Beginning in 2014 and held every April, National Canadian Film Day is an effort to promote Canadian film across Canada through synchronized screenings, events, and panel discussions. The inaugural event, held April 29, 2014, was officially recognized in the
House of Commons of Canada. The 2017 edition, a special sesquicentennial celebration, is on April 19, 2017. In 2019, the organization held the sixth annual National Canadian Film Day (NCFD) celebrating 100 years of Canadian cinema, with more than 1,000 events held in 600 Canadian communities and 25 countries. Due to the
COVID-19 pandemic in Canada, the 2020 edition of National Canadian Film Day was staged online, including film screenings on various streaming video on demand platforms and television channels, and a four-hour livestreamed broadcast featuring interviews with Canadian actors and filmmakers. The hosts of the livestream,
Ali Hassan and
Peter Keleghan, received a
Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Host in a Web Program or Series at the
9th Canadian Screen Awards in 2021. In 2022, for the first time a National Canadian Film Day event was held outside Canada, with professor Brad Warren and his Canadian wife Tanja organizing a screening of the films
Indian Horse, ''
My Internship in Canada (Guibord s'en va-t-en guerre)
, The Red Violin and Bon Cop, Bad Cop'' at
Coastal Carolina University in
Conway,
South Carolina. ==References==