Editor's Notes
The view from here
Veria TV brings health programs to MIP
Endemol announces MIP slate
Off the Fence makes inroads with travel
NHNZ gets ahead in CG
NBC networks debut in Thailand
RDF Rights' first US/Canada simulcast
Britney Spears special launches at MIP
More celebs in rehab for RDF Rights
Portfolio announces pre-MIP deals
September secures rights to big wedding show
Vanity Fair lists best of documentary films
Hulu offers Crawford as first feature
Obama's camp to unveil doc
Wildlife narration Newman's last credit
Britain could face heat for Supernanny
Telling someone else's story ain't easy
Infamous 'Treeman' losing growths
Nat Geo's profile of stress
update: BskyB ordered to cut back ITV stake
Documentary infiltrates films at New York Film FestivalOur take on current and past film and TV projects
Industry experts offer their take
| by: | Jun 1, 2006 |
Everybody in the broadcast industry (and their grandmother) claims to be giving factual a big push, but few can actually prove it. French pay channel Canal+ is an exception, thanks in large part to its head of docs, Christine Cauquelin. She wasn't blowing smoke two years ago when she told realscreen that the satcaster would be pushing factual as one of its key offerings.
Since then, two weekly slots dedicated to non-fiction - 'Sunday Escape' covers natural history and 'Monday Investigation' covers, you guessed it, investigation - have been created, with nearly 100 hours of programs broadcast each year. Plus, Cauquelin airs films that "explore new ways of telling stories" in primetime several times a year. Sounds like she could be describing a little film called March of the Penguins, which Canal+ pre-bought.
Known for taking risks on young filmmakers, Cauquelin did so with Penguins, trusting first-time feature director Luc Jacquet with the project. (She wasn't named during the Oscar acceptance speech for the film, but one of the film's producers thanked her on the Academy's website.) Her keen eye for talent obviously paid off, and is sure to keep Canal+'s roughly five million subscribers tuning in.
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