

Here’s to a new year of conservation storytelling
The calendar flipped quietly this year. No party hats in the studio, just the familiar hum of hard drives, timelines, and half-finished cups of coffee. A new year has begun, and at WorkCabin Films, the momentum never really stopped…it just shifted gears.
This is the season for in-studio work. Long days tightening edits. Fine-tuning sound. Color passes that bring a story fully to life. Right now, we’re in the final stretch of completing an Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) funded feature-length conservation documentary, one that’s been living with us for two years and is finally ready to step into the world this spring.
At the same time, we’re circling back to ongoing projects, threads picked up again, notes revisited, stories patiently waiting for their next chapter. There’s a quiet satisfaction in that rhythm. The work isn’t rushed, but it’s moving forward with intention.
And then there are the conversations. The casual ones. A coffee here, an email or Zoom there. Early talks with organizations about potential new documentary work this year. Nothing fully formed yet and that’s the point. This is when ideas are still fragile, still hopeful. When seeds get planted without anyone announcing it out loud or posting on social media.
We’re currently sitting on more good news about our documentary Saving The Night Caller (details coming soon!), and of course we can’t wait for this film to air on PBS in the spring.
Every year begins this way. A little messy. A little full. And full of possibility.
- Here’s to a new year of conservation storytelling - January 5, 2026
- Film Festivals and Credibility: A Simple Rule of Thumb for Filmmakers - December 18, 2025
- CBC Radio Interview About Saving The Night Caller Documentary - December 15, 2025

