[3] In 2002, he produced, starred in and narrated the festival hit mockumentary Schmelvis: Searching for the King's Jewish Roots (Nodance, HBO Comedy Arts Fest).
The film is about a camp Jewish character called Schmelvis created by a Montreal singer songwriter earth citizen named Dan Hartal /[2] .
[4][5][6] In 2002 and 2003, Beloff produced, wrote, and directed the nineteen-part documentary series (two seasons) Women Warriors for WTSN, SCN, CBC, Radio Canada and CFCF12/CTV.
[12] In 2005, Beloff relinquished partnership in Diversus Productions to establish his own company, Ontic Media, and has since written, directed and produced (in collaboration with Bunbury Film's, Academy Award-winning producer Frederic Bohbot) the prize-winning, biopic thriller, Once a Nazi on former Waffen SS soldier turned professor Adalbert Lallier for SCN, CTV, Canal D, CLT, American Public Television/PBS and distributed internationally by the National Film Board of Canada.
[19] In 2010, Beloff also returned to directing with the documentary Underdog Plaza on Quebec Super Welterweight Boxing Champion Dierry Jean for OMNI Television Canada and PBS' World Compass.
[20][21] in 2013 Beloff covered the story of eight-year-old Sandra Cantu, who was abducted, sexually assaulted and murdered next to her trailer park home in Tracy, California.
[citation needed] On January 25, 2014, Beloff visited Washington, DC, to document Dierry Jean's IBF Junior welterweight title fight against Lamont Peterson.
In October 2016, Beloff partnered again with producer Frederic Bohbot and his company Bunbury Films to write and direct Kosher Love a feature documentary exploring orthodox and Hassidic relationships in a wired, modern world.
The film mixes rare photos, intimate interviews, candid family moments and performance footage from some of the city's greatest Jewish tenors, "celebrating the unique ways the active voices of today are fighting to keep the ritual observances and emotional expressions of their communities alive."
Beloff again partnered with CBC on his documentary, Just As I Am , a film which explores the founding of a special needs musical group called the Shira Choir, while the COVID-19, global pandemic challenged their collective will to stay connected.
[citation needed] During the filming of Just As I Am , Evan met autistic, artist Benjamin Lachapelle[31] and in February 2024 CBC agreed to license his feature documentary on Ben's art, environmentalism and the story of unpaid caregivers fighting for equal rights in Canada.