Continuous Journey is a 2004 documentary film directed by Indian-Canadian film-maker Ali Kazimi.
In 1914, a Singapore-based Sikh known as Baba Gurdit Singh took the SS Komagata Maru on a voyage to transport Indian immigrants over to Canada.
This was due to an act they weren't yet aware of: the continuous journey regulation of 1908, which excluded Indians and South Asians from being able to enter the country.
Canadian documentary director Peter Wintonick wrote in an issue of Point of View on the film's brilliance and stated "rarely has a documentary been so beautifully directed and rendered, shot for shot, image by image, pan by pan, zoom by zoom.
"[1] Ali Kazimi's knowledge of the events depicted in the film was adored by Susan Walker of Toronto Star as she commented "Kazimi has gone at the incident from every angle.... (His) interviews with historians both in Canada and India provide a rich context for the fate of the 375 rejected immigrants.