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[ "Any Man's Death", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Any Man's Death<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Any Man's Death is a 1990 South African thriller drama film directed by Tom Clegg and starring John Savage, William Hickey, Mia Sara and Ernest Borgnine.Plot An investigative journalist is sent to the volatile frontiers of Angola and South-West Africa to investigate the disappearance of a photographer during the South African Border War. He eventually stumbles across an unrepentant Nazi war criminal who researches local snake venom in the hopes of finding a cancer cure.
narrative location
36,971
115,004
[ "Siren of Atlantis", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Siren of Atlantis<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Siren of Atlantis, also known as Atlantis the Lost Continent, is a 1949 American black-and-white fantasy-adventure film, distributed by United Artists, that stars Maria Montez and her husband Jean Pierre Aumont. It was the first feature she made after leaving Universal Pictures.André de Saint-Avit of the French Foreign Legion is discovered unconscious in the African desert. He claims he stumbled upon the lost kingdom of Atlantis, ruled by the beautiful Queen Antinea, who drove him to commit murder.
narrative location
36,972
115,005
[ "Keïta! l'Héritage du griot", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Keïta! l'Héritage du griot<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,007
[ "Panther Girl of the Kongo", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Panther Girl of the Kongo<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Panther Girl of the Kongo is a 1955 Republic movie serial that contains a great deal of stock footage from the 1941 Republic serial Jungle Girl. This was the penultimate of Republic's 66 serial films.Plot Mad scientist Dr. Morgan wants sole access to secret diamond mines in the local area of Africa. He breeds giant crayfish ("Claw Monsters") to scare away any other inhabitants. Jean Evans, the Panther Girl and friend Larry Sanders encounter the plot while on a photo safari in the region.Cast Phyllis Coates as Jean Evans, the Panther Girl Myron Healey as Larry Sanders, a big game hunter Arthur Space as Dr. Morgan, a mad scientist John Daheim as Cass, one of Dr. Morgan's henchmen Mike Ragan as Rand, one of Dr Morgan's henchmen Morris Buchanan as Tembo Roy Glenn as Chief Danka James Logan as Constable Harris
narrative location
36,973
115,008
[ "Secret Service in Darkest Africa", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Secret Service in Darkest Africa<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,009
[ "The Huggetts Abroad", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Huggetts Abroad<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Plot After Joe Huggett loses his job, the family decide to emigrate to South Africa, travelling via a land route that takes them across Africa. On their journey they become entangled with a diamond smuggler. Their truck breaks down in the desert and Joe and his son-in-law Jimmy have to trek across the sand to find help for the family.Cast Jack Warner as Joe Huggett Kathleen Harrison as Ethel Huggett Susan Shaw as Susan Huggett Petula Clark as Pet Huggett Dinah Sheridan as Jane Huggett Hugh McDermott as Bob McCoy Jimmy Hanley as Jimmy Gardner Peter Hammond as Peter Hawtrey John Blythe as Gowan Amy Veness as Grandma Huggett Peter Illing as Algerian Detective Frith Banbury as French Doctor Olaf Pooley as Straker Esma Cannon as Brown Owl Sheila Raynor as Woman with Straker
narrative location
36,974
115,011
[ "The Magnificent Two", "narrative location", "South America" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Magnificent Two<\e1> and <e2>South America<\e2>. Plot Two British Action Man travelling salesmen are sent to the South American country of Parazuellia to sell their goods. During the train journey, Eric accidentally opens a door leading to the death of the returning British educated Torres who is the figurehead of a revolutionary movement and a government secret policeman arresting him. Upon arrival in the city of Campo Grande, Eric is mistaken by the revolutionaries for Torres, and though they discover the death of the real Torres they pay Eric and Ernie to maintain Eric's impersonation of Torres to lead a revolution to oust a brutal dictator. However, once the revolution is successful Eric gains an inflated opinion of himself.
narrative location
36,975
115,012
[ "Jungle Blue", "narrative location", "South America" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Jungle Blue<\e1> and <e2>South America<\e2>. Jungle Blue is a 1978 American pornographic exploitation film directed by Carlos Tobalina under the pseudonym Troy Benny. The film stars Kathie Kori as Jane, a woman who journeys into the jungles of South America in search of her missing father, accompanied by explorers who secretly plan to steal jewels that they believe are being guarded by a native tribe. The other members of the cast include Nina Fause and Bill Cable.
narrative location
36,976
115,013
[ "Fresh Hare", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Fresh Hare<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,014
[ "Nightbreed", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Nightbreed<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Filming For the film, Barker used three soundstages at Pinewood Studios shooting some scenes on location at Wexham Park Hospital, Slough, Berkshire, UK over several nights and in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Bob Keen and his crew had two months to play around with ideas before doing any modeling work. They used computer-controlled animatronics but only where necessary. Towards the end of principal photography, Barker brought Star Wars concept artist Ralph McQuarrie in to paint mattes for the Necropolis sequences and design the history of the Breed in a symbolic way on an enormous mural across a 60-foot space on the set at Pinewood to be used in the opening credits.During an interview in 2022 on The Ghost of Hollywood, cinematographer Robin Vidgeon, mentioned that he disliked working with David Cronenberg, stating Cronenberg complained to Clive that he was being usurped.Barker was contractually obligated to deliver an R-rated film and could not make it as gory as his previous picture Hellraiser. Barker previewed the first cut of Nightbreed with a temporary soundtrack that did not go well, as people were confused by the characters' motives. He made some changes and the second test screening was much more successful. However, the ending with Decker's death was not well received and Barker changed it. In late July 1989, the studio pushed the release date for Nightbreed from its original autumn 1989 date to early February 1990 instead. The press release cited "the complex demands of the film's ground-breaking post-production optical effects", but this also included McQuarrie's mural and matte paintings, and a week of additional shooting in late August that would see key parts of the narrative re-shot. Barker shot extra scenes over three days in Los Angeles in late 1989 which included additional scenes with David Cronenberg which expanded and clarified his character. Barker's original version ran two-and-a-half hours and Fox asked for almost an hour to be cut prompting editor Richard Marden to leave the project in protest. Nightbreed was cut to two hours and then again to 102 minutes.
