Saturday, 16 February 2008

KINGSTON CANADIAN FILM FESTIVAL 2008 REVIEWS

BREAKFAST WITH SCOT (MONGREL MEDIA, 2007)***

By Rick Jackson

Sensitively directed by Laurie Lynd, Breakfast With Scot is a big surprise for a Canadian movie. Noah Bennett gives an impressive performance as Scot, who must deal with the loss of his mother while living with a gay couple, Eric (Tom Cavanaugh) and Sam. As you watch him adapt to his situation while waiting for Billy (Colin Cunningham), his mother's appointed guardian, you see him learn how to adjust to a crisis in his life. In the process, both Eric and Sam discover they, too, love him enough to empathize and share in the warmth and fellowship all three create together. Albeit predictable and slow moving, its ending is worth its weight in gold as a positive account of family life in the 21st century.

Cavanaugh plays Eric, a form Maple Leaf hockey star turned sports TV host, who, along with Sam, must look after Scot for two months. At first, their relationship is strained, but in the middle of the emotional chaos Eric finds himself in, he reaches out honestly in trying to find himself so he can understand Scot. Up until he meets him, he has avoided talking about his homosexuality and has made up excuses. By teaching his new friend about respect, Eric also learns he should practice what he preaches.

Based on the novel by Michael Downing, Sean Raycroft's screenplay has its touching moments and they make up for the flaws in direction.

Bennett brings to Scot, both the mentality of a child and the understanding of an adult. Eric and Sam fail to notice how he as grown up in the wake of his mother's tragedy, as does Billy. In his early scenes, Scot is obnoxious like most kids his age, but in a scene with one of his friends there is a tender moment when he tells us about his mother' s drug habit and how it was destroying her. He has learned to accept her death, even if he misses her a lot which is to be expected.

When Billy arrives to take Scot back with him and Nula (Jeananne Goossen0), his new bride-to-be, there is friction between the two of them. You know he has accepted Eric and Sam as his paternal influences because they share in something very special. The last few minutes bear this out.

The heartwarming finale brings a poignant touch, even if it is overly predictable. Yet it doesn't matter for this is a genuinely told story of resolving who you are and not trying to hide behind makeup, as is the case with Scot because of his mother's influence on him from an early age. It also means being in a place where he knows he can feel loved and be loved. For Eric and Sam it is a chance to accept in public their sexual orientation so they can live together with Scot with a new lease on their future as a nuclear family.

Breakfast With Scot doesn't disappoint one bit.

It is rated PG/Parental Guidance, with the warning: language may offend.


WALK ALL OVER ME (Mongrel Media, 2007)*

By Rick Jackson

Walk All Over Me is your familiar, cliched drama about loyalty, betrayal and dishonesty. Co-written (with Jason Long) and directed by Robert Cuffley, it focuses on Alberta (Leelee Sobieski), a young woman who has been running away from trouble all her life because of her own naivete and lack of street smarts. When she returns to her old babysitter named Celine (Tricia Helfer), now a dominatrix living the high life in a friend's expensive house, Alberta become so impressionable that she wants to be like her, so she can pay the bills. As it turns out, Celine is also in debt. However, this all becomes irrelevant when Alberta pretends to be Celine and gets in trouble with Paul (Jacob Tierney), a client, who, in turn, has cheated Rene (Lothaire Bluteau), a local mobster.

Throughout much of the film, it is a cat and mouse game with Rene and his two thug brothers intimidating Alberta, Paul and Celine, and it leads to some nasty business which involves sexually deviant behaviour that is not graphic enough to be offensive, nudity and violence. Despite their convincing performances in this modern Thelma and Louise (which, by the way, is far superior), both Sobieski and Helfer leave no lasting impression.

It is rated 14A, with the warnings: coarse language, sexual content and violence.


MUFFINS FOR GRANNY (FEATURES PRODUCTIONS, 2007)****

By Rick Jackson

This is one of the most shocking documentaries ever made about the mistreatment of Aboriginal children in residential schools between 1892 and 1996 when the last one closed.

Although not graphic in its telling, it is the stories by some of the survivors that illustrate in their own words the horrific time they experienced. Their mental, physical, and cultural abuse continues to remain with them today and, courtesy of writer, producer, director Nadia McLaren, you hear these ghosts of voices past. She describes them like the wind or, more appropriately in Aboriginal language, as 'the lungs of mother earth.'

Roy Thomas, who died in November 2004 at age 55, remembers the first image he saw after the nuns greeted him. It was Jesus on the cross and he thought to himself, "Is that what will happen to us?" He tells about growing up in the ways of nature and the stories of birds, animals and fish, which, as an artist, he has painted for posterity. The years he spent in the government school has left him with feelings of anger and bitterness, and when he left he began drinking
to forget. He was not the only one, for many others resorted to alcoholism for exactly the same reason.

