Some have called the documentary Canada’s national art form. If it is, the foundations of that art were laid by the National Film Board of Canada in the first six years of its existence, 1939–45, under the inspired vision and watchful eye of John Grierson, its first Commissioner. Released in the year of the NFB’s 75th birthday, Shameless Propaganda is filmmaker Robert Lower’s take on the greatest and most compelling propaganda effort in our history. Lower has watched the films produced by the NFB up until 1945—all 500 of them—and distilled the essence of their message to Canadians. Using only …
Access to media—and therefore more viewpoints—was limited during the war years. Is it harder or easier to disseminate propaganda in a social media era? Ask students to create a “This Is My Canada” using film or other media. What would they include and why? How has the rise of small cameras, particularly on phones, changed what is documented and shown in the news and other media (for example, people filming demonstrations and altercations)?