narrative location
36,977
115,015
[ "Ginger Snaps (film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Ginger Snaps (film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,020
[ "The Mysterious Pilot", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Mysterious Pilot<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. The Mysterious Pilot is a 15-episode 1937 Columbia movie serial based on the book by William Byron Mowery and starring the record-breaking aviator Frank Hawks. This was the second serial produced by Columbia. In the serial, Hawks plays a flying "mountie".Plot Carter Snowden (Kenneth Harlan) about to marry Jean McNain (Dorothy Sebastian), is accused of murder. When his accuser is killed, Jean flees the train she is on, and heads into the Canadian woods. Snowden sends a bodyguard to find Jean, who appeals to RCMP Captain Jim Down (Frank Hawks) for help. With his friend "Kansas" (Rex Lease) and Indian Luke (Yakima Canutt), Jim hides Jean. Snowden tracks down Jean and tries to lure her to his aircraft by telling her that Jim is injured and needs her. As soon as they realize what has happened, Jim and Kansas take to the air and force Snowden's aircraft down. Jean is unhurt but Snowden dies in the crash. Trying to get down to Jean, Jim's parachute gets tangled in the trees and Jean ends up rescuing him.
narrative location
36,979
115,022
[ "One Week (2008 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>One Week (2008 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. One Week is a 2008 Canadian drama film directed by Michael McGowan and starring Joshua Jackson, Liane Balaban, and Campbell Scott. The film debuted at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 8, 2008, and was released theatrically on March 6, 2009. Jackson plays Ben Tyler, who has been diagnosed with cancer. Requiring immediate treatment, he instead decides to take a motorcycle trip from Toronto across Canada to Vancouver Island. Along the way, he meets several people that help him reevaluate his relationship with his fiancée Samantha (played by Balaban), his job, and his dream of becoming a writer. The scenic backdrop of the Canadian landscape as well as an all-Canadian soundtrack serve as prevalent influences in the film. Joshua Jackson won Best Actor at the 2010 Genie Awards for his portrayal of Ben Tyler. Liane Balaban was nominated for Best Supporting Actress.
narrative location
36,981
115,024
[ "D2 (video game)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>D2 (video game)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Plot The game opens with Laura Parton falling asleep on an airplane trip to an undisclosed location. After being jolted awake by a tone over the airplane's PA system and a friendly conversation with a fellow passenger named David, a group of terrorists, who seem to be guided by some kind of mysterious cultist chanting to himself, suddenly and violently takes control of the plane. David, who turns out to be a special agent within the FBI, attempts to stop the terrorists, but he is thwarted when a meteorite strikes the plane, sending it crashing into the Canadian wilderness. After a series of bad dreams, Laura awakens in a small cabin being cared for by Kimberly Fox, a poet, and songwriter who also survived the crash. She explains that ten days have passed since the accident, although Kimberly had only found her some distance from the crash site two days prior, leaving a strange eight-day gap where she was mysteriously taken care of. The moment of peace is broken when another survivor, one of the hijackers, staggers into the cabin before suddenly transforming into a hideous plant-like monster. Here, Laura and Kimberly meet Parker Jackson, a CETI researcher and fellow crash survivor who drives out the monster, only to be driven out himself by a distrusting Kimberly. Laura then sets out into the wilderness in order to investigate the possibility of contacting the outside world and seeking out other survivors only to discover that more strange, hideous creatures are lurking in the area, as something is causing the crash survivors to mutate into the very same monsters she must avoid and battle while traveling through the region. She is driven deeper into the mystery when she must venture into an abandoned mining facility in order to locate Jannie, a lost little girl Kimberly had found along with Laura and one of the plane's former passengers.
narrative location
36,982
115,025
[ "Hit the Ice", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Hit the Ice<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,027
[ "Battle Grand Prix", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Battle Grand Prix<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,028
[ "The View from Castle Rock", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The View from Castle Rock<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. The View from Castle Rock is a book of short stories by Canadian author Alice Munro, recipient of the 2013 Nobel Prize in Literature, which was published in 2006 by McClelland and Stewart. The book is a collection of historical and autobiographical stories. The first part of the book narrates the lives of members of the Laidlaw branch of the family tree of the author, starting from their Scottish origins in the 18th century. The second part consists of fictionalized tales inspired by events in her own life.Contents Foreword Part One / No Advantages "No Advantages" "The View from Castle Rock" "Illinois" "The Wilds of Morris Township" "Working for a Living" Part Two / Home "Fathers" "Lying Under the Apple Tree" "Hired Girl" "The Ticket" "Home" "What Do You Want to Know For?" Epilogue "Messenger"The View from Castle Rock This story narrates the voyage of James Laidlaw and his family to Canada. The title stems from the event when James took his ten-year-old child Andrew to the top of the Rock of Edinburgh Castle to show him the coast of America (actually Fife). James Laidlaw (Old James) had one daughter, Mary, and 5 sons, Robert, James, Andrew, William, and Walter. Robert and William had moved to the Highlands before the move, while the others followed in the voyage (although James has left earlier). Andrew's family is composed of his pregnant wife Agnes and their infant son (Young) James. Agnes gives birth to a girl during the ocean crossing. Mary is very attached to Young James: she takes care of him and panics when he disappears. Young James dies shortly after their landing. Walter writes down an account of the trip in his journal. He meets a rich girl suffering from tuberculosis; her father suggests he follow them and get a job in his business, but Walter refuses.
narrative location
36,983
115,029
[ "The Devil's Partner", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Devil's Partner<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,032
[ "The Savage (1917 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Savage (1917 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. The Savage is a 1917 American silent drama film starring Colleen Moore and Monroe Salisbury that is set in Canada and was directed by Rupert Julian. The film is presumed to be lost.
narrative location
36,984
115,034
[ "Gold (2013 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Gold (2013 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Plot The film depicts a trek of settlers of German and Austrian-Hungarian origin on their way through a sparsely populated part of Canada. The Group travels in 1899 from Ashcroft, British Columbia to Dawson City, following the Klondike Gold Rush.
narrative location
36,985
115,036
[ "Cold Comfort (film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Cold Comfort (film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Cold Comfort is a Canadian psychological thriller film, released in 1989. The film was written by Richard Beattie and Elliot L. Sims based on the play by Jim Garrard, and directed by Vic Sarin.The film premiered in August 1989 at the Montreal World Film Festival.Plot Stephen Paul Gross is a salesman who gets drawn into a sexual psychodrama between Floyd (Maury Chaykin), a sociopathic truck driver, and his daughter Dolores (Margaret Langrick), when the three are caught together in a blizzard. The film's cast also includes Jayne Eastwood, Ted Follows, Richard Fitch and Grant Roll.Production The film was slated to be shot in Edmonton and Winnipeg, but had to be relocated to Ontario after production delays led the arrangements to fall through. Cynthia Preston had also been originally cast in the role of Dolores, but had to drop out after suffering injuries in a car accident, and Langrick was cast to replace her.In 1990, Langrick reprised the role of Dolores in a Vancouver stage production of Garrard's original play.
