

Everything to eat, see, and shop at the city’s biggest Vietnamese cultural festival.
Through immersive installations by Paola Pivi and Jakob Kudsk Steensen, PHI asks whether art can help us navigate climate anxiety and a world where truth feels increasingly unstable.
With New Blood and The Legend of Rory Shayne now on Crave, Nick Rose and Lewis Cohen talk kingpins, bank robbers, and why Montreal can't let go of its outlaws.
The Montreal illustrator enlisted roughly three dozen writers, artists, and poets to fill a hand-restored 1950s vending machine with fortunes in both languages.
The new Pointe-Saint-Charles venue combines courts, cocktails, Pilates, and hospitality in a bid to make the club itself the destination.
A free outdoor show became one of the biggest moments of this year’s festival, drawing a capacity crowd for the fast-rising Saguenay duo.
Questlove’s latest music documentary explores the band’s creative brilliance, internal tensions, and enduring influence.
Snowstorm or heatwave, Montreal finds a reason to celebrate all year long.
World premieres collide with free shows in the streets across 11 days of performances: Here’s how to navigate the 17th edition of Montréal Complètement Cirque from July 2 to 12, 2026.
Oscar Boyson’s feature debut uses dark comedy and mounting tension to explore what happens when the need to be seen becomes something far more dangerous.
From live audiovisual spectacles and outdoor installations to workshops, talks, and late-night performances, MUTEK’s 2026 celebration of art, electronic music, and technology will infuse six days with future-facing experiences.
At 22, Kane Parsons proves he can create terror from fluorescent lights, empty hallways, and pure unease. The harder task is giving that terror a purpose.
The sci-fi thriller sprawls under the weight of its own ambitions, but Steven Spielberg still finds moments of wonder, suspense, and cinematic magic few directors can match.
Before Angine de Poitrine, generations of Quebec musicians were building a world of costumes, performance art, invented languages, and gloriously unconventional music.
A dazzling spectacle of humanity, animalism, and the natural world with an urgent case made for coexistence.
Everything to eat, see, and shop at the city’s biggest Vietnamese cultural festival.
Through immersive installations by Paola Pivi and Jakob Kudsk Steensen, PHI asks whether art can help us navigate climate anxiety and a world where truth feels increasingly unstable.
With New Blood and The Legend of Rory Shayne now on Crave, Nick Rose and Lewis Cohen talk kingpins, bank robbers, and why Montreal can't let go of its outlaws.
The Montreal illustrator enlisted roughly three dozen writers, artists, and poets to fill a hand-restored 1950s vending machine with fortunes in both languages.
The new Pointe-Saint-Charles venue combines courts, cocktails, Pilates, and hospitality in a bid to make the club itself the destination.
A free outdoor show became one of the biggest moments of this year’s festival, drawing a capacity crowd for the fast-rising Saguenay duo.
Questlove’s latest music documentary explores the band’s creative brilliance, internal tensions, and enduring influence.
Snowstorm or heatwave, Montreal finds a reason to celebrate all year long.
World premieres collide with free shows in the streets across 11 days of performances: Here’s how to navigate the 17th edition of Montréal Complètement Cirque from July 2 to 12, 2026.
Oscar Boyson’s feature debut uses dark comedy and mounting tension to explore what happens when the need to be seen becomes something far more dangerous.
From live audiovisual spectacles and outdoor installations to workshops, talks, and late-night performances, MUTEK’s 2026 celebration of art, electronic music, and technology will infuse six days with future-facing experiences.
At 22, Kane Parsons proves he can create terror from fluorescent lights, empty hallways, and pure unease. The harder task is giving that terror a purpose.
The sci-fi thriller sprawls under the weight of its own ambitions, but Steven Spielberg still finds moments of wonder, suspense, and cinematic magic few directors can match.
Before Angine de Poitrine, generations of Quebec musicians were building a world of costumes, performance art, invented languages, and gloriously unconventional music.
A dazzling spectacle of humanity, animalism, and the natural world with an urgent case made for coexistence.