
1910: The Uncovering
For many years the only transportation link across Canada was one railway line. This tenuous, nation-building ribbon of steel was built through high, snowy, and unpredictable mountains. The tragic avalanche that occurred at the Rogers Pass summit in March of 1910 remains Canada's deadliest. 58 railway workers, majority Japanese died while attempting to clear a snow slide from the tracks when another larger avalanche struck from the other side in the middle of the dark night. This documentary project also delves into the lives of two unlikely friends today, a downtown Vancouver businessman, and a Japanese-born ski guide brought together by their need for purpose, healing, and a shared passion for researching the mysteries and injustices of this event. During production, the team was surprised with a visit by a 1910 victim’s great grandson from Tokyo.
You may like

Knox Mine Disaster

Who We Are: A Chronicle of Racism in America

The Truth lies in Rostock

Beard, Hair & Stache

Inside Chernobyl with Ben Fogle

AS AN EARTHQUAKE

Race War

Autodeclarado

The Hindenburg

Africville: Can't Stop Now

Un racisme à peine voilé

Killing the Indian in the Child

The Ballad of Ginger Goodwin

Gentleman Bandit

The Blinding of Isaac Woodard

Black Ice

Open Secret

The Venerable W.

Yellow Fever

In the Realms of the Unreal

Maternal Instinct

Voyeur

Sherman's March

180° South