narrative location
36,986
115,038
[ "Dear Canada", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Dear Canada<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Dear Canada is a series of historical novels marketed at kids first published in 2001 and continuing to the present. The books are published by Scholastic Canada Ltd. They are similar to the Dear America series, with each book written in the form of the diary of a fictional young woman living during an important event in Canadian history. The series covers both familiar and little-known topics such as Home Children, North-West Rebellion, and the 1837 Rebellion.
narrative location
36,987
115,039
[ "Dreamspeaker", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Dreamspeaker<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,040
[ "Excited (film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Excited (film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Excited is a 2009 Canadian romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Vancouver-based director Bruce Sweeney and produced by Catherine Middleton and Bruce Sweeney. It has screened at the Toronto International Film Festival, the Vancouver International Film Festival, the Palm Springs International Film Festival and the Seattle International Film Festival. It was given a theatrical release with Union Pictures. The film collected four Leo Awards including Best Feature length Drama and Best Direction of a feature-length drama.
narrative location
36,988
115,041
[ "Jatt & Juliet", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Jatt & Juliet<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,042
[ "The Grip of the Yukon", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Grip of the Yukon<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. The Grip of the Yukon is a 1928 American silent Western film directed by Ernst Laemmle, the nephew of Universal Pictures founder Carl Laemmle. The film starred Francis X. Bushman and Neil Hamilton, and is based on a story by William MacLeod Raine, "The Yukon Trail, A Tale of the North".Plot An old-time Alaskan miner dies and leaves his fortune and holdings to his daughter in the states. She comes north and is befriended by two old friends of her father. And she needs all the befriending they can provide as a true-blue villain has designs on her holdings and attributes.
narrative location
36,989
115,043
[ "The Royal Mounted Rides Again", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Royal Mounted Rides Again<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,045
[ "Trudeau (film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Trudeau (film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Trudeau is a 2002 television miniseries and biography dramatizing the life of former Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau. It aired on CBC Television on Sunday and Monday evenings and was written by Wayne Grigsby and directed by Jerry Ciccoritti.The miniseries was one of the highest-rated Canadian television programs of the year, resulting in 8 wins and 3 nominations. Two of the wins were from Directors Guild of Canada; one being the DGC Craft Award, as Jerry Ciccoritti won Outstanding Achievement in Direction and Dean Soltys won Outstanding Achievement in Picture Editing and the other being the DGC Team Award. As well, it won several Gemini Awards including Best Actor, Best Writing and Best Direction. Colm Feore also won Monte-Carlo TV Festival's Best Performance by an Actor. "With all its sham, drudgery and broken dreams, Trudeau is a beautiful show – the best Canadian political teleplay since Denys Arcand's Duplessis 25 years ago, and maybe the best ever."The miniseries follows Pierre Trudeau through the major events of his political mandates up to the patriation of the Canadian Constitution. A few of the major characters in the film (notably "Greenbaum" and "Duncan") are fictional, or composite characters. It was filmed in various locations in Canada, but mainly in Halifax, Nova Scotia and at Parliament Hill in Ottawa. Distributed in both official languages English and French, the two episodes first aired on 31 March and 1 April 2002. As background research, writer Wayne Grigsby spoke to numerous people who had known Trudeau, but the Trudeau family did not reply to the requests by the CBC.A prequel, Trudeau II: Maverick in the Making, came out in 2005, examining Trudeau's early life. This $8-million, four-hour CBC production was originally designed as a "double shoot," to be filmed in both French and English versions; however, it ended up being made in English only – even though most of the actors, including lead Stéphane Demers, are Québécois. (Demers inherits the role from Colm Feore, who was tied up playing the villain in The Chronicles of Riddick.)
narrative location
36,990
115,046
[ "The Snow Bride", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Snow Bride<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,048
[ "Strangers on Honeymoon", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Strangers on Honeymoon<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,049
[ "Kazan (1949 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Kazan (1949 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,050
[ "Warm Bodies (film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Warm Bodies (film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,051
[ "Challenge to White Fang", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Challenge to White Fang<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,054
[ "Stuck (2007 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Stuck (2007 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Cast Mena Suvari as Brandi Boski Stephen Rea as Thomas "Tom" Bardo Russell Hornsby as Rashid Rukiya Bernard as Tanya Carolyn Purdy-Gordon as Petersen Lionel Mark Smith as Sam Wayne Robson as Binckley R.D. Reid as Manager John Dunsworth as Cabbie Patrick McKenna as JoeProduction The film marks the first production under the newly reformed Amicus Productions. It was filmed in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada.
narrative location
36,991
115,055
[ "And Hope to Die", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>And Hope to Die<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Plot Blamed for the death of three gypsy children in a plane crash in France, Tony Cardot flees to Canada, pursued by gypsies intent on revenge. In Montreal he witnesses a shootout, takes care of a wounded man who soon dies, but not before giving Tony $15,000 and whispering the enigmatic words: "Toboggan committed suicide." Then Tony is assaulted by two thugs, Mattone and Paul, who can't find the cash on him and take him back to their hideout on an island. There he meets the group leader Charley who threatens to kill Tony if he doesn't reveal where the money is. Nevertheless, he lets Tony stay, and the two men proceed to play mind games with one another. In the meantime, Charley's girlfriend Sugar and Paul's sister Pepper are both vying for Tony's attention. Tony succeeds in convincing the group he is also a gangster, and they enlist him in their plan: to kidnap a crucial witness in a mafia trial. After the partial failure of the kidnapping and the dispersal of the gang, Tony and Charley hole up together in the gangsters hideout, waiting for the police.
narrative location
36,992
115,056
[ "The Country Doctor (1936 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Country Doctor (1936 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Plot The Country Doctor is set in a remote area of Quebec, Canada. The country doctor John Luke (Jean Hersholt) is an unlicensed general practitioner who cares for the residents of a small Canadian timber station taking much of his payment in barter. Having spent years operating from the station and from his own dwelling, and following a particularly bad epidemic of diphtheria in which several children die, the doctor decides to travel to Montreal to speak with the medical Managing Director of the region. The doctor's hope is that the director will try to get the rich corporation who owns the land to pay for a proper hospital. After trying unsuccessfully to make any headway and finding himself stymied by governmental red tape, he crashes a public dinner given by the medical association to argue his point in person. The timber corporation hears of this protest and sends their lawyers to take revenge on the doctor. During the course of the investigation the doctor's lack of a license is quickly discovered and the local police are informed that the doctor has been practicing illegally. The doctor returns to the timber station in low spirits. Before long, Asa Wyatt (John Qualen), one of the workers comes to the doctor's house with his pregnant wife (Aileen Carlyle). She is just about to give birth and the worker begs the doctor to help them despite his lack of a license. The local constabulary become involved and warn the doctor that he could face charges if he delivers the baby, but the doctor finds that he can't simply stand by passively and he starts to help the mother as the police berate him. After delivering the child, the doctor realizes that the birth is actually a multiple birth and the delivery continues until the doctor has delivered five babies. When word gets out, the doctor becomes a national hero, the building of a local hospital is set in motion, and the medical Managing Director in Montreal is congratulated by the Governor-General.
