Robin Spry
Robin Spry (October 25, 1939 – March 28, 2005) was a Canadian film director and television producer and screenwriter.
Spry was perhaps best known for his documentary films Action: The October Crisis of 1970 and Reaction: A Portrait of a Society in Crisis about Quebec's October Crisis.
Robin Spry was born in Toronto, Ontario to Canadian broadcast pioneer Graham Spry and economic historian Irene Spry.
After studies at Oxford University and the London School of Economics, Spry began his filmmaking career in 1964 at the National Film Board in Montreal, earning a place on its payroll in 1965 and remaining there until stepping down in 1978. While at the NFB Spry built a reputation as a documentarist engaged with the issues of the day, with films on abortion, youth rebellion, and contemporary politics. His Prologue documented the riots at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, weaving narrative with archival footage to become, in 1969, the first Canadian film to appear at the Venice Film Festival. His Canadian Film Award-winning documentary Action: The October Crisis of 1970 (1973) used a similar approach to tell the story of the kidnapping of British diplomat James Richard Cross and the murder of Pierre Laporte. Spry also tried his hand at other aspects of the film trade, acting as a producer, filmmaker, screenwriter, actor, cinematographer and film editor, and appearing in several colleagues' films, including Denys Arcand's Québec, Duplessis et après" (1972), reading out sections of the 1837 Durham Report. Spry starred in the 1981 hostage film Kings and Desperate Men.
In the mid-1970s Spry left the NFB to focus on production work, founding Telescene and then, upon its bankruptcy in 2000, continuing to work with other production firms in Montreal. Among the films he produced were Léa Pool's À corps perdu (1988), André Forcier's Une histoire inventée (1990), and John Hamilton's The Myth of the Male Orgasm (1993); he was also responsible for a number of television series, such as The Lost World. Other notable works included the 1995 mini-series, Hiroshima, about the events leading up to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which won a Canadian Gemini Award and was nominated for an American Emmy, as well as earlier films One Man (1977), Drying Up the Streets (1978), and Suzanne (1980). Spry died in an early-morning road accident on March 28, 2005 in Montreal, Quebec, leaving behind a son, Jeremy, and a daughter, Zoé, whom he had fathered by journalist Carmel Dumas (from whom he was divorced at the time of his death).
The first season of Charlie Jade was dedicated to his memory, as mentioned in the credits of the final episode, as was Air Crash Investigation's episode "Mistaken Identity".
Source: Article "Robin Spry" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
1981Kings and Desperate Men
1972Quebec: Duplessis and After...
1973Action : The October Crisis of 1970
1968The Ernie Game
1988Malarek
1992A Cry in the Night
1992A Cry in the Night
1973Action : The October Crisis of 1970
1988Straight for the Heart
1992A Cry in the Night
1987Keeping Track
1967Ride for Your Life
1973Action : The October Crisis of 1970
1966Little White Crimes
1978Drying Up the Streets
2003Student Seduction
1988Hitting Home
1988Hitting Home
1977One Man
1973Reaction: A Portrait of a Society in Crisis
1973Reaction: A Portrait of a Society in Crisis
1999Nightmare Man
Prologue
Prologue
1981Suzanne
1981Suzanne
1965You Don't Back Down
1987Keeping Track
Miner
Miner
1965You Don't Back Down
Change in the Maritimes
Change in the Maritimes
1977One Man
Illegal Abortion
Illegal Abortion
Flowers on a One-Way Street
Flowers on a One-Way Street
1988Hitting Home
Downhill
Downhill
1991An Imaginary Tale
1973Action : The October Crisis of 1970
1996On Dangerous Ground
1997Midnight Man
1998Thunder Point
1998The Windsor Protocol
2023Big Wolf on Campus
2023Sirens
2023Student Bodies
2023Charlie Jade
2023









