LostintheFog, Russell's Photodrama of Creation is also available for download at archive.org:
Postcards: https://archive.org/details/PhotodramaOfCreationPostcards/page/n1
Booklet: https://archive.org/details/ThePhotodramaOfCreation/page/n1
Film: https://archive.org/details/PhotodramaOfCreation (96 videos)
In April 1917, the Society/org lost its licence to show moving pictures in Ontario Canada, and thus became the very first instance of provincial movie censorship in Canada. By this time, Russell was an unpopular person with Canadian authorities - who had not allowed Russell to enter Canada in April, 1916 - and after Russell's death in 1916, the Photodrama was still shown in Canada but only for a short time.
For an account of how and why the Photodrama was censored in Canada, Gary Botting gives more detail in his book Fundamental Freedoms and Jehovah's Witnesses (from Chapter 2, page 17):
Many of the objections voiced against the Bible Students were, like Scott’s
letter, directed specifically against Russell himself, and therefore when
Russell died in October 1916, much of the ammunition with which the
Chief Press Censor and others had been arming themselves was effectively neutralized. Nonetheless, the charisma of Russell outlasted him, for he
appeared in film in the popular Photo-Drama of Creation to audiences that
were not used to seeing motion pictures:
The quality of the Photo-Drama photography and sound was so good
that some viewers thought C.T. Ruscell was present in person when he
appeared on the screen in the opening scene to introduce the presentation. The mixed media production, released initially in 1914, was one of the
most prescient and effective preaching techniques used by the Bible
Students at the time-an eight-hour event combining cinematography,
slides and cartoons, in colour, with a parallel sound-track incorporating
music and narration on separate phonograph records. The Photo-Drama was shown from coast to coast, from Halifax to
Victoria. In Hamilton, it was presented for three weeks to full houses at
the Grand Opera House. Thousands of Canadians saw it. Yet at the local
level, there were rumblings of discontent that the Bible Students could
show moving pictures on a Sunday. The clergy in particular complained
that the Bible Students, by showing the Photo-Drama on Sundays, often
drew curious parishioners away from their regular church services. The
Guelph Town Council passed a by-law specifically aimed at the PhotoDrama which stated that “no moving pictures be allowed to be shown on
Sunday, except for war purposes.” But the theatre manager had a provincial licence that allowed him to show film on Sunday, and the
mayor and Town Council were forced to back down. Russell had been replaced as president of the Watch Tower Society
by an equally dynamic leader, J.F. Rutherford, who in April 1917 gave a
stirring speech in the Royal Alexandra Theatre in Toronto urging
Christians not to take up arms. In response, the Provincial Treasurer of
Ontario, T.W. McGarry, cancelled the organization’s moving-picture
licence, thereby curtailing the Bible Student presentations of the PhotoDrama in Ontario. It was the first example of provincial censorship of
movies to be experienced in Canada.