9/11 Kids

9/11 Kids is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Elizabeth St. Philip and released in 2020.[1] The film profiles the ongoing effects of the September 11 attacks on the United States through the stories of the now young adults who were in the classroom where President George W. Bush was reading the children's book My Pet Goat when he was interrupted and informed of the attacks.[2]

9/11 Kids
Directed byElizabeth St. Philip
Produced byElizabath St. Philip
Steve Gamester
Written byElizabeth St. Philip
Greg West
Steve Gamester
CinematographyChris Romeike
Edited byGreg West
Production
company
Saloon Media
Distributed byBlue Ant Media
Release date
  • April 23, 2020 (2020-04-23) (Hot Docs)
Running time
88 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

The film premiered as part of the 2020 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival.[3] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada it was not screened theatrically, but premiered as part of the festival's online streaming component and aired on CBC Television on April 23 as part of the network's special Hot Docs at Home series of films from the festival.[4]

On June 8, the film was named as one of five recipients of the Hot Docs Audience Award. Although it was not the overall winner of the audience balloting, but in fact finished as first runner-up, in light of the pandemic situation and its ongoing effects on film distribution the award committee opted to split the award among all of the top five Canadian films.[5]

References

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