For Garnett, another survivor, it was a dark chapter in not only his life but for his people. He describes the experience as "one night was a long time." His anger and pain was so unbearable to recall, he couldn't even tell his wife after they were married.

Ralph Johnson also talks about the abuse that led to his drinking, and for a long time he couldn't tell stories about his childhood because of the shame and guilt he felt.

For Alice, aka Little Deer, she describes her time there as literally being separated from her family. During her first year she had to sleep on the floor because there weren't enough beds. What was even worse is her instant recall of what happened to pregnant girls whose fetuses were aborted and buried. She goes on to say how you were forbidden to speak up against the nuns for fear of being punished by God. The nuns, or "white ladies" as she calls them, also punished you with the strap, and if you were had a sister or other relative, you weren't allowed to talk to each other. Her tears reveal a hurt so deep, she had to stop talking more than once.

Delaney Sharpe is also very emotional about her time spent there and thanks Nadia for giving her a chance to speak out because someone had to tell their story.

Some of the children stayed in the residential schools from six up to 10 years. Some were lucky to spend less. The federal government took all the First Nations' children and put them in the 130 schools across Canada. The nuns were so strict, you were not allowed to speak in your native language, only English. You were also called by an assigned number, not your name.

McLaren uses title cards such as humility, truth, respect, honour, courage, wisdom, and love to underscore the thoughts and feelings of her interviewees, some of whom were surprised to be survivors. Their candor and truth documented here has left an indelible mark on them for life, including the nightmares and anxiety attacks they will continue to suffer.

Recent acknowledgment in the 1990s by the federal government, survivors and the Church have helped them begin to heal from the sting of their memories, yet it remains a sad part of Canadian history McLaren has told in this powerful and honourable documentary.

February 16, 2008


AMAL (SEVILLE PICTURES, 2007)****

By Rick Jackson

One of the best films I've seen so far this year is Amal, an uplifting story about an impoverished autorickshaw driver who drives an old man one day, not knowing who he really is and how he really touched him with his generosity and kindness as a common everyday working man.

What happens after the old man dies in hospital and the events leading up to the end are a series of episodes about greed, lack of self-worth and respect, a mother's longing for her son to marry and settle down, and the title character's good heart in helping others because it makes him feel so good.

Based on a story by Shaun Mehta, the screenplay by Richie and Shaun Mehta focuses on Amal's daily trips and the people he meets. One of them is G.K. Jayaran (Naseeruddin Shah), whose cantankerous attitude about people in general changes after Amal treats with the milk of human kindness, which his father taught him to be. When the old man, who doesn't identify himself, starts to cough, Amal asks him if he's alright and then hands him a box of cough drops. When he says he'll pay ten less for the ride, Amal only accepts the same amount out of respect for him. Jayaran understands he is not like all the other drivers who overcharge their customers. His narration at the beginning tells you just how, despite being poor, Amal is the richest man he has ever known.

Rupinder Nagra (Bollywood Hollywood) plays Amal as the good-natured and trustworthy son of a working class family. He will do anything he can to help anyone. When a little girl steals a purse from Pooja Seth, a regular rider, while in his ricksaw, he chases after her, only to see her the victim of a hit-and-run accident. He ends up caring about ehr and even arranges to pay for her expensive operation which the doctor convince shim she must have. Just as there are not any guarantees in life, she dies because, he believes, it is God's will.

While you only visit with Amal at certain times within the story's plotline, you meet Jayaran's children who learn they must wait 27 days before they can hear their father's will. Unbeknownst to them (and us) is a letter addressed to Amal which must be handed to him first. While Suresh (Roshan Seth) tries to find him, you find out he isn't in the will because he was hoping to inherit some of Jayaran's fortune. In the meantime, he bargains with one of his sons for a percentage of his share without the clear understanding or knowledge of his gambling debt which he must pay back to the local loan shark. When Suresh reads the letter, he realizes the deal with him must be terminated. In a moment of rage, he is killed by the son out desperation for his own personal greed for the money.

What is so refreshing to watch is how the screenwriters weave a tender love story between Poojah and Amal which further enhances Jayaran's last thoughts about a poor man's possession of wealth through his respect for those around him. Amal represents what is ultimately good about the human race and Jayaran wants to help him in return on his deathbed.

Without divulging the ending, you will be moved by the endearing simplicity of it magnified two-fold by Nagra's blissful existence to remain the same man without even knowing it. You will also be surprised in the manner the director reveals something more about Amal you don't know until another little girl gives him change and later tells us what it is.

Amal leaves you satisfied by it sheer honesty and conviction in presenting a story that speaks volumes about the human condition in a world too busy to understand or care. Like the title character who sees the end of his livelihood as a ricksaw driver, there is hope for him as he plans his future with Poojah or, at least, this is the seed planted for you to secretly wish it would happen. The story ends as it should because it is God's will for us not to know His plans. It is all left up to us to see what rewards will come our way. For Amal, it is something more precious than anything money can buy.