narrative location
36,993
115,057
[ "Renfrew of the Royal Mounted (1937 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Renfrew of the Royal Mounted (1937 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,058
[ "IndyCar Racing", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>IndyCar Racing<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,059
[ "The Dawn Maker", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Dawn Maker<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,060
[ "Canadian Pacific (film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Canadian Pacific (film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Canadian Pacific is a 1949 American historical Western film, directed by Edwin L. Marin and starring Randolph Scott and Jane Wyatt. Filmed in Cinecolor on location in the Canadian Rockies in Banff National Park, Morley Indian Reserve in Alberta, and Yoho National Park in British Columbia, it is a story about the building of the Canadian Pacific Railway.
narrative location
36,994
115,062
[ "Confessions of a Porn Addict", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Confessions of a Porn Addict<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,063
[ "Nomads of the North", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Nomads of the North<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,065
[ "On the Great White Trail", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>On the Great White Trail<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. On the Great White Trail also known as Renfrew on the Great White Trail is a 1938 American Northern starring James Newill as Sgt. Renfrew of the Royal Mounted in the second of the film series. It was produced and directed by Albert Herman.Plot summary Even in the remote fur trading section of Canada, Sergeant Douglas Renfrew finds a lady in distress. Kay Larkin, whose father is a suspect to a crime. Larkin's partner, along with another Mountie, are found murdered: word came down from the remote region of the Pacific Northwest from Dr. Howe, who resides there. But after finding old man Larkin, and arresting him in the name of the Crown, Renfrew hears his story and suspect's Kay's father is innocent of the charges. Pierre, an employee of a trading post up north, is suspect until Dr. Howe's guilt is revealed. Howe committed the murders and attempted to frame Larkin. The motive was theft and greed that resulted in a murder neither party wanted to be involved, then attempted to cover their tracks.
narrative location
36,995
115,067
[ "Perils of the Wilderness", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Perils of the Wilderness<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,068
[ "Ramsbottom Rides Again", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Ramsbottom Rides Again<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Plot Yorkshire pub owner Bill Ramsbottom (Arthur Askey) is finding the introduction of the "telly" has ruined his business at the "Bull & Cow". When he receives a cable from Canada, and learns that his grandfather "Wild Bill" Ramsbottom has left his estate to him, he confers with his family before deciding to set off for the frontier town of Lonesome in Canada to claim his inheritance. When all the family fortune is gathered together, there is not enough money to pay for tickets on a steamship for everyone. Ramsbottom and his mate, Charlie Watson (Glen Melvyn), stow away in big steamer trunks but are discovered by the crew. Made to work their passage, Charlie and Ramsbottom end up as culinary servers on the voyage. When the captain realizes that "Wild Bill" Ramsbottom's grandson is aboard, he allows him to travel as a passenger. Arriving at Lonesome, Ramsbottom learns that part of his bequeathment, is that he is the new proprietor of the saloon, which also comes with the job of deputy sheriff in the lawless town. The feared outlaw Black Jake (Sid James) also claims he owns the saloon, but more importantly, wants to locate a hidden map that points the way to a uranium mine on Indian territory. Ramsbottom and Black Jake have a confrontation at the saloon where the outlaw is arrested, but is later set free. When the map turns up, Charlie and Ramsbottom head off into Indian lands to locate the uranium mine. They run into Indian chief Blue Eagle (Jerry Desmonde), and the local tribe. When Black Jake rounds up his gang, a shootout takes place at the saloon. With the help of townspeople and the RCMP, Ramsbotttom is successful in defeating the outlaws and establishing peace in the town.
narrative location
36,996
115,069
[ "The Little Wild Girl", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Little Wild Girl<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,070
[ "Canada (novel)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Canada (novel)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Canada is a 2012 novel by American author Richard Ford. The novel follows 15-year-old Dell Parsons, who must learn to fend for himself after his parents are arrested for robbing a bank. The book also re-visits Great Falls, Montana, a setting that Ford frequently uses in his work. It was Ford's first "stand alone" novel since Wildlife (1990).Plot After his parents are arrested for robbing a bank, fifteen-year-old Dell Parsons is left to fend for himself. His twin sister Berner has run off, leaving him to a family friend who secrets him away to Saskatchewan, Canada. There Dell is to live with the American Arthur Remlinger, a man with a cool demeanor and a hidden inner violence that threatens Dell's well-being.
