Canadian film and television director
Jordan Canning
Born Occupation Film director Years active 2005 - Present
Jordan Canning is a Canadian director for film and television. She is known for her independent feature films We Were Wolves (2014) and Suck It Up (2017), as well as her work directing on television series Baroness Von Sketch Show , Burden of Truth and Schitt's Creek .
Early life
She was born in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador . She attended Concordia University in Montreal.
Career
Canning's films have won a number of awards, including two Golden Sheaf Awards ,[ 1] [ 2] three awards at the NSI Online Short Film Festival ,[ 3] and top prize at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival RBC Emerging Filmmaker Competition.[ 4] [ 5] She directed all twenty-three episodes of the IPF-supported web series Space Riders: Division Earth for CTV . The show won the 2014 Canadian Screen Award for Best Digital Series and four Canadian Comedy Awards , including Best Director.
Canning's 2014 feature film We Were Wolves made its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival [ 6] and is distributed by Unobstructed View.[ 7] We Were Wolves stars Peter Mooney and Steve Cochrane. Canning's debut feature was also awarded the Best Feature Prize from the Atlantic Film Festival .[ 8]
In 2015, Canning was awarded the Women In the Director's Chair Feature Film Award[ 9] for her second feature film, Suck It Up (2017), which premiered at the 2017 Slamdance Film Festival and is distributed by Level Film. Suck it Up stars Grace Glowicki and Erin Carter, and won Best Feature Film at the 2017 B3 Frankfurt Biennale,[ 10] and Canning was nominated for the Directors Guild of Canada 's DGC Discovery Award .[ 11]
In 2016, Canning made a foray into television, directing on Saving Hope and This Hour Has 22 Minutes , where she became the first female director on the show. The following year, she directed episodes of the series The Detail (CTV ), Burden of Truth (CBC /The CW ), and Baroness Von Sketch Show (CBC /IFC ).[ 12] In 2018, she directed on Schitt's Creek , Little Dog (CBC ) and season four of Baroness Von Sketch Show .
Canning was nominated for two 2020 Canadian Screen Awards: one for Best Direction, Comedy (Schitt's Creek , "Meet The Parents" )[ 13] and one for Best Direction, Variety or Sketch Comedy (Baroness Von Sketch Show , "Humanity is in An Awkward Stage" - with co-director Aleysa Young).[ 14]
In 2023. Canning was recognized for her direction of the Star Trek: Strange New Worlds episode "Charades" , which was listed as one of the ten Best TV Episodes of 2023 by Rolling Stone .[ 15] Canning's directorial work on "Charades" also garnered her recognition from Indiewire , which ranked the episode #22 on their list of the 25 best TV episodes of 2023,[ 16] and Vanity Fair , which also listed the episode as one of the best of 2023.[ 17]
Canning also directed a number of music videos, including:
She is a 2010 graduate of the Director's Lab at the Canadian Film Centre and an alumnus of TIFF Pitch This! and Talent Lab.
Filmography
Film
Year
Title
Role
Genre
Notes
2005
Pillowtalk
Writer, director
Short Film
2006
Thick & Thin
Writer, director
Short Film
2007
Here On In
Writer, director
Short Film
2008
The House Series - Bedroom, Kitchen, Bathroom
Director
Short Film Trilogy
2009
Countdown
Writer, director
Short Film
National Screen Institute Drama Prize
2010
Best Served
Director
Short Film
2010
Not Over Easy
Director, Co-Writer
Short Animation
NSI Short Film Festival Awards
2011
Oliver Bump's Birthday [ 18]
Director
Short Film
Canadian Film Centre Short Dramatic Film; Yorkton Film Festival Golden Sheaf Award - Short Subject
2012
Seconds [ 19]
Writer, director
Short Film
TIFF RBC Emerging Filmmakers Award[ 20]
2012
The Tunnel
Director
Short Film
2014
We Were Wolves
Director, Co-Writer
Feature Film
2014 Toronto International Film Festival
2015
Space Riders: Division Earth
Director
Web Series
Canadian Screen Award - Best Digital Series
2017
Suck It Up
Director
Feature Film
WIDC Feature Film Award[ 21]
2017
Ordinary Days
Co-Director
Feature Film
Canadian Film Festival - Best Director
2020
4 North A
Co-director, writer
Animated short
Television
References
^ "2012 Golden Sheaf Award Winners" Archived 2013-04-11 at the Wayback Machine . Yorkton Film Festival
^ "2010 Golden Sheaf Award Winners" Archived 2013-04-11 at the Wayback Machine . Yorkton Film Festival
^ "Jordan Canning's Not Over Easy wins all three NSI Online Short Film Fest awards" . National Screen Institute , September 13, 2012
^ "RBC Emerging Filmmakers Competition Winners 2012" Archived 2013-04-04 at the Wayback Machine .
^ "'Salty and sweet' pays off for Jordan Canning" The Telegram , Tara Bradbury September 06, 2012.
^ Vlessing, Etan (2014-08-06). "Toronto: Film Festival Unveils Canadian Lineup" . The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved 2024-01-30 .
^ "Jordan Canning's We Were Wolves gets distribution" . Playback Online , October 1, 2014 by Etan Vlessing
^ Etan Vlessing (October 1, 2014). "Jordan Canning's We Were Wolves gets distribution" . Playback . Retrieved 2024-01-30 .
^ "Jordan Canning Wins $120,000 Prize: WIDC Feature Film Award Announced" . WIDC, March 2, 2015 by Carol Whiteman
^ "B3 BEN AWARD 2017: Congratulations to the winner!" . B3 Biennale . 2017-06-12. Archived from the original on 2017-12-29. Retrieved 2017-12-28 .
^ Barry Hertz, "Directors Guild of Canada reveals long list for Discovery Award" . The Globe and Mail , September 5, 2017.
^ "Newfoundland filmmaker becomes first female 22 Minutes director" . CBC News . Retrieved 2016-12-20 .
^ "Jordan Canning" . 18 February 2020.
^ "Jordan Canning, Aleysa Young" . 18 February 2020.
^ Sepinwall, Alan (2023-12-24). "The 10 Best TV Episodes of 2023" . Rolling Stone . Retrieved 2024-01-30 .
^ Steve Greene; Ben Travers; Erin Strecker (2023-11-29). "The 25 Best TV Episodes of 2023" . IndieWire . Retrieved 2024-01-30 .
^ "The Best TV Shows of 2023" . Vanity Fair . 2023-07-10. Retrieved 2024-01-30 .
^ " Worldwide Short Film Festival 2012" . Now Toronto by Norman Wilner June 7, 2012
^ "Jordan Canning comes back for seconds" . The Scope .
^ "RBC and TIFF Announce Winners of the 2012 RBC Emerging Filmmakers Competition - RBC" . www.rbc.com . Retrieved 2016-08-23 .
^ "Jordan Canning Wins $120,000 Prize: WIDC Feature Film Award Announced" . Retrieved 2016-08-23 .
External links