It is rated 14A, with the warning: coarse language.


EMOTIONAL ARITHMETIC (SEVILLE PICTURES, 2007)****

By Rick Jackson

An international cast brings this dramatic and international reunion of three survivors, two children and one adult, from the Drancey detention camp together thirty-five years after they last saw each other. Their stories rekindle the feelings of Melanie and Christopher, the two children, who are now adults, and Jakob, the young man (now in his senior years) who bartered for their lives so they could live. Without getting into too much detail, except for the tinted black and white flashbacks, you are left with a quiet and sensitively told story of each of their lives. Here, less is more.

Based on the novel by Matt Cohen, the screenplay by Jefferson Lewis focuses on the three of them as they share in both the shadows of their past and the new memories they are about to experience. After the initial moments of seeing each other alive and well, their reunion is marked by a series of emotions that stir up an avalanche of thoughts and feelings.

For Melanie, who has been addressed at saving everything she can about their childhood in the camp, it is the hardest for her to let go of the past and really move on despite settling down, getting married and rearing a son, now all grown up. Played by Susan Sarandon, she is the epitome of beauty, despite the emotional scars she bears all these years later. In one of her strongest roles, she brings together both the domesticity of motherhood and the emotional baggage of her historical past. Her strength as a character can be seen through her own personal gut reactions to each situation which are dead on.

The flashbacks to the camp with young Melanie and Christopher (Regan Jewitt and Alexandre Nachi) reveal a strong attachment between them, one so strong it helped them overcome what they were going through mentally. Now grown up, they still share the same feelings toward each other. The older Christopher (Gabriel Bryne) secretly wishes he could run away with Melanie, but the times are different now and he reluctantly accepts her new life and is agreeable to leave the next day so it would create any further emotional bouts or fights between them and Melanie's husband, David..

Jakob Bronski (Max Von Sydow in a strong supporting role) does not remember all the details of the camp because his memories are lost forever because of the drugs and electroshock treatments given to him by the Germans after he killed a prison guard. Sydow doesn't make him a saint, but more a human being who, as an older man, wants to appreciate what years he has left. Although there are two key scenes when he tries to remember, he can't. However, he is haunted by the experience and dreams he is still back there.

Byrne injects Christopher with a dichotomy of purpose. His surprise appearance is met with reluctant happiness and when she tells him she's not prepared to see him, you know she's right. The emotional setback during their reunion is tinged with both a sense of regret and elation. Christopher tries to reach out for her and, despite his understanding of the life she now leads, he desperately wants to have her. His jealousy forces him to leave before they each can reconcile with the past.

Christopher Plummer plays Melanie's husband, David. He is tired of her obsession with the past and wishes they could spend their retirement years together like any average married couple. However, he understands more than he is willing to admit.

In another excellent supporting role, Roy Dupuis, in one of his few English speaking roles, is Benjamin, their son, who has made them grandparents with Timmy (Dakota Goyo). He, too, has wrestled with his mother's past and wants to know what happened to make her act the way she has since he learned about her condition at a young age.

While Jakob is redeemed for his good deed and the sacrifice he took to spare Melanie and Christopher as children, Melanie still must reconcile with her past for she has been burdened by this experience for far too long. Even though she wishes she could, you have an understanding that there are some memories that can't be healed by time.

As for Christopher who has hidden his past with her, he returns to France where he continues his life as a British novelist. His memories remain locked between he and Melanie and you never learn the extent of them because of their personal nature. It is best to leave it unsaid and in the past where it belongs, like any good story.

Director Palo Barzman and editor Arthur Tarnowski have carefully woven together a powerful drama about a time which is not often told from the point of view of the children who survived and carried on with their lives after the Second World War.

It is rated PG/Parental Guidance, with the warning: mature theme.


THE GREEN CHAIN (CHRISTAL FILMS, 2007)**

Written and directed by Mark Leiren-Young, The Green Chain is an ineffective semi-documentary about the conflict between loggers and environmentalists in Canada. Interviews with seven people about their views on the central issue of cutting down trees are barely interesting because each one of them rambles on for far too long.

First up is Ben Holm (Scott MacNeil), the logger, who talks for 15 minutes about logging as his livelihood and the environmentalists who protest are using signs made out of paper, which, in turn, comes from the mills. He goes on to point out the government siding with them and the sad fact you have to get permission to where you can cut the trees, unlike years ago when you could do it anywhere.

Next is Abigail Edwards (Babs Chula) who is in jail for protesting against cutting down trees. She doesn't seem to mind being there. A former science teacher, she says trees were cut down near her home so a highway could be built and feels enough is enough. There are also examples about other protestors, such as kids lying down in front of bulldozers and others posing naked for a calendar.

