Canada’s history explained in record time
‘Canada: The Story of Us’ shows the history of Canada at a fast pace and with a lot of action.
‘Canada: The Story of Us’ shows the history of Canada at a fast pace and with a lot of action.
The most compelling thing about this series is the world. Bleak and desolate, the grim desperation of humanity clinging to survival in its last few cities is ominously believable.
Everything is morally ambiguous to the point that even protagonists are not really heroes, but anti-heroes.
Subbed anime is the purest form of anime. It is the way the creators of the show intended it to be watched.
These English voice actors are professionals, so to dismiss the entire English dubbing industry as terrible is close-minded.
If it were a better show, I’d be calling it ‘daring and risk-taking’ instead of ‘terrible and weird.’
The best of Canadian film, TV, and digital content were celebrated at the Canadian Screen Awards this year.
One of the biggest strengths of the show has been the cast of characters, which remains largely unchanged (with a few notable exceptions) since it began.
Since my childhood there have been significant shifts in the type of programming available to children.
When you set up a television program that only focuses on women being kidnapped and beaten, you are perpetuating the patriarchal ideal that women should be cossetted and protected.