Rain, Drizzle, and Fog

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St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, is North America's most easterly landfall. For half a millennium, its perfect harbour has provided a safe refuge in the middle of the treacherous North Atlantic. For 300 years of its history it was an actual crime to try and settle--Newfoundland was the private preserve of British fishing merchants. But people stayed, despite the colonial masters, despite the lack of law and order, despite hellish weather and raging seas. And the city grew--lurching through centuries of crisis, disaster, privation. For filmmaker Rosemary House, "This is still a hard rock land, a dirty old town at the back of beyond. And yet the St. John's townie is so proud, you'd swear we lived in Paris." In this documentary, she explores her city with the help of six locals, Mary Walsh, Andy Jones, Anita Best, Brian Hennessey, Ed Riche, Des Walsh, writers and performers all. (Source: National Film Board)

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01-01-1998

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49 min

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English

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Director
Rosemary House

Rosemary House

In 1990, St. John’s, Newfoundland-based director Rosemary House made the award-winning short When Women Are Crazy. Since then she’s directed over 20 films, including the feature comedy Violet (2001) starring Mary Walsh and Peter MacNeill, and NFB docs Rain, Drizzle and Fog (1998) and Salvation (2002), which was nominated for the Donald Brittain Award. Her other films include Bloomsday Cabaret (2004), nominated for a Best Direction Gemini, Christopher House: Ahead of the Curve (2007), and Hold Fast (dir. Justin Simms).
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