Norflicks has been a successful independent Canadian television production company since its incorporation in 1985. Led by its president and founder, Richard Nielsen, Norflicks has earned a reputation for creating high quality, entertaining television.
Richard was President and CEO of Nielsen-Ferns International from 1972 to 1980, and Chairman of Primedia Productions from 1980 to 1985. During his career, Richard has won three Anik awards for best Canadian television program of the year. With Nielsen-Ferns, he produced, among others, A Third Testament for Time-Life Films and the BBC; The Newcomers/Les Arrivants, the Irish episode of which was nominated for an Emmy; and The Wars, a feature film which won three Genie Awards.
Norflicks’ co-production with
Norflicks’ war documentaries have won popular and
critical acclaim around the world. This is perhaps most evident with the
success of No Price Too High (1995), a six-part
series chronicling Canada’s involvement in the Second World War, which
has aired on Bravo!, Canal D, PBS and History Channel (UK), and was
featured in CBC’s 1998 tribute to World War II, Canada Remembers,
along with another Norflicks’ documentary, Battle Diary: A Day
in the Life of Charlie Martin. In 1999, Norflicks produced the
three-part series, Far From Home: Canada and the Great War,
which has been broadcast on Bravo! and CBC. Norflicks also produced Remembrance:
Memorial to an Unknown Soldier, a one-hour documentary honouring
Canadians who fought in the major wars of the 20th century and have no
known graves. The five-part documentary series, Seapower to
Superpower (2001), for History Television and the Discovery
Channel (Canada and Europe), examines how the quest for control of the
world’s oceans has been the most important military reality of the
past 400 years. Test of Will:
The company has also made its mark in the world of religious programming with programs such as an hour-long film for RKO on the Poverty Pilgrimage instituted by Pope John Paul I, and An Ark for Our Time and Images of Love, Words of Hope (1988), as well as Knowing Eternity, 25 1/2 hour programs on the Gospel of John (Knowing Eternity; Knowing Ourselves; and Experiencing the Mystical), which feature Jean Vanier, one of the world’s most respected religious figures, and the founder of L'Arche Communities.
In addition to its strengths in the areas of drama,
war documentary and faith-based programming, Norflicks is widely known
for making programs that bring Canadian history to life. In 2000,
Norflicks produced People’s Poet: New Brunswick’s Alden Nowlan,
a documentary on one of the country’s greatest literary talents who
rose from the poverty of rural Atlantic Canada to win acclaim across
North America, for Vision TV, Access TV/Canadian Learning Television and
Bravo!.
Norflicks is also expanding into new media, having
co-produced a CD-ROM version of No Price Too High with
City Interactive in 1998 and having recently developed a new educational
web site with Telefilm
With many projects currently in development,
including Hitler's German Foes, the story of the Sudeten
Germans who fled the