narrative location
36,997
115,071
[ "Friends (1988 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Friends (1988 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,073
[ "The Long Dark", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Long Dark<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. The Long Dark is a first-person survival video game developed and published by Hinterland Studios. The player assumes the role of crash-landed bush pilot Will Mackenzie who must survive the frigid Canadian wilderness after a geomagnetic storm. The game received seed financing from the Canada Media Fund, and further funding was secured through a successful Kickstarter campaign in October 2013.An alpha version was released through Steam Early Access in September 2014. The alpha version was later launched on the Xbox One as one of the first two launch titles associated with Microsoft's Game Preview Program in June 2015. Early reviews of the alpha release were generally positive, and the game went on to sell around 750,000 copies by April 2016. It was officially released on all aforementioned platforms on August 1, 2017, as well as for PlayStation 4. In 2017, it was announced that a film adaptation of The Long Dark was in the works. On September 17, 2020, it was announced that the game would be coming to Nintendo Switch later that same day.Development Following completion of his work as director on Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine, Raphael van Lierop left Relic Entertainment to work on projects which he felt were "more personal" and "more representative of [his] values". Van Lierop also left Vancouver, moving his family from the city to the northern part of Vancouver Island. Inspired by these new surroundings, he formed Hinterland and began to work on The Long Dark, a game about surviving the Canadian wilderness. Hinterland wanted to explore a post apocalyptic world from the fringes, away from the urban apocalypse, which "we've all seen a million times" and away from "B-movie cliches like zombies". Van Lierop was also keen to impart a Canadian identity upon the game, having been frustrated with homogenised AAA video games which sacrificed character for mass market appeal, he summed up his approach with, "I'm Canadian. This game is Canadian. Deal with it."When van Lierop announced the Hinterland team in September 2013, members included Alan Lawrance, formerly a lead at Volition, Marianne Krawczyk, writer of the God of War series, and David Chan, BioWare's first audio designer. A year later, they were joined by Ken Rolston, the lead designer of The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind. Hinterland operated as a virtual team, with its members remote workers. Lawrance cites remote work as a crucial factor in his decision to join Hinterland.Hinterland obtained seed funding from the Canada Media Fund, and in September 2013, launched a Kickstarter campaign for The Long Dark to raise C$200,000 and build a community around the game. The campaign was successful, raising C$256,617 upon its completion in October 2013. PayPal contributions following the Kickstarter campaign pushed the final total to over C$275,000 by March 2014. Hinterland announced the game's voice cast during the Kickstarter campaign, allowing The Long Dark to capitalise on the actors' individual fan bases; the cast announced were Mark Meer, Elias Toufexis, Jennifer Hale and David Hayter. Hinterland were mindful of the game's scope, not wanting to expand the team's size and increase risk, and so limited their Kickstarter stretch goals to those that added quality, rather than those that added in-game content.Van Lierop spoke of their studio's approach to early access at the 2015 Game Developers Conference where he warned against allowing the player community to dictate the game's direction. Van Lierop spoke of the differing play styles in the game's audience; though players that preferred a "hardcore survival" experience were in the minority, they were most vocal in the player community. Had Hinterland pandered to those requests, they might have alienated the silent majority of their player community.In April 2016, Van Lierop posted an update about the Story-mode release, explaining that Hinterland had elected to delay the launch of Story mode until it contained 4–6 hours of initial gameplay instead of the originally planned 2 hours. He also declined to set a release date, saying, "You won't get another promise from me about when it will ship, until we are close enough to being done with it that I can say with 100% certainty, and give you a definitive date that I know isn't going to end up with us pushing out an experience we aren't 100% satisfied with". He pointed to the evolution of Sandbox mode as another reason for delay, saying that its popularity had grown to the point that Hinterland decided to bring back regular updates for it, even though it was originally conceived merely as a test-bed for the Story mode. His post also provided a developmental road-map with short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals for additions and improvements.In February 2020, the developers asked Nvidia to remove The Long Dark from GeForce Now, a cloud streaming service, shortly after the service exited beta and went "live". The developers said that their game was improperly placed on the service without any sort of licensing agreement; Nvidia agreed to remove it as a result. The game returned to GeForce Now in May 2020 after Nvidia announced they would switch to an opt-in policy for including games on their platform.In October 2022, Hinterland announced the development of their first paid content expansion named "Tales from the Far Territory", the expansion plans to add additional gameplay systems, regions and Tales, narrative-themed challenges that explore the regions added. Additionally Hinterland plans on adding free content along with each update of the paid expansion. On December 5, 2022, Tales from the Far Territory officially releases. The second part to the expansion pass, released March 31, 2023, added the first Tale named "Signal Void". A new Tale named "Frontier Comforts" was released on June 21, 2023.
narrative location
36,998
115,074
[ "Undercover Men", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Undercover Men<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,075
[ "How to Plan an Orgy in a Small Town", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>How to Plan an Orgy in a Small Town<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,076
[ "Numb (2015 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Numb (2015 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Numb is a 2015 Canadian thriller from director Jason R. Goode, and produced by Jenkinson/Goode Productions
narrative location
36,999
115,077
[ "A Woman's Faith", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>A Woman's Faith<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,078
[ "Almost America", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Almost America<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,079
[ "First Round Down", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>First Round Down<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,080
[ "Red Riders of Canada", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Red Riders of Canada<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,081
[ "Blueprint (film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Blueprint (film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,082
[ "Stateline Motel", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Stateline Motel<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,086
[ "Calendar (1993 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Calendar (1993 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,087
[ "The Savage Innocents", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Savage Innocents<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. The Savage Innocents is a 1960 adventure film directed and co-written by Nicholas Ray. Anthony Quinn and Yoko Tani star, with Lee Montague, Marco Guglielmi, Carlo Giustini, Anthony Chinn, and Michael Chow in supporting roles, alongside Peter O' Toole in an early film role. It was adapted from the novel Top of the World by Swiss writer Hans Rüesch. The film was an international co-production, with British, Italian and French interests involved; in the United States it was released by Paramount Pictures. The film was shot on-location in the Canadian Arctic, with interiors shot in Britain's Pinewood Studios and in Rome's Cinecittà studios. It was entered in the 1960 Cannes Film Festival. The film's themes include Inuit survival in the extreme arctic wilderness, as well as their raw existence and struggle to maintain their lifestyle against encroaching civilization.Plot An Inuk hunter kills a Christian missionary who rejects his traditional offer of food and his wife's company. Pursued by white policemen, the Inuk saves the life of one of them, resulting in a final confrontation in which the surviving cop must decide between his commitment to law enforcement and his gratitude to the Inuk.
narrative location
37,001
115,088
[ "Black Robe", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Black Robe<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,089
[ "Curse of the Fly", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Curse of the Fly<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,092
[ "The Wolf Hunters (1949 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Wolf Hunters (1949 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,095
[ "The Great Barrier (film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Great Barrier (film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. The Great Barrier is a 1937 British historical drama film directed by Milton Rosmer and Geoffrey Barkas and starring Richard Arlen, Lilli Palmer and Antoinette Cellier. The film depicts the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway. It was based on the 1935 novel The Great Divide by Alan Sullivan. It was made at the Lime Grove Studios in Shepherd's Bush. The film's sets were designed by Walter Murton.Cast Richard Arlen as Hickey Lilli Palmer as Lou Antoinette Cellier as Mary Moody Barry MacKay as Steve Roy Emerton as Moody J. Farrell MacDonald as Major Rogers Ben Welden as Joe Jock MacKay as Bates Ernest Sefton as Magistrate Henry Victor as Bulldog Kelly Reginald Barlow as James Hill Arthur Loft as William Van Horne Frank McGlynn Sr. as Sir John MacDonald
narrative location
37,002
115,097
[ "Black Bridge", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Black Bridge<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,098
[ "CART Fury Championship Racing", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>CART Fury Championship Racing<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,099
[ "Dangers of the Canadian Mounted", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Dangers of the Canadian Mounted<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,100
[ "End of the Line (2007 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>End of the Line (2007 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,101
[ "Fathers and Crows", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Fathers and Crows<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,104
[ "Gone Fishin' (video game)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Gone Fishin' (video game)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Gone Fishin' is a fishing video game for DOS released in 1994 by Amtex. The player takes part of a fishing tournament in the Bay of Quinte in Lake Ontario. This includes buying fishing equipment at a store and getting advice from both the storekeeper and an older man at a nearby fishing lodge.
