We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
101 Fascinating Canadian Film and TV Facts
Regular price
$14.99
Regular price
$0.00
Sale price
$14.99
Unit price
/
per
Sold out
Re-stocking soon
101 lesser-known stories to delight Canadian cinema and television fans. Do you know:
Who was in the first on-screen nude scene in a Canadian feature film?
Which David Cronenberg film was raided fo...
Read More
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
Ships within 2 business days
-
05 November 2024

101 lesser-known stories to delight Canadian cinema and television fans.
Do you know:
Do you know:
- Who was in the first on-screen nude scene in a Canadian feature film?
- Which David Cronenberg film was raided for obscenity?
- Why Oliver Reed was arrested while shooting The Brood?
- Which iconic Canadian television series was syndicated in over fifty different countries?
- Which Canadian film critic wrote a full-page retraction after reconsidering a positive review he gave a film?
- What role Canada played in the creation of Dennis Hopper’s Easy Rider?
Price: $14.99
Pages: 272
Publisher: Dundurn Press
Imprint: Dundurn Press
Series: 101 Fascinating Facts
Publication Date:
05 November 2024
Trim Size: 7.00 X 5.00 in
ISBN: 9781459754317
Format: Paperback
BISACs:
PERFORMING ARTS / Film / History & Criticism, Film history, theory or criticism, PERFORMING ARTS / Television / History & Criticism, REFERENCE / Trivia, Television, Trivia and quiz questions
A deep and breathtaking dive into a lost world of Canadian film lore.
If you didn’t know that Hockey Night in Canada is the longest running sports TV show on the planet or that Peter Fonda wrote most of Easy Rider in a seedy Toronto motel, then you need a copy of 101 Fascinating Canadian Film and TV Facts. Writer/producer Thom Ernst gathers the arcane, the obscure, and the just plain weird in this entertaining compendium of Canadiana. I mean, who knew that Pierre Berton conducted the last known interviews with both Malcolm X and Bruce Lee? This is a must-read for every movie buff and TV fan out there.
When you sit down to read 101 Fascinating Canadian Film & TV Facts, be sure to have a glass of your favourite beverage at your side because Thom Ernst’s book is an intimate visit with a celebrated cinephile! His passion for Canadian film lifts from the page with his easy conversational tone, making you feel like you are getting the inside track on little-known industry secrets. This book is full of surprises, giggles, and shocking facts – even for those of us in the know. 101 Fascinating Canadian Film & TV Facts will do more than entertain, it will serve as a conversation starter ... where that conversation leads, however, is entirely up to you.
Easy, fun, and as accessible as a Canadian movie star. Thom gives Canadian cinema an identity that goes beyond the polite and quirky.
Effortlessly fun, jammed with useful trivia, and written with such a sense of patriotic pride that you can almost smell the maple syrup wafting off the page. The only book that knows more about Canadian entertainment might be Atom Egoyan’s personal diary.
Before reading 101 Fascinating Canadian Film and TV Facts I thought I was a pretty savvy Canadian film nerd. It appears my knowledge only scratched the surface. This book is a treasure trove of everything from little known facts to stories of collaborations that could have been. You might think you're a film nerd until you read this.
An eclectic and free associative, all-Canadian journey, from geniuses to con artists, from slasher films to movies with actual off-screen death counts, to the almost happened jaw-droppers like David Cronenberg’s version of the musical Porgy and Bess. Read and feel the maple syrup flow in your veins.
A delightful read and a reminder of what we’ve got to be proud of as Canadians. Ernst blends some of the more obvious moments in our history with some very well-deserved deep cuts that many will appreciate.
If you didn’t know that Hockey Night in Canada is the longest running sports TV show on the planet or that Peter Fonda wrote most of Easy Rider in a seedy Toronto motel, then you need a copy of 101 Fascinating Canadian Film and TV Facts. Writer/producer Thom Ernst gathers the arcane, the obscure, and the just plain weird in this entertaining compendium of Canadiana. I mean, who knew that Pierre Berton conducted the last known interviews with both Malcolm X and Bruce Lee? This is a must-read for every movie buff and TV fan out there.
When you sit down to read 101 Fascinating Canadian Film & TV Facts, be sure to have a glass of your favourite beverage at your side because Thom Ernst’s book is an intimate visit with a celebrated cinephile! His passion for Canadian film lifts from the page with his easy conversational tone, making you feel like you are getting the inside track on little-known industry secrets. This book is full of surprises, giggles, and shocking facts – even for those of us in the know. 101 Fascinating Canadian Film & TV Facts will do more than entertain, it will serve as a conversation starter ... where that conversation leads, however, is entirely up to you.
Easy, fun, and as accessible as a Canadian movie star. Thom gives Canadian cinema an identity that goes beyond the polite and quirky.
Effortlessly fun, jammed with useful trivia, and written with such a sense of patriotic pride that you can almost smell the maple syrup wafting off the page. The only book that knows more about Canadian entertainment might be Atom Egoyan’s personal diary.
Before reading 101 Fascinating Canadian Film and TV Facts I thought I was a pretty savvy Canadian film nerd. It appears my knowledge only scratched the surface. This book is a treasure trove of everything from little known facts to stories of collaborations that could have been. You might think you're a film nerd until you read this.
An eclectic and free associative, all-Canadian journey, from geniuses to con artists, from slasher films to movies with actual off-screen death counts, to the almost happened jaw-droppers like David Cronenberg’s version of the musical Porgy and Bess. Read and feel the maple syrup flow in your veins.
A delightful read and a reminder of what we’ve got to be proud of as Canadians. Ernst blends some of the more obvious moments in our history with some very well-deserved deep cuts that many will appreciate.
Thom Ernst is a Toronto-based film critic, broadcaster, and author. He is the former host of television’s longest running film program, Saturday Night at the Movies, and is the author of the memoir The Wild Boy of Waubamik.