Nettie Wild

Nettie Wild Trailers

Haida Modern TrailerCapturing Reality TrailerDistant Islands Trailer

Nettie Wild is a Canadian filmmaker with a focus on documentaries that highlight marginalized groups and discrimination that these groups face, including people in Canada and around the world. She has worked throughout her professional career as an actor, director, producer, and cameraperson.

Most Popular Nettie Wild Trailers

Total trailers found: 17

A Place Called Chiapas Trailer (1998)

20 February 1998

In 1994, the Zapatista National Liberation Army, made up of impoverished Mayan Indians from the state of Chiapas, took over five towns and 500 ranches in southern Mexico.

Roundup Trailer (2020)

16 November 2020

Watch 4,000 cattle return from summer grazing to 20 families who share a communal pasture and corral.

Haida Modern Trailer (2019)

01 October 2019

In the 50 years since he carved his first totem pole, Robert Davidson has come to be regarded as one of the world’s foremost modern artists.

Distant Islands Trailer (1981)

01 January 1981

This short animation uses appliqué and embroidered tapestries to recall a young girl's happy summers spent sailing with her family off the coast of British Columbia.

Uninterrupted Trailer (2012)

26 September 2012

There is a savage beauty and strange hope that comes from witnessing the surge of a massive migration.

Dream Job Trailer (2019)

15 July 2019

Katie is tired of working behind a desk. She ventures out for a day in the life, with mountain professionals to find her calling in the ski industry.

KONELĪNE: our land beautiful Trailer (2016)

29 April 2016

Set deep in the traditional territory of Tahltan First Nation, Northern British Columbia’s Red Chris gold and copper mine is the backdrop to a lyrical tapestry of landscapes and diverse personal stories from the land.

Capturing Reality Trailer (2008)

01 November 2008

From cinema-verite; pioneers Albert Maysles and Joan Churchill to maverick movie makers like Errol Morris, Werner Herzog and Nick Broomfield, the world's best documentarians reflect upon the unique power of their genre.

First We Eat Trailer (2020)

28 May 2020

Putting food security to the test in Yukon, the filmmaker bans all store-bought groceries from her house in a year-long adventure in farming, fishing and foraging complicated by three skeptical teenagers, no caffeine and -40° temperatures.

Fix: The Story of an Addicted City Trailer (2002)

10 September 2002

Dean Wilson may be Canada’s most powerful junkie. He shoots heroin in Vancouver’s downtown Eastside and strategizes with federal health policy advisors.

Bevel Up Trailer (2015)

01 January 2015

Bevel Up is an educational film designed to give students and instructors access to the experience of health care practitioners who work with the drug-using population of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside.

Fairy Creek Trailer (2025)

19 February 2025

In Fairy Creek, director Jen Muranetz documents the largest act of civil disobedience in Canadian history, creating a searing portrait of contemporary environmental activism, bearing witness to the lengths activists are willing to take to protect British Columbia’s last old growth forests.

Blockade Trailer (1993)

13 September 1993

"Blockade" takes place in the mountains and valleys of northern British Columbia, at the heart of the boldest aboriginal land claims case to challenge the white history of Canada.

All The Time In The World Trailer (2015)

17 July 2015

A documentary that chronicles life's natural unfolding when a family tries to live by the seasons instead of by the clock.

A Rustling of Leaves: Inside the Philippine Revolution Trailer (1988)

13 October 1988

A chronicle of the three points of a political triangle — the legal left, the illegal (armed) revolution, and the enemy which threatens them both: the armed reactionary right.

Deepa Mehta, in Profile Trailer (2012)

01 January 2012

A portrait and tribute to Canadian filmmaker Deepa Mehta.

GO FISH Trailer (2023)

23 September 2023

GO FISH takes an abstract dive into the beauty and chaos of the annual Pacific herring migration, when millions of herring return to the Salish Sea to spawn.