narrative location
37,003
115,107
[ "Gunfighters of the Northwest", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Gunfighters of the Northwest<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Plot White Horse Rebels, under the command of a mystery villain known only as The Leader, attempt to create an independent White Horse Republic in Canada's northwest. Funded by gold from the Marrow Mine, they attack Canadian settlements in the area. The North-West Mounted Police, represented primarily by hero Sgt. Ward and his sidekick Constable Nevin, discover The Leader's real identity. An added complication comes in the form of First Nations, Blackfeet driven into Canada from the United States, who attack both sides and whom the rebels attempt to use as scapegoats for their own attacks.
narrative location
37,004
115,108
[ "Comandamenti per un gangster", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Comandamenti per un gangster<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,109
[ "Hitler Meets Christ", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Hitler Meets Christ<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,110
[ "Iron Road (film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Iron Road (film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Iron Road is a 2009 Canada/China television miniseries written by Barry Pearson and Raymond Storey and directed by David Wu. Starring Sun Li, Luke Macfarlane, Peter O'Toole, Sam Neill, and Charlotte Sullivan, Iron Road chronicles the untold story of Chinese workers who helped to build the Canadian Pacific Railway in the 1880s. The mini-series was filmed in the Kamloops, B.C. area with many local actors.Iron Road is only the second joint venture to be created under a Canada/China co-production treaty established in the 1960s. The first was 1989's Bethune: The Making of a Hero.Production Principal photography was shot in Hengdian World Studios (China) and in British Columbia, Canada. The Canadian shoot locations were filmed in the Kamloops area of the Thompson-Nicola Regional District and Kelowna. Authentic wood trestle bridges built by the Canadian Pacific Railway during the Gold Rush of the early 1900s were used for film locations. Kamloops Heritage Railway's 2141 locomotive was brought in, and a section of actual railway was used, which was discontinued from service during the shoot. The background performers cast as immigrant labourers in the Canadian shoot were mostly Asians from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. An additional performer's fee was offered to those who were willing to shave their heads for an authentic period look. Professional hairstylists were employed to hand costume the traditional Chinese long hair braid.
narrative location
37,005
115,111
[ "Mason of the Mounted", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Mason of the Mounted<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,112
[ "New Waterford Girl", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>New Waterford Girl<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. New Waterford Girl is a 1999 Canadian comedy-drama film directed by Allan Moyle, and written by Tricia Fish. It stars Liane Balaban as Agnes-Marie "Mooney" Pottie, a teenager in New Waterford, Nova Scotia, who dreams of life beyond her small-town home. She is inspired and fascinated when Lou Benzoa (Tara Spencer-Nairn), an idiosyncratic girl from New York City, moves into the house next door. Agnes learns Lou has a talent for boxing, leading to her taking Lou in as "muscle" in an attempt to make some changes around town. The film's cast also includes Mary Walsh, Nicholas Campbell, Cathy Moriarty, Andrew McCarthy, Mark McKinney, Bette MacDonald, Ashley MacIsaac, Krista MacDonald, Cassie MacDonald, Darren Keay and Patrick Joyce.Plot Agnes-Marie "Mooney" Pottie is a 15-year-old girl and black sheep of her family who is sick of her life in the isolated coastal community of New Waterford. She is considered an exceptional student by her depressive, semi-alcoholic English teacher, Cecil Sweeney, who also nurtures an inappropriate crush towards Mooney that is not reciprocated. Based on her talent, Cecil suggests she should attend an arts school in New York City. Mooney manages to get a scholarship at one school, but her religious parents, Francis and Cookie, refuse to let her go. When a family from New York City moves in next door, Mooney quickly becomes friends with the eldest daughter, Lou. Lou is the daughter of a jailed boxer, and though she is of modest stature, she is able to knock men out when they are lying, something the devoutly Catholic townspeople consider as something of a religious miracle. Lou develops a side hustle, knocking out the unfaithful men of the town in exchange for money from their wronged girlfriends. Meanwhile, Mooney concocts a plan to leave town. She begins to openly kiss different boys in town in order to gain a reputation for promiscuity, though she never actually has sex with any of them. Not wanting to be left out, many boys claim they have slept with Mooney. Mooney then tells her parents she is pregnant, which she knows will cause them to send her away where she can then escape and run away to Manhattan. However, the plan backfires as the boys of the town, having wised up to Moonie’s plan, threaten to reveal the truth about never having slept with Mooney. Though Mooney orders Lou to punch them out to show they are liars, they do not fall down when she hits them which shows they are telling the truth. Joey, one of the boys, gives the girls an ultimatum—Lou must face off with New Waterford’s reigning boxing champion in a match, or Mooney’s secret will be made public. Lou ends up winning the match, but Mooney sees Joey outing her to her father anyway. Her father now believes she lied about being promiscuous primarily to cover up the fact that the father of her baby is Cecil. Francis goes to confront Cecil at his trailer, which sits on the edge of a cliff. Cecil, grasping what is going on, claims he is the father and kisses Mooney. Mooney's mother, arriving in time to see the kiss, gets in her car and rams it several times into Cecil's trailer, causing it to topple over the cliff and land on the beach below. Later, Mooney boards a train to Antigonish, Nova Scotia, where she is to spend the rest of her supposed pregnancy. After exchanging goodbyes with her family, Mooney is given a letter by her mother just before leaving. Seeing her tearful family, she announces she wants to stay. Her mother orders her to get back on the train. On the train, Mooney reads the letter which reveals that her mother knows what her plans are and wishes her luck.