Brett Hall (Tahmer Penikett) has been a firefighter since he was sixteen. He goes on a tirade about the causes of putting out fires which is completely off topic. His sermonette never says anthing you don't already know. Neither does it address the loggers or environmentalists.

The protest that has been in this local town, the name of which is not identified, is led by the star, Leila Cole (Tricia Helfer). She is busy going over her speech which she tries to be serious about, but all it does is bore you to death by her incessant inanities, whining and complaining about everything not connected with the central issue of the film. When she finally gets down to discussing why she is there, she does make the point about where the animals will go if the trees are cut down and suggests we buy up all the trees like Sting did in Brazil.

From her hotel room, the director switches to Dylan Hendrix (Brendan Fletcher) who has been living in a tree as part of his personal crusade. He has books and other comforts of home to keep him happy but he serves no useful purpose than to be condescending in his attitude about trees. It all goes far afield when he starts to mention the trees who fought back in The Lord of the Rings trilogy. There isn't any rational point made, either.

August Schellenberg is cast as John Clements, the executive with an opinion about one tree in particular, the spruce, which, he says, is a sacred tree that shouldn't be cut down. He approaches the issue as if this was a travelogue.

The last person interviewed is waitress Jenne Holm (Jillian Fargey) who goes on her own personal discussion about the customers who patronized the restaurant where she works for that day, and, after almost ten minutes, she finally makes the point, like her husband did at the beginning, about logging as a livelihood and the families who have had fathers, brothers or other relatives as loggers for more than one generation.

The Green Chain never asserts itself with the main issue it tries to bring forth, except for the strong opinions which are never galvanizing as they should be. The lack of real impact on either side of the debate doesn't allow you to make up your own mind. In the end, you are left with a shallow and empty discussion with no real purpose, except to see these seven voice their frustration and helplessness in getting across their points of view.


February 23, 2008

Copyright 2008 Rick Jackson

Friday, 8 February 2008

LONG LIFE, HAPPINESS & PROSPERITY (ODEON FILMS, 2002)

By Rick Jackson

Few films these days inspire you as much as director Mina Shum's latest effort, Long Life, Happiness And Prosperity. Set in the Chinese Canadian community, it is a profound story of hope and faith in a world which is often difficult to live in. In the context of seeing it in the current troubled times when the United States and her allies (including Canada) may be going to war with Iraq, it is a refreshing look at the individual lives of a thriving suburb where hopelessness and despair are replaced by the indirect actions of a twelve‑year‑old girl named Mindy.

The screenplay by Shum and Dennis Foon is a celebration of life itself. All the characters in Long Life have all the tools they need to enrich their lives but they just don't understand how to apply their knowledge and devotion to life. Everything is so close but far away. Not until they realize the choices they have made can actually make a difference do they take heart in their own beliefs through religion, love and happiness.

Using magic realism, Shum and producer Raymond Massey show real life stories and how the lives portrayed are affected by magic. It doesn't all seem far‑fetched, either. If you are really listening to what each character says and watching how each handles their own predicaments, there is a life lesson to be learned.

Especially effective throughout is Peter Wunstorf's cinematography. The collaborative effort between Shum and Wunstorf in their use of the Chinese color system: blue/green in Shuck's story represents youth or age, red in Mindy's story represents red, and in Bing's story, gold is the color of royalty.

Valerie Tian plays Mindy like any other girl her age. She cares about her mother Kin (Sandra Oh) and wishes her only the best in life because she is overworked, lonely, and struggling financially. When Mindy finds a book of Taoist charms in a local shop, she sees a way to make some important changes. Her attempts are, albeit, naive and silly from anyone who doesn't believe, but in some strange small way the lives of her mother and her community become better off. As you watch it all unfold, you are capitivated by Mindy and those she meets in her day‑to‑day world.

Ric Young plays Bing Lai, who works at the butcher shop. For twenty years he has felt the burden of working in his father's shadow. In Hong Kong he has become famous in the butcher trade, while Bing labors as a worker with the hope of bringing his own son Peter (Kameron Louangxay) into the family business. When Peter rejects his father's wishes, you can feel the hurt that the father experiences. However, you can't help notice it is almost exactly how Bing's father must have felt twenty years earlier. Although you never see it in the film, it is deeply felt in the emotions on both sides. The day Bing wins the lottery does not mean long life, happiness and prosperity without love and respect. On those things, money does not come with any guarantee. When his wife Ada (Christina Ma) and Peter leave for good, it is their liberation from someone tied to an ancient custom from the old country.

