Money Minters

{{Infobox film

| name = Money Minters

| native_name = Les Monnayeurs

| image =

| caption = Film poster

| director = Ted De Wit

| producer = F. R. Crawley
Ted De Wit

| writer = Munroe Scott

| narrator =

| music = William McCauley

| cinematography = Frank Stokes
Grant Crabtree

| editing = James W. Turpie

| studio = Crawley Films

| distributor = National Film Board of Canada

| released = {{Film date|1958}}

| runtime = 11 minutes

| country = Canada

| language = English

| budget =

}}

Money Minters ({{langx|fr|Les Monnayeurs}}) is a Canadian short documentary film, directed by Ted De Wit and released in 1958.[http://www.screenculture.org/cesif/film/money-minters "Money Minters"]. Canadian Educational, Sponsored and Industrial Film Project. Sponsored by INCO and the Royal Canadian Mint, the film documents the process of making a coin from the initial mining of metal ore at Sudbury to the coin's final production at the Royal Canadian Mint."Currency exhibit worth $1 billion". The Globe and Mail, March 8, 1969.

The film was one of three co-winners, alongside The Quest and The Tall Country, of the Canadian Film Award for Best Theatrical Short Film at the 11th Canadian Film Awards in 1959.Maria Topalovich, And the Genie Goes To...: Celebrating 50 Years of the Canadian Film Awards. Stoddart Publishing, 2000. {{ISBN|0-7737-3238-1}}. pp. 45-47.

References

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