Bob Kotyk

Bob Kotyk Trailers

The Border at Tolstoi Trailer

Most Popular Bob Kotyk Trailers

Total trailers found: 9

Bring Me the Head of Tim Horton Trailer (2015)

14 September 2015

Guided by the spirit of “The Cuadecuc Manifesto” (coined by co-director Evan Johnson and inspired by Pere Portabella’s 1970 experimental cult documentary, Cuadecuc, vampir), Bring Me the Head of Tim Horton is a strange, stirring behind-the-scenes look at Paul Gross’s new feature, Hyena Road.

The Forbidden Room Trailer (2015)

07 October 2015

A submarine crew, a feared pack of forest bandits, a famous surgeon, and a battalion of child soldiers all get more than they bargained for as they wend their way toward progressive ideas on life and love.

Seances Trailer (2016)

28 April 2016

Seances, co-created with the National Film Board of Canada, presents a wholly new way of experiencing film narrative.

Friend of the Drifting Light Trailer (2024)

23 December 2024

A nameless narrator, new to Toronto, wanders the streets and reflects on the history and reality of the city, while wrestling with the demons of the past.

Spirit Workers Union Trailer (2017)

01 January 2017

A short film by the co-writer of The Forbidden Room, Spirit Workers Union features a cast made up of numerous Winnipeg rail workers playing a group of ghosts who decide to form a union.

The Border at Tolstoi Trailer (2025)

07 November 2025

A border guard at the US-Canada crossing of Tolstoi, Manitoba falls victim to the effects of a strange weapon that separates her mind from her body.

East of Asessippi Trailer (2025)

21 December 2025

At a subway station in Toronto, two people meet and make a connection.

The Plains of Abraham Trailer (2017)

01 January 2017

A living portrait of the filmmaker's grandparents visiting the Plains of Abraham, the historic battleground where the English defeated the French to claim Canada for the British Empire.

I'll Be Trailer (2022)

01 January 2022

A modern-day silent film, a city symphony and a surreal odyssey into the numbing world of work, Bob Kotyk's I'll Be reflects life as it's lived today.