For the middle‑aged married couple of Hun Ping and Shuck Wong (Tsai Chin and Chang Tseng) life is lonely without their daughter who has left home to go to university. When Shuck loses his job, he feels a heavy burden on his shoulders. Thanks to his own faith and Hun Ping's in the Yellow God and a lost turtle, life doesn't have to end but begin in something wonderful.

Long Life, Happiness and Prosperity has also something to do with our acceptance of the life choices we make in our daily lives, in addition to our simple faith in humanity and religion to guide us.

When Mindy's charms go astray, they are symbolic of how oblivious our lives can become if we let it happen. Only when we share a mutual concern, in the case of Kin and Alvin (Russell Yuen) who eventually find love together, and the Wongs who have their happiness restored through their own love and acceptance of each other, can we all find long life, happiness and prosperity.

As for Bing Lai, he has found it, too, through his own luck at winning the lottery. By basking in his own personal prosperity, he has found happiness and, hopefully, long life.

Long Life, Happiness, And Prosperity is one of the most important films about the human condition ever made. It demands to be seen twice to appreciate its full impact.

February 22, 2003

THE NATURE OF NICHOLAS (FULL STOP FILMS, 2002)

By Rick Jackson

The Nature of Nicholas is one of the most original Canadian films ever made. Written and directed by Jeff Erbach it is a surreal fable. When it is over, you will be left with a profound statement about the human condition.

For any boy growing up, puberty brings its own sense of dread and innermost feelings and as it is expressed here it becomes less the Hollywood butt of jokes and ridicule for laughs, but a serious character study about sexual orientation. The physical decay of Bobby is a metaphor for intense feelings of shame.

What starts off as a coming‑of‑age story about Nicholas, the story changes direction when it introduces a supernatural element. As the film opens, the school year is ending as he and his friend Bobby discuss going to party at Jenna's house. When another girl, Kimberly pretends she has kissed and made love to Nicholas during a game of spin the bottle, it is all for show so there won't be any embarrassment for either one of them. It also stirs up feelings of a sexual nature which he has trouble expressing.

Jeff Sutton gives a strong performance as Nicholas, a shy boy of twelve who is not good at parties, not interested in girls, and has replaced his absent father as the man of the house. He likes to go around the house with his shirt off, showing off his masculinity. However, underneath this facade is a troubled boy who is without a father figure, and retreats into his own world of dissecting animals and reading. Confronted with Bobby's physical change, Nicholas says, "This is a little strange."

Cast as Bobby, Nicholas' best friend, is David Turnbull. When Nicholas kisses him, it opens a series of feelings Bobby cannot understand. He likes girls yet he becomes confused by his own sexuality. In a bizarre twist, he becomes two people. There is the normal Bobby, and the physically decaying carbon copy of him. His condition represents the shame he feels toward Nicholas and in spite of their friendship they try to work things out. When Bobby sorts out his sexuality, it is interesting how Nicholas goes through the same kind of metamorphosis.

In supporting roles, Ardith Boxall plays Nicholas's mother. She is trying to raise him all alone and encourages him to enjoy himself.

As the absent father who appears as an apparition, which may or may not be a figment of Nicholas's imagination, Tom McCamus is a mysterious character. There are scenes between the father and Nicholas that hint at incest but it is not developed any further in the plot. In a scene straight out the science fiction classic, The Stepford Wives (1975), he is able to control his wife.

When Mother brings home a new beau named Roy, Nicholas opens up a little. During his first visit, Nicholas finds himself talking to his father. It is disturbing and eye‑opening.

Shot on location in and around Winnipeg, The Nature of Nicholas makes clever use of the countryside as a metaphor of beauty. Life can be beautiful if you let it. When it is eroded by feelings of inadequacy and shame, it can manifest itself physically as another part of one's self that has been literally broken like a limb off a tree.

The Nature of Nicholas shows the struggling years of puberty in a way you may never see again on the big screen. It is a definitely a film you won't easily forget.

February 22, 2003

PUNCH (THINK FILM/BRIGHTLIGHT PICTURES, 2002)

By Rick Jackson

You won't want to miss Punch, one of this year's big surprises at the The Kingston Canadian Film Festival. Writer‑director Guy Bennett has come up with an impressive debut largely helped by a strong cast.

After introducing Dr. Sam Frizzell and his daughter Ariel, you are immersed in a blow‑by‑blow interrogation into their lives. The father, well played by Michael Riley, wants only the best for his daughter. When he brings home a date, Mary (Marcia Laskowski), the owner of a photo shop, the daughter feels her father can do better. She also is jealous and becomes enraged. Shocked by this behaviour, Sam must come to terms with Ariel and try to restore his short‑term relationship with Mary. Along the way, he meets Julie (Meredith McGeachie), Mary's sister, who also happens to be the undefeated champion of women's topless boxing.

