Cream Productions

  • Trustfeed ratings Icon
  • Trustfeed ratings Icon
  • Trustfeed ratings Icon
  • Trustfeed ratings Icon
  • Trustfeed ratings Icon

Toronto, Canada

creamproductions.com
Motion Pictures and Film· Video production service

Cream Productions Reviews | Rating 4.4 out of 5 stars (3 reviews)

Cream Productions is located in Toronto, Canada on 380 Adelaide St W. Cream Productions is rated 4.4 out of 5 in the category motion pictures and film in Canada. Cream Productions is a Toronto and LA based Producer of award-winning mini-series, specials, returnable series, XR, and digital innovation. We deliver distinctive and highly-acclaimed content to TV and digital platforms. Cream is led by David Brady and Kate Harrison, who bring over twenty years of film and television production experience to the company. Our clients include streaming giants Netflix and Hulu, as well as premier networks including CNN, Discovery Channel US, Canada and Discovery Network International, National Geographic Channel US and International, History Canada, BBC America; BBC Worldwide Channels, Discovery ID, OLN Canada, HGTV Canada, W Network Canada, Smithsonian Channel, ZDF, France 5, Pro Seiben, Channel 4 and Channel Five. Cream also continues to be partner of choice in Canada for international co-productions, most recently service providing for season two of Sky Atlantic’s “Riviera.”

Address

380 Adelaide St W

Phone

+1 4169798458

Company size

11-50 employees

Headquarters

Toronto, Ontario

Founded

2003

Accessibility

No wheelchair-accessible entrance

Open hours

...
Write review Claim Profile

F

Film/Comm Talent

Cream productions is fantastic! Our talent loves auditioning for their series....they are super organized, friendly and uber professional. Gloria Mann is fantastic at casting for them....love this company!!!

C

Clara Koonce

I am enjoying the program very much. However, one segment disturbed me for reasons other than the usual content. The program about the 'house of the rising gun', ignored the root cause of the entire sequence of events, i.e., the unlawful entry into a home, by two thugs, one of whom was killed by a resident and later lionized, rather than condemned, by community members who might just as easily have been a victim of his, and his partner's criminal activity. Admittedly, the shooter should have been under supervision, even confinement, for his erratic, paranoid behavior, but he did not trigger the sequence of events - the thieves did.

M

Mark Kappele

Dave Brady work's there