John Walker

John Walker
Total Credits at Criticker: 2 (Actor), 11 (Director), 4 (Writer)
Find more information about John Walker at The Internet Movie Database
Titles you haven't rated - Actor (2) | Director (11) | Writer (4)
G.I. Joe: The Revenge of Cobra
The GI Joe team must face Cobra's latest plot to conquer the world using a device that can control the weather. (imdb)
Strand, Under the Dark Cloth
John Walker's film is a documentary that is "beautifully crafted, thoroughly researched and intimately recounted" with generous amounts of Strand's most famous photographs, clips from his films and collaborators. (mubi.com)
Chambers: Tracks & Gestures
A biography of the Canadian painter Jack Chambers called Chambers.
A Winter Tan
A film based on the letters of American memoirist and feminist writer Maryse Holder, published in 1979 as the book Give Sorrow Words - Maryse Holder's Letters from Mexico.
Distress Signals
America's number 2 export is entertainment. While more audiences worldwide marvel at Dallas' Southfork ranch, regional film and television producers are ignored in their own backyards. DISTRESS SIGNALS divulges much about global television and the workings of the market for it. It reveals plenty about attitudes and inequalities in different areas, and provides vivid examples of the use and misuse of the medium - as a preserver of culture, as a forum for sharing ideas, or as a brain deadener. (icarusfilms.com)
A Drummer\
A rare and unique assembly of some of the greatest drummers in the world. Explosive talent, passion, humour and irresistible personality come together in a magical setting when seven diverse drummers create a profound and unforgettable experience. (John Walker Productions)
Quebec My Country Mon Pays
Quebec My Country Mon Pays charts the impact of Quebec's Quiet Revolution in the 1960s. This social justice movement unleashed dramatic cultural and political changes that led to the separatist movement, the FLQ crisis and, ultimately, the exodus of more than 500,000 English-speaking Quebecers. Montreal-born filmmaker John Walker reveals his own complicated relationship with the province in a film brimming with love and longing. Walker's roots in Quebec go back 250 years.
Assholes: A Theory
Inspired by the NYT bestselling book, this lively philosophical investigation into the rise of asshole behaviour across the world asks: What does it mean to be an asshole, and more importantly, how do we stop their proliferation?