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Maureen Parker

Maureen Parker is executive director of the Writers Guild of Canada. 

The only conundrum for Cancon is its continued conflation with foreign service production

Opinion | BY MAUREEN PARKER | March 16, 2020
By that logic, 2006 Oscar-winner, The Departed, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Matt Damon, directed by Marin Scorsese, set in Boston and made entirely in English, is a Chinese movie, because it was based on the 2002 Hong Kong film, Infernal Affairs, writes Maureen Parker. Image courtesy of The Departed
Opinion | BY MAUREEN PARKER | March 16, 2020
Opinion | BY MAUREEN PARKER | March 16, 2020
By that logic, 2006 Oscar-winner, The Departed, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Matt Damon, directed by Marin Scorsese, set in Boston and made entirely in English, is a Chinese movie, because it was based on the 2002 Hong Kong film, Infernal Affairs, writes Maureen Parker. Image courtesy of The Departed
Opinion | BY MAUREEN PARKER | March 16, 2020
By that logic, 2006 Oscar-winner, The Departed, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Matt Damon, directed by Marin Scorsese, set in Boston and made entirely in English, is a Chinese movie, because it was based on the 2002 Hong Kong film, Infernal Affairs, writes Maureen Parker. Image courtesy of The Departed
Opinion | BY MAUREEN PARKER | March 16, 2020
Opinion | BY MAUREEN PARKER | March 16, 2020
By that logic, 2006 Oscar-winner, The Departed, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Matt Damon, directed by Marin Scorsese, set in Boston and made entirely in English, is a Chinese movie, because it was based on the 2002 Hong Kong film, Infernal Affairs, writes Maureen Parker. Image courtesy of The Departed