Jennifer Abbott
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jennifer Abbott (born c. 1965) is a Canadian director, cinematographer and editor, best known as a documentary maker. Her first feature documentary, A Cow at My Table (1998), explores contemporary Western attitudes to livestock and meat production. More recently, she served as co-director and editor of the widely acclaimed documentary, The Corporation (2003), which critically examines large corporations in the modern world. That film won numerous international film awards, including a Genie for best documentary, an audience award from the Sundance Film Festival, and a Top Ten Films of the Year designation from the Toronto International Film Festival. Her previous work includes the experimental short Skinned, and as editor for Two Brides and a Scalpel: Diary of a Lesbian Marriage (1999). She is also the editor of the book Making Video 'In': The Contested Ground of Alternative Video on the West Coast. She has taught at the Emily Carr Institute of Art & Design in Vancouver. She lives on Galiano Island in British Columbia, Canada.
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The Magnitude of All Things

Skinned

The Corporation

I Am

Skinned

The Film That Buys the Cinema

Two Brides and a Scalpel: Diary of a Lesbian Marriage

A Cow at My Table

A Cow at My Table

A Cow at My Table

A Cow at My Table

Sea Blind, the Price of Shipping Our Stuff

Us and Them

Out of the Poison Tree

I Am

Let it Ride: The Craig Kelly story

Us and Them

The New Corporation: The Unfortunately Necessary Sequel

The Magnitude of All Things

The Magnitude of All Things

The Magnitude of All Things

The Magnitude of All Things

The Magnitude of All Things

The Corporation
