Jump to page content
Small text Medium text Large text Terms and Concepts Site map Adjust text size Text and printable version Home
See Everything, Hear Everything
Watch films, excerpts and view archival artefacts—all chosen by
NFB experts—plus much more!
Film title
 
Close
Close
Excerpt (2:33)
An Ecology of Hope
2001, production : Fernand Dansereau
Pierre Dansereau, a leading Canadian environmentalist and...
View »»
Close
Excerpt (1:11)
An Ecology of Hope
2001, production : Fernand Dansereau
Environmental action can take many forms - public and...
View »»
Close
Excerpt (2:57)
The Man Who Talks with Wolves
2001, production : Carlos Ferrand
People have had a long and complex relationship with...
View »»
Close
Excerpt (2:01)
René Dumont: Global Ecologist
2001, production : Richard D. Lavoie
French agronomist René Dumont was an important early...
View »»
Close
Excerpt (2:32)
René Dumont: Global Ecologist
2001, production : Richard D. Lavoie
The French agronomist René Dumont helped put...
View »»
Close
Excerpt (2:16)
Something in the Air
2001, production : Sylvie Dauphinais
Pesticides help increase food production, particularly in a...
View »»
Close
Excerpt (2:27)
Something in the Air
2001, production : Sylvie Dauphinais
Many PEI farms that once grew a range of crops are now...
View »»
Close
Excerpt (2:51)
Worst Case Scenario
2001, production : Glynis Whiting
Shell Canada wants to drill for sour gas near Rocky Mountain...
View »»
The Man Who Talks with Wolves
 

Help

 

Internet connection

Each film on this site is available for viewing at low speed or high speed.

  • Low speed: recommended if your Internet connection uses a dial-up modem (56 kbps or slower). Low-speed viewing results in lower quality image and sound.
  • High speed: recommended if you have high-speed Internet (DSL, cable modem) or are connected to an institutional network. Viewing in high-speed mode may cause occasional jerky images and sound interruptions if the speed of your connection is not fast enough.

If you're not sure which speed to use for viewing the films, try high speed first. If the results are not satisfactory, switch to low speed.

 

Format

Films can be available for viewing in either Macromedia Flash or QuickTime. Image and sound quality are similar for all these formats.

  • Flash: lets you view the film directly in the Web page without launching an external application. Requires the Flash plug-in (download for free at Macromedia Flash Player).
  • QuickTime (alternative format): requires QuickTime, version 7 or more recent (download for free at QuickTime).
 

Closed captions (CC)

Translation of the audio portion of a film into subtitles, for example, dialogue, narration, sound effects, etc. These captions let hearing-impaired viewers read what they cannot hear. Closed captions are available for a few films. To access them, you must select QuickTime (under Format) and With closed captions (under Accessibility).

 

Described video (DV)

A narrated description of a film's key visual elements to enable the vision-impaired to form a mental picture of what is happening on screen. Described video is available for a few films. To access them, you must select QuickTime (under Format) and With described video (under Accessibility).

Excerpt  (2:57) 2001, production : Carlos Ferrand
The film
People have had a long and complex relationship with animals. We hunt them, raise them as livestock, and keep them as pets . We use them for food, transport and recreation. Michel Pageau, a former hunter and trapper who now runs a shelter for injured wildlife , discusses his interaction with the leader of a wolf pack.

More info on this film in NFB catalogue »»


In the wilderness of northern Quebec, Michel and Louise Pageau devote their lives to caring for injured wild animals and returning them to their natural habitat. Some animals simply cannot make it in the wild any more, so the Pageaus opened a shelter - the Pageau Refuge - for animals that cannot be released.

Michel Pageau has been interested in animals since childhood. A former trapper and hunter, he has a gift for making contact with wild creatures. Pageau feels a particular connection with wolves - and for several years he has maintained a friendship with a number of them, based on mutual trust. Their level of communication is astonishing. When Michel calls, the wolves respond. At one point, Michel is distressed because their rapport seems to have broken down. Ché-Cché, the head of the pack, will not let him approach. Can Michel rebuild their relationship?

With stunning images and poetic narration, The Man Who Talks with Wolves takes us into a mysterious world where the line between human and beast becomes blurred. Some subtitles.