Suzanne Crocker is an award-winning filmmaker living in Dawson City, Yukon in the Far North of Canada. Her documentaries have received national and international acclaim. Her work includes two features and 12 shorts, some of which were produced through her company, Dift Productions. Her first feature documentary, All The Time In The World (2014), has won 22 festival awards from around the world, was nominated for Best Film of the Decade from the Green Film Network, and has been translated into 12 languages. Her second feature documentary, First We Eat (2019), also screened around the world, winning 11 festival awards and qualified for Best Documentary at the 2021 Academy Awards. Suzanne Crocker switched careers from rural family doctor to filmmaker in 2009.
Featuring the perspectives of three children (aged 10, 8, and 4), _All The Time In The World_ is an inspiring, humorous, and family-friendly documentary that chronicles the natural rhythm of life as a family chooses to live by the seasons instead of by the clock, highlighting the connection, creativity, and ingenuity that flourish as a result.
Featuring the perspectives of three children (aged 10, 8, and 4), _All The Time In The World_ is an inspiring, humorous, and family-friendly documentary that chronicles the natural rhythm of life as a family chooses to live by the seasons instead of by the clock, highlighting the connection, creativity, and ingenuity that flourish as a result.