Voices of Canada – 2025 Lineup

DOC NYC is proud to partner once again with the Consulate General of Canada in New York to showcase an exciting array of Canadian nonfiction filmmaking. New Canadian documentary features and shorts are presented across several sections of the festival. Additionally, a delegation of Canadian producers with works-in-progress will participate in the DOC NYC PRO industry conference and take meetings with industry leaders through the Voices of Canada – Industry Roundtables initiative.

Features

Voices of Canada Features Screening at DOC NYC 2025:

A Thousand Colors

Cutting Through Rocks

Matabeleland

Paul

Shifting Baselines

TCB: The Toni Cade Bambara School of Organizing

The Eyes of Ghana

The Pink Pill: Sex, Drugs, and Who Has Control

True North

What We Inherit

Shorts

Voices of Canada Shorts Screening at DOC NYC 2025:

Am I the Skinniest Person You’ve Ever Seen?

A View from Home

Burcu’s Angels

That Which is Heard

The Man in the Rectangle

Two Kinds of People

We Were the Scenery

The Voices of Canada Industry Roundtables program will bring six Canadian works-in-progress film projects to NYC for a day of curated meetings and industry feedback. This initiative is co-presented by the Consulate General of Canada in New York and the Department of Canadian Heritage’s Creative Export Strategy (CES).

The 2025 DOC NYC Voices of Canada works-in-progress projects are:

Gagged

Director: Nathalie Bibeau / Producers: Nathalie Bibeau, Tara Jan, Andrea Stewart

Gagged is a poetic reckoning that unmasks how NDAs have quietly enabled abuse, stifled victims, and shaped our collective silence. Featuring a live case that will break in the film, paralleled with Zelda Perkins’ quest to ban them, it is a story about secrets and what happens to us all when the wrong ones are forced to be kept.

Inuguiniq

Director: Olivia Ikey / Producers: Kim O’Bomsawin, Andrée-Anne Frenette

Inuguiniq follows Inuk filmmaker Olivia Ikey as she and her young daughter Navarana reconnect to long-lost Inuit traditions surrounding birth. Inuguiniq offers unprecedented access to a multi-millennial people’s traditional philosophies and ways of being, which were almost completely erased. A deeply intimate story that also speaks universally about how we bring and support life in the world.

Holdouts

Director: Ric Bienstock / Producers: Ric Bienstock, Garfield Miller

Holdouts tells the eccentric, defiant stories of homeowners and business owners who refuse to sell – quirky strongholds in seas of glass and steel – exposing both their oddball charm and the larger fights over gentrification, housing, and what we call “progress.”

The Gymnasts of Fisherman Colony

Director: Habiba Nosheen / Producers: Amar Lohana, Habiba Nosheen

Against the weight of societal expectations on women and girls, three Pakistani teenagers push to make space for themselves, one somersault at a time. The film offers a rare and tender portrait of girlhood, joy, and play told through the eyes of young girls navigating the margins of society.

North Korea’s Joy Division

Director: Noa Im / Producers: Ann Shin, Sally Blake, Erica Leendertse, Mariam Bastani

Four women break decades of silence to expose North Korea’s secret “Joy Division”—a pleasure squad serving three generations of dictators. Their explosive testimonies reveal a world of sex, power, and propaganda, where performance itself becomes a weapon of control.

Turtle Island Rap

Director: Alexandra Lazarowich / Producer: Jessica Ford

Turtle Island Rap follows three young Indigenous rappers as they fight to make it in the music industry, push through colonial barriers, and challenge prejudice through their art.