Draft:Helene Klodawsky

Canadian documentary filmmaker (born 1956) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Helene Klodawsky (born 1956) is a Canadian documentary filmmaker based in Montreal, Quebec. Active since 1984, she is known for feature documentaries exploring social justice, human rights, refugee experience, elder care, labour, and women's lives. Since 1987, her films have been broadcast by major networks including the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), PBS, CTV, Channel 4, Canal+, and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.[1] Her work has been reviewed in The Globe and Mail, The New York Times, Variety, La Presse, Le Devoir, and Artforum, and has screened at festivals internationally.[1] She is a member of the Writers Guild of Canada, Doc Organization, and Réalisatrices Équitables.

Born1956 (age 6970)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
EducationNSCAD University (Nova Scotia College of Art and Design)
OccupationDocumentary filmmaker
Yearsactive1984–present
Quick facts Helene Klodawsky, Born ...
Helene Klodawsky
Born1956 (age 6970)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
EducationNSCAD University (Nova Scotia College of Art and Design)
OccupationDocumentary filmmaker
Years active1984–present
Known forNo More Tears Sister, Undying Love, Malls R Us, Stolen Time
AwardsGemini Award (2003, 2006); Spirit of Freedom Award, Jerusalem International Film Festival (2006); Writers Guild of Canada Award (2004); World Press Photo Second Prize (2018); YWCA Woman of Distinction Award (2025)
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Early life and education

Klodawsky was born in Toronto, Ontario in 1956. Her parents, Bluma Klodawski and Anzsel Klodawski, originally from Łódź, Poland, were Holocaust survivors.[2] She is a graduate of the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Career

Klodawsky began making films in the mid-1980s. Her early work includes Painted Landscapes of the Times: The Art of Sue Coe (1986) and Shoot and Cry (1988), a documentary about a young Israeli conscript in the occupied territories, which marked her first engagement with the Middle East.[3] Her 1994 feature Motherland: Tales of Wonder was produced with the National Film Board of Canada.

Her feature documentaries have been produced primarily in association with the National Film Board of Canada,

Intuitive Pictures https://www.intuitivepictures.ca/ and Catbird Films https://catbirdproductions.ca/en and have aired on the CBC's Documentary Channel, Superchannel canada https://superchannel.ca/ and on PBS's long-running documentary strand POV. Several of her films have been programmed at institutions including the Museum of Modern Art in New York.[4]

Films

Stolen Time (2023)

Stolen Time follows elder rights lawyer Melissa Miller as she builds legal cases against the long-term care industry on behalf of hundreds of aggrieved families, challenging major for-profit nursing-home corporations over neglect and abuse of elderly residents.[5] The film had its theatrical release in March 2024 following a national tour.[6] Writing in Stir, critic Adrian Mack described the film as a chilling documentary that measures a society by the compassion it extends to its most vulnerable.[7] POV Magazine called the film an investigation of institutional ageism.[8] SEE Change Magazine featured Klodawsky and Miller in a profile on the film's examination of neglect in for-profit care homes.[9]

The film received the Humanitarian Award and Award of Excellence at the Accolade Global Film Competition (2024), and the Documentary Feature Award and Viewer Impact Award at the Impact DOCS Awards (2024).[10]

No More Tears Sister: Anatomy of Hope and Betrayal (2004)

No More Tears Sister tells the story of Dr. Rajani Thiranagama, a Sri Lankan human rights activist, anatomy professor, author, and mother who was assassinated in Jaffna at age 35 during the Sri Lankan Civil War. The film draws on archival footage, personal correspondence, and dramatic recreations to recount her commitment to documenting abuses committed by all parties to the conflict, including the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.[11][12]

The film received its US premiere on PBS's POV strand on June 27, 2006.[11] The New York Times published two reviews at the time of the PBS broadcast.[13][14] The Globe and Mail described the film as putting a human face on the Tiger tragedy.[15]

The film received the Spirit of Freedom Award for Best Documentary at the Jerusalem Film Festival (2006),[16] was nominated for Best Political Documentary at the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television, and won Best Cinematography at the Gemini Awards (2006).

Undying Love (2002)

Undying Love examines the love stories of World War II survivors — primarily Holocaust survivors — as they rebuilt their lives in post-war Europe, drawing on personal testimony ranging from love at first sight to arranged marriage.[17] Writing in Variety, critic Robert Koehler noted that the filmmaker, herself a daughter of a Holocaust survivor, had assembled several testimonials covering a wide emotional range.[17]

The documentary won Best Feature Documentary at the Warsaw Jewish Film Festival (2003), received the Gemini Award for Best Television History Documentary in Canada (2003), and won Best Documentary Screenplay from the Writers Guild of Canada (2004).[18]

Malls R Us (2009)

Malls R Us examines the global shopping mall phenomenon through interviews with developers, architects, labour organizers, environmentalists, and shoppers across Canada, the United States, Europe, India, Dubai, and Japan. Writing in Artforum, Brian Sholis discussed the film's treatment of mall culture as a lens on consumer society.[19] The New York Times cited the film in its coverage of the fate of the American mall.[20]

