Sugar Dumplin

by Tristan Barrocks • 19 mins • Short • Drama, Narrative • Canada • English • 2024

Ebony, a young Jamaican-Canadian woman, struggles to reconnect with her estranged father, Desmond, by reviving the one thing that once united them—cooking. As she prepares beloved Caribbean meals from her childhood, she discovers Desmond is battling early-stage dementia, adding urgency to their fragile bond. Through the shared act of cooking, they slowly mend their fractured relationship, proving that love, memory, and family can be rekindled one meal at a time.

One Day

by Yazmeen Kanji • 17 mins • Short • Drama, Comedy, Coming of Age • Canada• 2024

In a suburb just outside of the downtown core of Toronto, Ontario, an Indo-Caribbean Muslim teenager, Adeela, can’t help but fantasize her way through every part of her day. Adeela is secretly fiery, searching for her confidence amongst the emotionally limiting environments she feels she has no control over. In her daydreams, Adeela explores her desires to be seen and heard as the stylish, artsy, justice-seeking young woman she anxiously wants to be. Hesitant to radiate that confidence in real life, she seeks inspiration from an outspoken classmate and comes to learn that she is the only one capable of giving herself the push she needs. Adeela becomes changed in one day, simply by imagining what could be.

Home, Sick Home

by Jamlec David • 12 mins • Short • Drama • Canada • English • Spanish • 2025

Stacy, a spirited 19-year-old Dominican girl – life takes an unexpected turn when she secures a prestigious scholarship to pursue her studies in the vibrant landscape of Canada. However, as she embarks on this thrilling new chapter, Stacy is confronted with an emotional struggle that threatens to overshadow her dreams.

Play It Loud!

by Graeme Mathieson • Canada, Jamaica, United States Canada • 1hr 21 mins • Documentary • English

Play it Loud! is a feature documentary that tells the remarkable story of how Jamaican music came to Canada as part of a social and cultural migration that had a seismic impact on Canada and helped transform this country into a modern nation and make it a mecca for Jamaican music. We tell this story primarily through the life, music, struggles, and triumphs of Jamaican Canadian singer Jay Douglas. Jay is both a witness and participant in the stories we tell – the 1950’s birth of Jamaican popular music; the early 1960’s Jamaican migration to Canada; the flowering of a uniquely Canadian black music culture that is now celebrated around the world, though still little appreciated here. Through Jay’s personal story, we tell a much bigger and largely untold tale of cultural transformation.