This is not a carbon copy of Girlfight (2000), Karyn Kusama's directorial effort about a dysfunctional family and the triumph of an underdog fighting the odds. Altruistically speaking, Punch is also about a dysfunctional family trying to move on after the death of a loved one, a wife/mother who committed suicide.

When Sam suddenly realizes when he brings home a potential new soul mate that Ariel has become both a daughter and pseudo‑wife, he must separate the two for the sake of his needs as a man. At the same time, Ariel must learn to satisfy her needs which she is reluctant to do. Her bouts of jealous rage and temperament are not like her. However, the father innately realizes she is reaching out in another way. Since she was too young when her mother died, she doesn't understand the difference between loving your daughter and lover at the same time. The lines become confused in Ariel's mind and she lashes out at him. She actually sees her father as fulfilling the roles of both parents and there are concomitant circumstances.

In his original screenplay based partly on his own life experiences as a single father to his real‑life daughter, Sonja Bennett, who plays Ariel, the story hits home for him personally. For us watching, it represents the single parent family from the husband's point of view.

Sonja imbues her character with such brutal honesty and conviction, you hope she will eventually find her way to happiness and let her father do likewise. By film's end, she becomes a better person because she has figuratively and literally fought to make the necessary changes in order to grow from adolescence to adulthood.

Laskowski and McGeachie are uncannily portray sisters and their interaction with each other contribute to understanding the heartbeat of any relationship. The former's growth from her owlish appearance and shyness to a person with a more sure‑footing and determination to succeed is a revelation. Despite McGeachie's strong feminine attributes, she comes to realize that she, too, has her own set of needs which need to fulfilled. She need not feel she is fighting back at the world in the boxing ring.

Punch delivers a strong ensemble cast with memorable performances. Don't miss it.

February 22, 2003

19 MONTHS (CANADIAN FILM CENTRE, 2002)

By Rick Jackson

Benjamin Ratner and Angela Vint star in 19 Months, one of the most ridiculous movies I've ever seen, Canadian or otherwise. They play two people who have been living commonlaw for nineteen months and have mutually agreed to separate. On their last night, they have trouble agreeing to what movie they should rent so they decide to stay home.

Written and directed by Randall Cole, it gets lost in its own labyrinth of emotions and melodramatic spaces. After watching Ratner and Vint for a half‑hour, you are ready to walk away from this movie. They are clearly not destined to be in love for ever, and this point gets even clearer by the end.

Vint's Melanie is clearly the more mature and responsible half of their relationship. She wants to grow as a person and pursue her ambition as a struggling painter determined to put on her one‑woman exhibit at a local gallery.

At the opposite end is Ratner's Rob who is self conscious, annoying and not in tune with his true feelings. A professional student with three degrees under his belt, he is currently working on his fourth. When it comes to his love life, he is not honest with himself or others.

19 Months might well have been subtitled, "A Primer On How Not To Date" but it doesn't deserve any kudos. It is entirely forgettable.

February 22, 2003

MARION BRIDGE (MONGREL MEDIA, 2002)

By Rick Jackson

Marion Bridge breaks new ground in Canadian Cinema by bringing to the surface a very important health issue that Hollywood has eschewed in favor of car chases, escapism and comic book characters. What unfolds for ninety minutes is a powerful drama about the death of a family member. The film's title comes from a song of the same name.

Written by Daniel MacIvor (who won the best screenplay prize at the Atlantic Film Festival), based on his own play, you are slowly drawn into the lives of three sisters in a small town in Nova Scotia who are faced with their ailing Mother. When she is discharged and sent home to be cared for by her three daughters, the shock of her eventual death and memories of a happier time bring them together.

Agnes is the sister who moved away from home and as the film opens she is returning home. Her anger and emotion are hidden inside and she escapes by retreating to irresponsible behaviour by staying out late and drinking which only antagonizes her siblings. It is the hurt that scares her the most; the realization that her mother is going to die, and Molly Parker plays her with such honesty and conviction, you feel for her right to the end.

Stacy Smith plays Louise, the sister who can't face up to her mother coming home from the hospital. She thinks if she acts like a child by watching TV and playing the guitar, the new reality in her life might go away.

As the more serious sister Theresa, Rebecca Jenkins (Bye Bye Blues) gives one of her best screen performances. When you first see her she is struggling to save her relationship with Glen, who doesn't want to have children. She deals with her mother's illness with sarcasm and stays up all night like a motherly sister when Agnes comes home late. Theresa doesn't trust anyone, something she says she has to work on.

The scenes with the sisters together are so poignant, you become immersed in their personal lives: from Theresa's cry of despair at letting go of her fear over her mother's death, Agnes' retreat like a teenager out to have a good time, and her head‑to‑head chat with her two sisters who help bring her back to reality.

In an excellent supporting role, Ellen Page plays Joanie, a troubled teen who doesn't know her real name or anything from her past. When Agnes sees her, she is reminded of her own reckless youth.

