The 22nd Canadian Film Awards were held on October 3, 1970 to honour achievements in Canadian film.[1] The ceremony was hosted by broadcaster
Bill Walker.
With the goal of broadening public awareness of the awards, the organizers moved the ceremony back into a theatre, with a section reserved for the general public. They also initiated the enormously popular Film Award Week which allowed the public to join the international jury in screening the nominated films. After reviewing 125 entries, the judges presented the international jury with 65 nominees.
Cinepix Film Properties withdrew the films Love in a Four Letter World and Here and Now (L'Initiation) after an article in Time implied that the jury was unsympathetic to the films' sexual content.[2]Jean Pierre Lefebvre threatened to withdraw the film Q-Bec My Love if the
Ontario Censor Board did not withdraw its demand for the film's explicit sexuality to be edited; provincial cabinet minister
James Auld intervened to dissuade the board from insisting on the cuts.[3]
^Maria Topalovich, And the Genie Goes To...: Celebrating 50 Years of the Canadian Film Awards.
Stoddart Publishing, 2000.
ISBN0-7737-3238-1. pp. 89-91.
Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television Note: Awards by year articles are listed here by the year of eligibility for nomination; due to variable scheduling of the ceremonies, this is not always the same year in which the awards were presented.
The 22nd Canadian Film Awards were held on October 3, 1970 to honour achievements in Canadian film.[1] The ceremony was hosted by broadcaster
Bill Walker.
With the goal of broadening public awareness of the awards, the organizers moved the ceremony back into a theatre, with a section reserved for the general public. They also initiated the enormously popular Film Award Week which allowed the public to join the international jury in screening the nominated films. After reviewing 125 entries, the judges presented the international jury with 65 nominees.
Cinepix Film Properties withdrew the films Love in a Four Letter World and Here and Now (L'Initiation) after an article in Time implied that the jury was unsympathetic to the films' sexual content.[2]Jean Pierre Lefebvre threatened to withdraw the film Q-Bec My Love if the
Ontario Censor Board did not withdraw its demand for the film's explicit sexuality to be edited; provincial cabinet minister
James Auld intervened to dissuade the board from insisting on the cuts.[3]
^Maria Topalovich, And the Genie Goes To...: Celebrating 50 Years of the Canadian Film Awards.
Stoddart Publishing, 2000.
ISBN0-7737-3238-1. pp. 89-91.
Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television Note: Awards by year articles are listed here by the year of eligibility for nomination; due to variable scheduling of the ceremonies, this is not always the same year in which the awards were presented.