narrative location
37,006
115,113
[ "Northwest Trail", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Northwest Trail<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,114
[ "Passage (2008 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Passage (2008 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,115
[ "Perils of the Royal Mounted", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Perils of the Royal Mounted<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,116
[ "Susannah of the Mounties (film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Susannah of the Mounties (film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Susannah of the Mounties is a 1939 American Western film directed by William A. Seiter and starring Shirley Temple, Randolph Scott, and Margaret Lockwood. Based on the 1936 novel Susannah of the Mounties by Muriel Denison, the film is about an orphaned survivor of an Indian attack in the Canadian West who is taken in by a Mountie and his girlfriend. Following additional Indian attacks, the Mountie is saved from the stake by the young girl's intervention with the Indian chief. The plot differs significantly from the book in that it is set twenty years earlier at a much smaller Mounted Police fort and Susannah's parents are dead rather than in India.Plot As the Canadian Pacific Railway makes its way through the western frontier of Canada in the early 1880s, railroad workers and settlers come under frequent attack by Indians who resent the white man's encroachment on their land. One such attack on a wagon train leaves only one survivor, a young girl named Susannah Sheldon who is found by a mounted patrol in the command of Inspector Angus "Monty" Montague. Susannah is taken to the post where she is cared for by Monty and his friend, Pat O'Hannegan. They do their best to help her overcome her ordeal. Some time later, Vicky Standing arrives from Toronto to visit her father, the Superintendent. Monty is immediately enchanted by the beautiful woman. The blossoming romance sparks a rivalry in Susannah and Harlan Chambers, the head of the railroad camp. The Indian attacks resume when renegades steal horses from the railroad camp. One of the friendly Indians, Chief Big Eagle, promises to track down the renegades and deliver them to the camp. As a show of good faith, the Chief leaves his son, Little Chief, at the post. Little Chief teaches Susannah Indian ways. While the two are out riding, they run into a renegade, Wolf Pelt, attempting to sell his stolen horses to Chambers. The two argue and Chambers threatens the Indians with extinction. Wolf Pelt returns to his tribe and uses Chambers' threats to demand that the tribe go to war against the Europeans. That night, Wolf Pelt raids the post to retrieve Little Chief and kidnaps Monty. Soon after, Big Eagle sends a message demanding that the railroad abandon the area or they will kill Monty. Susannah searches for Monty; she approaches the Indian camp, she is taken prisoner. As the tribe prepares to burn Monty at the stake, Susannah escapes the teepee and appeals to Big Chief, accusing Wolf Pelt of inciting Chambers by stealing his horses. Wolf Pelt denies the charges. To determine who is telling the truth, Big Chief uses the stick of truth that will point to the liar. When the stick drops towards Wolf Pelt, Big Chief frees Monty and offers him and Susannah his peace pipe.
narrative location
37,007
115,117
[ "The Ex (1997 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Ex (1997 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,119
[ "The Flaming Forest", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Flaming Forest<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,120
[ "Red Blood of Courage", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Red Blood of Courage<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Plot Sgt. Sullivan of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police goes undercover as a wanted criminal.
narrative location
37,009
115,121
[ "The Romance of the Far Fur Country", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Romance of the Far Fur Country<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. History To commemorate the 250th anniversary of Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) in 1920, founded in 1670 and then an undisputed leader of the international fur trade, the company decided to bookmark and document its 250 years of journey as part of written history, gramophone recording, and as a feature film. To make the promotional feature film, advertising the company's working history and commercial land holdings in Canada's North, HBC hired two cameramen from New York City and sent them on board HBC's ice-breaker. This 'silent' film later became known as The Romance of the Far Fur Country.The film crew sailed from Montreal to Arctic circle. As reported in a BBC article, in the next course of nine months, they captured extraordinary footage never done before. They captured more than 75,000 feet of film equivalent to 8 hours of viewing time. It is reported that the crew filmed the documentary by walking laboriously on land, across the ice, and traveling by dogsled over a frozen river. The crew filmed from canoes on the Abitibi river and had to portage canoes over their shoulders. The film was premiered in Allen theatre at Winnipeg on May 23, 1920. It was later released across western Canada and in London.
narrative location
37,010
115,122
[ "Trail of the Mounties", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Trail of the Mounties<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,123
[ "Tum Bin", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tum Bin<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Production Filming The principal photography started from November 2000, and the film is mostly shot in Calgary, Canada, while the songs were picturised in Mumbai.
narrative location
37,011
115,124
[ "Nanette of the Wilds", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Nanette of the Wilds<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,126
[ "Indian Summer (1993 film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Indian Summer (1993 film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Indian Summer is a 1993 American comedy drama film written and directed by Mike Binder. The movie was filmed at Camp Tamakwa (a summer camp in Algonquin Provincial Park in Ontario, Canada), which Binder had attended for ten summers as a child camper. Indian Summer features an ensemble cast, including Binder's childhood friend, film director Sam Raimi, who has a supporting role in it.
narrative location
37,012
115,128
[ "Toilet (film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Toilet (film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,131
[ "Legend No. 17", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Legend No. 17<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Legend No. 17 (Russian: Легенда №17) is a 2013 Russian biographical sports film directed by Nikolai Lebedev and produced by Trite Studio. The film is based on real events and tells of the rise to fame of the Soviet hockey player Valeri Kharlamov and about the first match of the Summit Series USSR — Canada 1972.The film was awarded with six Golden Eagle awards, including the best Russian film of the year. The filmmakers received the State Prize of the Russian Federation for the year 2013.Plot The picture begins set in 1956 with children's experiences during the Running of the Bulls in Spain where Kharlamov's mother originally was from. Then the action is transferred to Moscow in 1967, where the young hockey player gets acquainted with the famous trainer Anatoly Tarasov, who sends Valeri along with his friend Alexander Gusev to the city of Chebarkul, Chelyabinsk Oblast, where they will play for the local "Zvezda" team. Having overcome the difficulties of adaptation in the lower league team, Valeri displays effective hockey skills and returns to Moscow at the end of the season where Tarasov invites him to join HC CSKA Moscow, but at first Anatoli tests Kharlamov's character and his ability to dedicate his life to hockey. Kharlamov passes all of Tarasov's trials and gradually becomes one of the leading attackers of CSKA, and then the USSR national team. The trainer constructs an attack trio of Mikhailov-Petrov-Kharlamov. At the same time intrigues are waged around Tarasov by the curator of hockey from the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Eduard Balashov, whose son the coach once expelled from the team. Balashov tries to drag Kharlamov to his side, stressing Tarasov's excessive rigidity, but the hockey player refuses to sign any papers against his coach (Kharlamov later tells Tarasov everything but Anatoli responds that he already knew everything). Against the background of the development of Kharlamov's hockey career, the story of his acquaintance and love with Irina Smirnova is shown, who tries to support the hockey player in difficult moments. After the scandalous match between the USSR national team and HC Spartak Moscow, when Tarasov led the team away from the ice in a protest against refereeing, the upset Kharlamov gets into a car accident and seriously injures his leg (in the film this biographical episode of the hockey player was shifted to be four years earlier). After the operation Valeri begins to exercise his leg in order to return to the ice as soon as possible since the first Summit Series in history between the USSR national team and the Canadian professionals is scheduled for 1972. Overcoming his injuries Kharlamov begins to train, and the new coach of the national team Vsevolod Bobrov, appointed instead of Tarasov, includes Valeri in the team that flies to play in Canada. Tarasov comes to escort the team to the airport and says parting words to Kharlamov. The Soviet hockey players arrive in Montreal. The Canadians are confident in the victory of their team and are trying in every possible way to prove this to the USSR: at a press conference a Canadian journalist says that he will eat the evening edition of his newspaper if the Soviet team wins, and on a television show two leaders of the Canadian national team, Phil Esposito and Bobby Clarke, hint that the Soviet team has no chance of victory. In conclusion, before the match a newspaper is slid under the door of Bobrov's room with a caricature depicting the Soviet hockey players as "snotty" pupils who learn to play hockey with the Canadian "teacher". The match begins. The Canadians win the first face-off and in half a minute open the score. At the sixth minute the score is 2:0. But soon the USSR team makes the score even, and in the second period, Kharlamov leads the team ahead 2:3. Valeri stickhandles through several opponents and scores his second goal. After this goal all spectators give a standing ovation to Kharlamov. During the intermission, the Canadian coach tells his players that this is not a match, but a war, and instructed Bobby Clarke to deal with the "Number Seventeen". During the game Bobby Clarke slashes Kharlamov's previously injured knee with a stick. However, Valeri refuses to leave the game despite danger of aggravating his injury and ending his hockey career, and returns to the ice. At the end of the match, Valeri rushes with the puck towards the Canadians' goal, aggravates his injury and falls down, but while sliding in prone position, passes the puck to one of this teammates who scores the seventh goal for the Soviet team. After the match Phil Esposito tells Kharlamov that he is impressed by his game, speed, and the two goals. The USSR squad scores several more goals with Kharlamov's active participation and wins with a crushing score 7:3.