One of the most poignant moments in the film comes in the last half‑hour when the mother is close to dying and Agnes reads her last words. She tells her daughters to see beautiful things and look for the good.

Augmented by Stefan Ivanov's cinematography, you get to see some stunning shots of the Nova Scotia countryside. The sunrise and sunsets you see underscore the end of the mother's life, and the new beginning the three sisters must face as they continue their lives without her.
Looking after a loved one at home is the central theme of Marion Bridge. It is more than just a story of a dying mother and her three daughters. Director Wiebke von Carolsfeld captures on film the closeness of the nuclear family during a most vulnerable time. Without resorting to comedy or satire, she presents the universal and complex nature of dying with downright honesty and conviction. Anyone who has ever lost a loved one will relate to the mother's death which is presented in a dignified and respectful manner.

Marion Bridge is rated 14A with the warnings: coarse language and mature theme. It premiered at the Kingston Canadian Film Festival. In attendance was the film's director Wiebke von Carolsfeld.

February 22, 2003

TRUE MEANING OF PICTURES (MERCURY FILMS, 2002)

By Rick Jackson

Directed by award‑winning documentary filmmaker Jennifer Baichwal, The True Meaning Of Pictures: Shelby Lee Adams' Appalachia is an absorbing and interesting account of a unique culture in the United States. Adams, who has been chronicling the life of Appalachia for over thirty years, has met with controversy over his pictures but it has not stopped him from portraying a people whose lives he sees as a vital part of Americana. The only way he feels he can do this is by letting you share in a living experience through his collection of pictures.

Throughout this documentary, you see him set up the pictures and are shown the end result. These are not phony Hollywood settings which surprises and shocks you when art critics are divided at the veracity of these pictures. Adams' photographs have been unfairly stereotyped as hillbilly and perpetuating the Hollywood myth of the aforementioned people in Kentucky, thanks in large part to films like director John Boorman's now classic Deliverance (1972).

One critic even suggests Adams' picture of an old woman with a pipe in her mouth is a straight copy right out of a Li'l Abner cartoon strip. Watching the story unfold before your very eyes, you know this is simply not true. Both sides tell their story with alarming alacrity and thanks to Baichwal's efforts in celebrating Shelby's collection of pictures, you are able to see firsthand there really exists such a people in Appalachia.

The experience of seeing the holiness people, a sect of the Pentecostal church who literally believe and practice the Book of Mark in what is called "serpent handling religion" brings home the sincerity and devotion of Adams' work as a photographer.

Trusted by everyone, he is able to return again and again to put together as a participant,
the celebration of lives lived. You see this in countless examples of their emotional and financial hardships to individual episodes of their daily lives. This is their true meaning, and Baichal's exploration of Adams's work brings this to light in an invigorating and entertaining way.

February 22, 2003

LOVE, SEX & EATING OF BONES (THINK FILM, 2003)

By Rick Jackson

One of the more interesting movies at this year's Kingston Canadian Film Festival is Love, Sex & Eating The Bones, a surrealistic comedy that will no doubt be an eclectic favorite for many moviegoers. Part of the film's title comes from a line in the movie, "I am here, flesh and bones," while the rest of it comes from the romantic relationship in it. After watching the first few minutes of it, I was taken aback by its bold subject, an adult movie packaged like a commercial blockbuster like Sleepless In Seattle.

Written and directed by Sudz Sutherland, from a story by Sutherland and Jennifer Holness, Love, Sex & Eating The Bones is as offbeat as it is funny. The two main cast members, Hill Harper and Marlyne N. Affleck, hold your attention after their first meeting. You want to see them together and you are not disappointed.

The plot turns are quite predictable, and much of the dialogue borders on your average daytime drama, but it is the performances that carry off the mundane to make it interesting, if you are willing to wait until the end.

Some older moviegoers may be disgusted by this film. The scenes of brief nudity and in the Pornucopia shop, and the virtual reality prostitute that comes to life in Michael's living room
may not be like anything you've seen before.

Hill Harper plays Michael, a struggling photographer who works as a security guard to make ends meet. When you first see him he is playing around with two of his fellow co‑workers and exhibiting irresponsible behaviour. He also has a sexual problem that almost ruins his chance of experiencing true love when he meets Jasmine at the neighbourhood laundromat.

Cast as Jasmine, a manager of an advertising agency, is Marlyne N. Affleck whose strong eye‑catching performance will be long remembered after the end credits roll. Her beauty almost rivals Halle Berry and let's hope we will see her in more meatier roles soon.

She tells Mike early in the film that she is celibate but that doesn't stop him from pursuing her. Impressed at the laundromat by his photographic album he carries with him, the two show sparks right away. Later on she asks him what he dreams about, an important question because she asks another man the same question with different results. His answer is his work, and being good enough to make a difference in the world.

