Smoluk made his debut feature film,
Horsethieves which was completed on a shoestring budget and was awarded the Audience Choice Award at the 2005 Winnipeg International Film Festival. Smoluk was awarded an
Investors Group scholarship for leadership studies at
The Banff Centre, and received the Future Leaders of Manitoba award for the Arts. Smoluk was the youngest filmmaker ever selected to the
National Screen Institute's Features First Program.
Super Channel, Canada's only national English pay television network, premiered
Foodland in October 2011. The network profiled the film in the Super Channel Gems selections.
Foodland premiered on the
IFC in March 2014. Smoluk was awarded selection by an international jury to attend the eQuinoxe Europe screenwriting development program in Lindau, Germany in October 2016. In 2019, Film Training Manitoba (FTM) appointed Smoluk as the
managing director and in this new role, he was made responsible for all operations, financial and training activities at the Winnipeg-headquartered organization. At the time of his appointment, he was the youngest senior executive in the province of Manitoba's Department of Economic Development's Sector Council Program. He led FTM's first rebranding of its logo and colors in twenty years, as well as growth from approximately 100 to 200 participants annually to 1,400 individuals undertaking FTM's training programs. In 2020, Smoluk and the National Screen Institute (NSI)'s CEO Joy Loewen launched a joint partnership between NSI and FTM to bring a combination of educational programming including distance learning, in-class training, career consulting and outreach to
Indigenous creators and Manitoba's northern communities. Smoluk delivered the 2020 commencement addresses at two of his alma maters, McMaster University and Red River College. Smoluk spoke publicly about the need for more filmmakers in Manitoba to access financing but noted, "It's always a very competitive industry in terms of financing. That's always a challenge, but we have some companies that have been doing so well with attracting productions and working collaboratively with the community." In the fall of 2021, Smoluk announced the creation of the Summit for Women in Film Trades (SWIFT), which was the first major conference to take place at Red River College Polytechnic's new Innovation Centre in January 2022. The conference's goal— the first in Canada to focus on film trades — was to encourage more women to join the film industry while providing training and networking opportunities for current female film professionals. "It does have potential economic challenges for industry because when you want to carry out large-scale film productions, there's a cost to bring people from out of province to fill those labour voids," said Smoluk. "If you can improve on (the percentage of female staff), you're going to do a lot as an organization to bring more people into the industry and deal with that." After the success of the first sold-out SWIFT conference in 2022, FTM expanded and rebranded the event to Canada's Supporting Women in Film Trades (SWIFT) 2023 Conference. Speaking of the merits of SWIFT, Smoluk stated, "You want the most talented capable workers. And if you're not attracting underrepresented workers, you're not growing your industry." With the delivery of a major national event, former
Governor General of Canada Michaëlle Jean was announced as the keynote speaker of SWIFT 2023. At a SWIFT press conference at Frank Digital's Studio, Smoluk praised Jean's accomplishments and stated, "As a woman who made strides in male-dominated fields including politics, journalism, and filmmaking, Jean was a natural choice to headline the conference." Smoluk also announced the selection of Manitoba crown attorney Chantal Boutin and Winnipeg's first women mayor
Susan Thompson as distinguished SWIFT speakers. In an electrifying development for film enthusiasts in Canada, Smoluk selected filmmaker
Rory Kennedy to lead the Film Master Series Conference organized by Film Training Manitoba (FTM) in
Winnipeg, Canada. The event took place on February 10 and 11, 2024, at the Manitoba Institute of Trades and Technology. The initiative was designed to foster
workforce development for Canada's film industry by providing a platform for attendees to learn from world-renowned film professionals. "Rory Kennedy is an outstanding and tenacious filmmaker, and Film Training Manitoba and our partners are so honoured to be working with her to deliver this important workforce development initiative," Said Smoluk. The Film Master Series also featured a special session with Kennedy instructing specifically for women, non-binary, and Trans participants. During the 2024
Gimli Film Festival Smoluk announced a special film industry welcoming session held in Winnipeg for Ukrainian refugees hoping to enter Manitoba's film sector. The session would feature five Ukrainian Canadians discussing jobs and career paths within the film industry. The first of its kind session in Canada was in response to the
Russian invasion of Ukraine and a wide collection of refugees coming to Canada. Smoluk partnered with the
Ukrainian Canadian Congress (UCC) and among the panelists there was a representative from
ACTRA and staff from FRANK Digital, a Winnipeg-based video production company. The aim was to help fill a number of growing film positions in Manitoba by educating and eventually hiring Ukrainian newcomers in the growing sector. Smoluk's Film Training Manitoba partnered with the
Canadian Society of Cinematographers in May 2024 to launch the first large-scale training sessions in Canada for indigenous cinematographers. The session was instructed in Winnipeg by award-winning cinematographer,
Luc Montpellier CSC, ASC. "Film Training Manitoba (FTM) was deeply honoured to serve as a training partner on this ground-breaking industry development program to build the skills of our film workers," said Smoluk. "This wonderful and innovative collaboration provides the most cutting-edge skills development for Manitoba's film industry. FTM is looking forward to the many more years of this exceptional new partnership." At press conference in September 2025, Smoluk announced a
Canada Media Fund backed project to have Rory Kennedy conduct a series of masterclasses in targeted Manitoba communities. The Manitoba Northern & Diverse Creators Program was designed to help more rural, northern, Indigenous, Black, and 2SLGBTQ+ Manitobans break into creative roles in the film industry. Canadian filmmaker Charles Konowal called the program's scope and level of collaboration, "unprecedented in Canada… a brilliant new strategy to connect underrepresented communities and cultural groups to grow our film industry." == Filmography ==