All the Time in the World is the 2014 feature documentary debut of Canadian filmmaker, former physician and mother of three Suzanne Crocker. Having always felt that ‘there was never enough time for the things that really counted’, as she explains in the film, Crocker and her partner, Gerard Parsons, make the remarkable decision to leave their jobs and a comfortable family home in Dawson City to take their three children, Sam (ten), Kate (eight) and Tess (four), as well as their dog and two cats, to live in the remote Yukon wilderness in north-west Canada. Laden with supplies of food, clothes, books and other essentials, the family spend nine months living in a small wooden cabin that is devoid of road access, electricity and running water. With no phones,…
