Peter Katadotis

参加作品

The Company of Strangers
Executive Producer
A busload of women become stranded in an isolated part of the Canadian countryside. As they await rescue, they reflect on their lives through a mostly ad-libbed script.
Life on Ice
Executive Producer
This documentary film focuses on the animal life that survives in this harsh arctic climates at the edge of the ice - from the simple algae to narwhals, polar bears, sea birds, seals, whales and walruses.
Edge of Ice
Executive Producer
This feature documentary highlights the nature of Arctic sea ice, and its crucial importance to life in the Far North. Underwater photography presents rare views of some of the most spectacular wildlife, with micro- and macro-photography enhancing the world within the individual ice crystals. Footage from Inuit hunting camps at the floe’s edge illuminate the relationship between the Arctic people and their intricate ecosystem.
Canada Vignettes: Arctic Seascape
Executive Producer
A vignette exploring the depths of the Arctic Ocean.
Canada Vignettes: Under the Pole
Producer
A team of divers to the Arctic Ocean places a Canadian flag at the North Pole.
Paper Wheat
Executive Producer
This film, based on the play of the same name, portrays the harsh lives of early Saskatchewan settlers and the foundation of the co-op movement on the Prairies.
The Mystery of Bay Bulls
Executive Producer
A film on the "SAPPHIRE", the oldest identified wreck in Canadian waters. Parks Canada's underwater archaeology team is responsible for the excavation of the three-hundred-year-old frigate.
Canada Vignettes: Faces
Executive Producer
Animated images showing the variety of people who live in Canada.
Cree Way
Producer
This short documentary examines an innovative educational program developed by John and Gerti Murdoch to teach Cree children their language via Cree folklore, photographs, artifacts, and books that were written and printed in the community. Made as part of the NFB’s groundbreaking Challenge for Change series, Cree Way shows that local control of the education curriculum has a place in Indigenous communities.