narrative location
37,013
115,132
[ "Dus", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Dus<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,135
[ "Mrs. Mike (film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Mrs. Mike (film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Plot A young Boston woman, Kathy O'Fallon, travels north to visit her Uncle John at his cabin near the Canada–US border. While there she meets Mike Flannigan, a sergeant with the Canadian Royal North-West Mounted Police, and before long they're in love. Kathy marries Mike, who takes her by dogsled to his outpost in the cold, remote north. Life is harsh there, particularly during the winters. A tightly knit community counts on Mike in ways that go far beyond normal police business. But he is away when a pregnant Kathy begins to worry about giving birth in such a primitive environment. Neighbors help deliver Mary, a baby girl, but surviving in the wilderness is extremely difficult, and the child dies during a diphtheria epidemic. Kathy makes up her mind to return to Boston, but realizes that she still loves and can't leave Mike.
narrative location
37,016
115,137
[ "Blue Canadian Rockies", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Blue Canadian Rockies<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,138
[ "Eye of the Beast", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Eye of the Beast<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,139
[ "Cas and Dylan", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Cas and Dylan<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Plot Dr. Cas Pepper is a 61-year-old doctor, a self-proclaimed loner, and terminally ill. Dylan Morgan is a 22-year-old woman, somewhat of a social misfit, and an aspiring writer. She is currently living with her boyfriend Bobby, who is an unstable individual. Cas reluctantly agrees to give Dylan a short lift to her home. Cas accidentally strikes Bobby with his car when he jumps in front of them and points a rifle at them, and, fearing that he may now be a fugitive from the law, drives away with Dylan's encouragement. Cas and Dylan take off on a drive across Canada, he heading to his vacation home on Canada's west coast (where he plans to bury his recently deceased dog and to commit suicide), and she towards an ostensible interview with a major publishing company she has been communicating with. Initially Cas is not thrilled with the prospect of spending the ride with this young talkative kid, but as the adventure progresses, they grow sweetly fond of each other, helping one another resolve the issues they encounter along the way. The epilogue shows a successful, fulfilled Dylan some time after the cross-country trip, with her voice-over telling us about her tremendous respect for him, and that her current happiness is largely a result of following his advice—a happiness not hindered by the fact that he left her his entire estate after his death (as well as his "secret" pasta sauce recipe).
narrative location
37,017
115,140
[ "Offensive Fouls", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Offensive Fouls<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Offensive Fouls is a Canadian play about racism written for young adults, for use in secondary schools. It was written by Jason Long.History and plot The play premiered in 1999 and was initially produced by All Nations Theatre, the organization that commissioned Long to write the play. Hustle n' Bustle Theatre made its debut with the play in 2011. There are only two characters in the play: Joey, a 17-year-old Irish-Canadian basketball player; and Christine, his Chinese-Canadian girlfriend. The plot follows Joey as he is benched from his basketball team after Christine suspects that he was involved in a racially motivated corner-store vandalism incident. Offensive Fouls is intended for an adolescent audience.Reception The play was written for performances in secondary schools, and has been performed throughout Alberta. Performances have also been held in Niagara Falls, Ontario, and Neptune Theatre in Halifax, Nova Scotia, as well as in Winnipeg. It was performed in Edmonton, Alberta as recently as 2011.The dialogue has been praised for presenting "teenagers who really sound like teenagers.”The play was nominated for a Dora Mavor Moore Award.One reviewer remarked, "It’s not often the public gets a chance to see “what they’re teaching the kids these days,” so when you do, it behooves us to pay attention because the target audience will be calling the shots before too long."Offensive Fouls was published in a collection of Canadian plays for young adults titled Things That Go Bump in 2009.
narrative location
37,018
115,141
[ "Jordan Is a Hard Road", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Jordan Is a Hard Road<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. Jordan Is a Hard Road is a 1915 American silent drama film directed by Allan Dwan and starring Dorothy Gish, Frank Campeau and Sarah Truax. The production was under the overall supervision of D. W. Griffith, and was the first film made by Dwan for Griffith's company Fine Arts. The evangelist Billy Sunday acted as a consultant. The film is set in Canada, with location shooting taking place for two weeks around Big Bear Lake in the San Bernardino Mountains. No prints are known to exist, and is therefore believed to be a lost film.
narrative location
37,019
115,142
[ "Lovers Courageous", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Lovers Courageous<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,143
[ "October Gale (film)", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>October Gale (film)<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. October Gale is a Canadian thriller film written and directed by Ruba Nadda. The film premiered at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival in the Special Presentations section of the festival. It was acquired by IFC Films and received a release in March 2015. The film stars Patricia Clarkson, Scott Speedman, and Tim Roth. Clarkson had previously worked with Nadda on Cairo Time.
narrative location
37,020
115,144
[ "In Line of Duty", "narrative location", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>In Line of Duty<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
115,145