Unbeknownst to either one of them, they both share the same feelings toward each other. She also tries to persuade Mike to do something with his photographs, to not hold back the gift he
has in the darkroom. He has a promising career if he only would get his act together and be more responsible.

The scenes of virtual reality in Mike's living room can only be perceived as part of his sexual fantasy or imagination. As he works in the darkroom there is a knock at the door; a call to feed on his carnal desires.

Sutherland uses a split screen technique when Jasmine and Mike are calling each other. It is reminscent of the old Hollywood style of moviemaking which was revived in last year's Down With Love, a tribute to the Doris Day/Rock Hudson movies of the 1950s and early 1960s.

One of the most memorable scenes in Sutherland's latest film comes near the end when Jasmine must do something to get Mike's attention and keep it. It doesn't prove quite enough, until both realize they are really in love with each other. The director is saying that in matters of the heart, this is all that matters.

Love, Sex & Eating The Bones is as offbeat as it is entertaining.

February 7, 2004

MOVING MALCOLM (MONGREL MEDIA, 2003)

By Rick Jackson

Written, directed, co‑produced and starring Benjamin Ratner, Moving Malcolm is a deeply flawed comedy about lost love. As you watch the characters interact, they are separated and brought together by a communal sense of belonging. As each struggles to survive in the real world, it is their bond of friendship with family and friends that brings them together.

Ratner the screenwriter loosely based his directorial debut on his own life, and the Maxwell family scenes were shot in the Ratner home. Just as the characters vie for attention and acceptance, there is an annoying sense of staginess in the presentation of many of the scenes, and the dialogue at times is rife with cliched and unnecessary dialogue when an emotion or reaction would have sufficed.

As Gene Maxwell, Ratner suffers from some ailment in which he needs to take pills but you are never told what it is. He also overacts and displays the emotions of a newcomer rather than an experienced actor. His credits include Bruce Sweeney's Last Wedding and 19 Months.

Elizabeth Berkley (Rodger Dodger, Any Given Sunday) plays Liz Woodward, who spurns Gene on their wedding day, only to return to him more than a year later to ask him help move her father, the Malcolm of the movie's title, played by veteran Canadian actor John Neville. She injects Liz with a sense of adventure and love as she flies off to Prague to star in a low‑budget science fiction movie. While there she has an affair with the stunt co‑ordinator. As you watch Liz and Gene talk on the phone you can sense they really do not belong together.

Neville gives a convincing performance as Malcolm, an aging patriarch whose daughter Liz is not home long enough to take care of him. His sense of humor and zest for life add a poignant touch. His long and distinguished career has seen him appear on many stages around the world, including Stratford Theatre in Stratford, the National Theatre, Broadway, and Nottingham Playhouse in England. Among the films he has appeared in are Spider and The Statement.

In supporting roles, Jay Brazeau and Babz Chula play Gene's parents and Rebecca Harker is Jolea Maxwell, Gene's sister who is autistic. Her character was based on Ratner's real‑life sister.

Under Ratner's direction, Moving Malcolm manages to hold your attention, even if it is slow‑paced and uneven.

February 7, 2004

LUCK (ODEON FILMS, 2002)

By Rick Jackson

Written and directed by Peter Wellington, Luck triumphs as a smart, witty film about a group of underachievers who like to bet. Using the Canada/Russia hockey series from 1972 as a backdrop, it carefully plots the intricacies of gambling by letting you see what happens when the gambler both wins and loses.

Luke Kirby is perfectly cast as Shane Bradley, the 28‑year‑old who agrees to look after Margaret's cat while she goes to England with her ex‑boyfriend. With her absence comes another shocking discovery for Shane; his luck has disappeared, too. When he makes a deal with a loan shark to pay it back, he goes deeper in debt and suffers physical pain. In an inspirational moment with his friends, Andrew, Vittorio and Robbie (Jed Rees, Sergio Di Zeo, and Noam Jenkins) they all become bookmakers during the Canada‑Russia hockey series. They first start making money by betting against Canada and lose $15 million. Margaret's return means Shane's luck has, too, and you are left hoping it does as the last scene fades to black and the end credits roll.

Cast as Margaret is Sarah Polley, who gained international recognition with her critically‑acclaimed performance in Atom Egoyan's The Sweet Hereafter. Last year she was effective as a dying mother and wife in My Life Without Me. In Luck, she plays the understanding friend who helps Shane.

Wellington captures the excitement of the Canada‑Russia series and for sports fans who remember 1972 it will be deja vu. For those who weren't around, it shows a piece of Canadian sports history relived in the guise of a fictional drama where one individaul (Shane) is the main focus. When he pushes his luck too far, he finds out there are serious consequences.

Luck is a good character study about gambling and how long fate is on your side.

February 7, 2004