The film was nominated for Best Documentary by the Directors Guild of Canada (2009) and Best Documentary Screenplay by the Writers Guild of Canada (2010).[21] It was named one of 15 Notable Films of 2010 by the American Library Association.[22]

Family Motel (2007)

Family Motel follows a Somalian refugee mother and her teenage daughters after they are evicted from their apartment and placed in a motel shelter for the homeless in Montreal. The Globe and Mail reviewed the film on its broadcast, noting the dignified portrait of a family navigating homelessness and displacement.[23]

The film won the Prize for the Promotion of Tolerance Through Film at Les Rendez-vous du Cinéma Québécois (2008)[24] and was a drama finalist at the International Festival of Audiovisual Programs (FIPA) in Biarritz, France, where it was among the most-discussed works of the festival's documentary programme.[25]

Come Worry With Us! (2013)

Come Worry With Us! documents the Montreal post-rock band Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra — specifically band members Efrim Menuck and Jessica Moss — as they navigate touring, artistic life, and parenthood after the birth of their son. The film explores the economic precarity of independent musicians and the particular challenges for women and parents in the music industry. Reviewing the film at Hot Docs 2014, That Shelf described it as a keenly observant and universally relatable story of loving parents trying to do right by their newborn while sustaining their artistic work.[26] Writing in Rabble.ca, the film was described as a call to nurture, art, and motherhood.[27]

Grassroots in Dry Lands (2015)

Grassroots in Dry Lands profiles a network of social workers applying a community development methodology pioneered at McGill University's School of Social Work to low-income neighbourhoods in Israel, the Palestinian territories, and Jordan. The film returned Klodawsky to the Middle East, a region she had first documented in Shoot and Cry (1988).[3] It was broadcast on the CBC Documentary Channel.[28]

=== From Janet With Love (2017) ===

From Janet With Love is an interactive new media documentary portrait of Janet, an immigrant caregiver from the Philippines living in Montreal, and the network of correspondence and community she built across continents. The project was produced with the National Film Board of Canada as part of its Legacies 150 series.[29] The National Post covered the film's portrait of a pen-pal caregiver from the Philippines.[30]

The project won Second Prize in Innovative Digital Storytelling at the World Press Photo Festival (2018) and was featured in the World Press Photo Travelling Exhibition's 100-city global tour.[31]

Filmography

Feature documentaries

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Notes
2023 Stolen Time NFB; Hot Docs premiere
2015 Grassroots in Dry Lands NFB; CBC Documentary Channel
2013 Come Worry With Us! NFB; Hot Docs 2014
2009 Malls R Us Directors Guild of Canada nomination
2007 Family Motel NFB; drama-documentary hybrid
2004 No More Tears Sister: Anatomy of Hope and Betrayal NFB; PBS POV premiere
2002 Undying Love Gemini Award, Best History Documentary
1994 Motherland: Tales of Wonder NFB Federal Women's Film Program
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=== Other works ===
More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Notes
2019 The Invisible Everywhere
2017 From Janet With Love Interactive new media; World Press Photo Second Prize
2000 In Search of Lucille
1999 Hire Learning
1998 What If... A Film About Judith Merril About science fiction editor Judith Merril
1991 No Time to Stop NFB
1988 Shoot and Cry NFB; Israel/occupied territories
1986 Painted Landscapes of the Times: The Art of Sue Coe Icarus Films
1986 Love's Labour
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== Awards and recognition ==
More information Year, Award ...
Year Award Category Film Result
2025 YWCA Y des femmes Montréal — Prix Femmes de mérite Media and Communications CareerWon
2024 Accolade Global Film Competition Humanitarian Award Stolen TimeWon
2024 Accolade Global Film Competition Award of Excellence Stolen TimeWon
2024 Impact DOCS Awards Documentary Feature Award Stolen TimeWon
2024 Impact DOCS Awards Viewer Impact Award Stolen TimeWon
2018 World Press Photo Festival Second Prize, Innovative Digital Storytelling From Janet With LoveWon
2010 American Library Association Notable Film Malls R UsWon
2010 Writers Guild of Canada Best Documentary Screenplay (nomination) Malls R UsNominated
2009 Directors Guild of Canada Best Documentary (nomination) Malls R UsNominated
2006 Jerusalem Film Festival Spirit of Freedom Award, Best Documentary No More Tears SisterWon
2006 Gemini Awards Best Cinematography No More Tears SisterWon
2006 Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television Best Political Documentary (nomination) No More Tears SisterNominated
2004 Writers Guild of Canada Best Documentary Screenplay Undying LoveWon
2003 Warsaw Jewish Film Festival Best Feature Documentary Undying LoveWon
2003 Gemini Awards Best Television History Documentary Undying LoveWon
2008 Les Rendez-vous du Cinéma Québécois Prize for Promotion of Tolerance Through Film Family MotelWon
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References

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