Gonick's first film was the 1997 short
1919, a historically revisionist depiction of the
Winnipeg General Strike from the window of a gay Oriental bathhouse. In 1999, Gonick created the experimental short
Tinkertown. In 2001, Gonick released his first feature film,
Hey, Happy!. The film premiered at the 2001
Sundance Film Festival, and had its Canadian premiere at the
Inside Out Film and Video Festival, where it won the award for Best Canadian Film. In its subsequent Canadian theatrical release, it was screened with
Guy Maddin's short film
The Heart of the World. In the early 2000s, Gonick directed a number of episodes of Canadian documentary television series
KinK, before releasing his second feature film
Stryker in 2004. In 2007, Gonick wrote and directed
Retail, a comedy television pilot, followed by
Hirsch (2010), on
John Hirsch, and
What If? (2011), on Leslee Silverman, artistic director of Manitoba Theatre for Young People. In 2012, he won the
Winnipeg Film Group's Manitoba Film Hothouse Award. Gonick directed the documentary
To Russia with Love, featuring LGBT athletes in the
2014 Winter Olympics. The film was nominated for a
GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Documentary at the
26th GLAAD Media Awards, In 2016, he was one of the directors of the documentary series
Taken for Aboriginal People's Television Network, about murdered and missing Indigenous women. In 2025, his film
Parade: Queer Acts of Love and Resistance premiered as the opening film of the
Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival. ==Installation==