was as powerful as it was because the government helped make it that way,” Celozzi says matter-of-factly. “They used them to do their dirty work until they didn’t need them anymore.”



Growing up, Celozzi didn’t see any of this as unusual. His childhood was shaped by an unspoken awareness that everyone around him grew up fast.

“It was a strange normality. You just knew not to ask too many questions.”

But questions came anyway, especially from the outside. With every poorly researched documentary or dramatized gangster flick — the 1995 film Sugartime stars John Turturro as Giancana — his family became further distorted.

“All these caricatures yelling and swearing, running like football players down a field — that’s not them. I wanted people to see the real people behind the headlines,” he says.

To do that, he knew he’d have to walk a tightrope.

“The hardest part was being truthful without hurting people. Sam’s daughters are still alive. I’m closest to two of them. Bonnie is a creative consultant on the project. Without her, I wouldn’t have done this.”

That sense of responsibility runs through every line of the screenplay.

“I wrote characters, not caricatures. These men weren’t supermen. They had ulcers. They broke down. They second-guessed. They masked their fear. I know that because I saw it,” he explains,

DeWalt says he wasn’t sure what to make of it when Celozzi first brought him the story six years ago — even though they’d met decades earlier at a social event in Regina.

“I said, ‘Really? This is a true story?’” he recalls.



But then Celozzi flew him to San Diego to meet Bonnie Giancana.

“She looked me in the eye and said, ‘Our family wants the truth told.’ That moment changed everything.”

According to DeWalt, what makes the project so compelling is its emotional authenticity.

“Nobody in the family is proud of this, but it’s a story about loyalty, betrayal and the grey areas of history,” he says.

What also sets November 1963 apart is its refusal to retread worn conspiracy theories. It’s a story that’s never been told.

The film moves fast, but its emotional core is nuanced. The decision to use split screens and simultaneous storylines was rooted in how Celozzi first heard the story himself, from his uncle Joseph (Pepe) Giancana.

“He was the fly on the wall. Now the audience gets to be that fly,” Celozzi says.

Each of the film’s central characters is based on a real person (most of whom are now deceased), giving the cast rare access to historical materials. Actors studied interviews, documents and photos to shape their portrayals. In some cases, they even stayed with relatives of the characters they were playing.

“Roland Joffé spent three days living in one character’s actual home, working with the actor to really get inside the role. It’s been that detailed, that immersive,” DeWalt says.

Casting the right actors to embody such emotionally loaded material was critical.

“I didn’t want anyone who thought this was just another gangster movie; these roles come with weight,” Celozzi says.



“I was in the room with the actors. I could say, ‘No, that’s not how he walked. That’s not how he looked at you.’ And they embraced that.”

The star-studded cast includes John Travolta (Pulp Fiction) as Johnny Roselli; Robert Carlyle (The Full Monty) as Jack Ruby; Dermot Mulroney (My Best Friend’s Wedding) as Chuckie Nicoletti; Mandy Patinkin (Homeland) as Anthony Accardo; Jefferson White (Yellowstone) as Lee Harvey Oswald; and Thomas Fiscella (The Mysterious Benedict Society) as Sam Giancana.

The production team scouted locations in New Orleans and Atlanta before discovering the texture and scale they needed in the Winnipeg.

The Exchange District’s turn-of-the-century facades are now doubling as Dallas and Chicago circa 1963, complete with vintage signage, authentic period wardrobe and more than 75 classic cars sourced locally.

“It’s the only place in North America where you can find eight blocks by eight blocks that look like the 1940s or ’50s. The production value is extraordinary. When you see this movie, it will feel like you’re standing on the Grassy Knoll in 1963,” DeWalt says.

Of course, mounting a project of this scale hasn’t been easy. With more than 200 crew members and an estimated 1,500 background actors, it’s the largest production ever undertaken by Mind’s Eye Entertainment.

There’s also a strong emotional undercurrent for DeWalt, who still remembers the day Kennedy was shot.

“I was a kid, but I remember the silence in the house, the shock. It was like 9/11 — the world stopped. And to now be helping tell a story that humanizes that moment … it’s just a thrill on a human level.”

So what will audiences take away?

“I hope they walk out thinking, ‘That makes sense.’ I’m not trying to control how they feel. I’m just putting the truth in front of them,” DeWalt says.



Celozzi knows that truth is unsettling. He knows it raises more questions about government complicity, secrecy and power than it answers. He knows there are echoes in today’s headlines. But he’s not afraid.

“The last person who might’ve had a problem with this died in 2014. And the rest? They’ve either gone quiet or given me their blessing,” he says.

What about his uncles? Would they approve?

“I don’t think Sam would be too happy, but I think he knew I’d do it one day,” he says of the Mafia boss, who died in 1975 at age 67 after being shot seven times while in the basement of his home. There are numerous theories and suspects about who killed Giancana and why, but officially his murder remains unsolved.

At the end of the day, Celozzi isn’t trying to rewrite history, just to correct its tone. To show that the men behind the myths had routines, regrets and love in their lives. That they dressed up for Halloween. That they cried alone after losing a spouse. That they were more than the headlines.

“I’m not saying bad things didn’t happen. I’m saying they were human.”
Winnipeg Free Press
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Old Posted Jul 17, 2025, 4:11 PM
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chrisdca Exclusive: actor John Travolta on the Winnipeg set of "November 1963," Wednesday, July 16, 2025. Travolta was filming scenes at the Red Top Drive Inn for the upcoming movie chronicling the lead-up to the assassination of U.S. President John F. Kennedy in Dallas. The production also stars Mandy Patinkin & Dermot Mulroney. Filming is scheduled to wrap in Winnipeg on July 31 for a release date sometime in 2026.













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Virtual production possibilities ‘almost endless’
Avro XR Studio celebrates grand opening in St. Boniface as partners CoPilot, AVentPro showcase tech benefits
By: Gabrielle Piché
Posted: 7:43 PM CDT Wednesday, Jul. 16, 2025

The man cruising down city streets in a Chevrolet Camaro was, in fact, not moving at all. Behind him, towers passed by; in front, throngs of people from Manitoba’s film sector surveyed the scene.

They observed the LED screens showing the cityscape, encircling film cameras and soundproofing wall hiding the door the Camaro drove through.

Wednesday marked Avro XR Studio’s grand opening. Companies behind the virtual production studio are touting it as Manitoba’s first of its kind at ground level.


A demonstration of the Avro XR virtual production studio on Wednesday.

“A lot of people we’ve spoken to, they all say ‘Oh, you do virtual production? That’s cool, but when can I bring a car into the space?’” said Austin MacKay, co-founder of CoPilot Co.

CoPilot Co., which assists in film production and extended reality, partnered with AVentPro on the new studio. The latter company specializes in event production and audio visual services.

The two Manitoba businesses crossed paths via a mutual connection, said Garry Hale, AVentPro president.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, AVentPro launched a live broadcast studio with a virtual backdrop for events.

“We realized just how many of our corporate, non-profit and association clients could benefit from this technology,” Hale told a crowd Wednesday.

The company supplies and assists with LED equipment. CoPilot Co. has a background in designing virtual production stages and using the technology for filming.

Now, after a roughly $1 million investment, the St. Boniface-area site is open for booking.

“Our goal … is to inspire and educate local industry, improving productions,” said Reid Valmestad, co-founder of CoPilot Co.

Perhaps the studio, at 635 Camiel Sys St., will help attract international productions to Manitoba, he added.

Avro XR joins StudioLab xR in Winnipeg’s virtual production studio offerings. Matthew Dyck, associate creative director with UpHouse, has booked StudioLab xR for his advertising clients.

The downtown training hub has allowed UpHouse to pitch “more ambitious work” knowing it can be done, Dyck relayed. He recently did two campaigns for a customer: one involving high mountain skiing, another involving a tropical beach.

“We shot them both back-to-back in the same location,” Dyck said. “The possibilities are almost endless.”

He attended Avro XR’s opening to scout the studio. The virtual production space is roughly 1,500 square feet; there’s also a multi-purpose studio with a green screen, production office and kitchen.

Concerns around weather, traffic and disrupting communities by filming are eliminated by using virtual production studios, said Kenny Boyce, City of Winnipeg manager of film and special events.

“They can be there all day and all night,” Boyce said. “The more that we can throw at visiting productions — having direct flights, aggressive tax credits, really talented crews … they shop where they want to go make their film.

“Winnipeg has so much going for it right now.”


Reid Valmestad (left) and Austin MacKay, co-founders of CoPilot Co, explain the demonstration of the AVRO XR virtual production studio on Wednesday

Some four productions were filming in Winnipeg on Wednesday, including November 1963, a thriller about John F. Kennedy’s assassination starring John Travolta. Manitoba logged $224.9 million worth of film production budgets in 2023-24, Manitoba Film & Music’s most recent report shows.

Valmestad sees Avro XR as a “very important stepping stone” to a full-scale virtual production studio.

The Mandalorian, a Star Wars television series, is among the shows shot through virtual production. Jette Studios, in Niverville, aims to create its own virtual production space, too.

Avro XR has launched booking on its website (www.avroxr.com).
Free Press
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