writers gone wild! |
The Victoria Independent Film and Video Festival, now in its eighth year, is like the little engine that could in a city thats, well not really a city so much as a postcard village on steroids. With a mission to expose and inspire both youth and adults to the use of film as a creative tool, this years event screened 165 films and had an impressive array of special programs including new media interactive events, film forums, art shows, workshops, lectures, special screenings, parties, and more parties. One of the new events at this years festival was InFocus, a program that emphasizes the films of one country. This year the spotlight was on Austria with such notable films as Jedermanns Fest and La Pianiste with the wonderful Isabelle Hupert in the title role. Kathy Kay, the festivals director, is serious about making independent film accessible to the average viewer, and it was while on that quest that the opening night film was chosen. "We have found in general that the gala audience are not particularly independent filmgoers, and so this year we selected a film that was more accessible."
I dont like to compare films, hell, truth be told, I dont even particularly like reviewing films, but film festivals are a setup for that inevitability. So let me say straight up that Todd Solondzs latest, Storytelling, was not only the best at the festival but surpasses his own earlier films (Welcome to the Dollhouse and Happiness) as well. Storytelling is the best commentary on race and class that I have seen, and it is one of the best on sex. (Beware, though, if you see the film outside of a film festival venue, youll probably see a big red box strategically placed to cover the most graphic of the sex scenes Solondzs one concession in pursuit of an R rating.) Storytelling has been described as two films in one, though it might be more accurately described as one film from two different perspectives. The first, titled Fiction, has four main characters young punkish girl, disabled boyfriend, sadistic teacher, star student using sex and creative writing to spar with each other and themselves in ways that leave the audience crying "uncle." Part two, titled Nonfiction, doesnt let up in its uncompromising romp through Americas suburbs, this time through the lens of a loser documentarian who follows a high school student whose only goal is to be a talk show host, and his family (John Goodman plays the father) and their Salvadoran help. In my view, Solondz has done his best work yet. Vacuuming Completely Nude in Paradise from Britains Danny Boyle (Trainspotting) is the story of a vacuum cleaner salesman whose sole purpose in life is to sell more than anybody else with such obnoxious aggression that he is hated by all his colleagues. Timothy Spall plays it so well and so maniacally that the audience hopes only for his long and torturous demise. But just when we think we dont give a rats ass about the character and, in fact, think he may be too over-the-top nasty, Boyle does something remarkable. He manages, within minutes, to make us care. Jim Cartwright has written an ending that slams the brakes on a runaway train and the audience is left to recover as the credits roll. Lunch with Charles, a Canada-Hong Kong coproduction, written and directed by Michael Parker, is a light romantic comedy that could have easily swerved into slapstick but never did partly because of the development of each of the four main characters and partly because the script always stayed interesting. Lunch with Charles is the story of a husband who lives in Hong Kong and his wife who lives in Canada. Shes given him an ultimatum to move to Canada or lose her. He thinks shes having an affair and, unbeknownst to her, makes the trip to Vancouver to save his marriage. Circumstances have them continuously missing each other as she travels to the Canadian Rockies for work, meeting somebody else along the way, her husband following in her trail and also meeting somebody else along the way. The cast of Sean Lau (Hong Kong film veteran), Nicholas Lea (X-Files, Vertical Limit), Theresa Lee (The Poet), Francoise Yip (The Pledge), and Bif Naked, in a debut performance, are all excellent and play off each other well. On the more serious side, Lola is the story of a woman (Sabrina Grokvich) who is unhappy in her marriage to emotionally abusive Mike (Colm Feore) and would appear to have been just waiting to meet wild child Sandra (Joanna Going) to set herself free. After tragedy takes Sandra out of the picture, Lola decides to leave her husband for good and take Sandras place, wig and all, in what would have been her first visit home in ten years to see her mother. Canadian director Carl Bessai shot this film with a minimal crew and Dogme-style techniques, and it is exactly because of that (along with the wonderfully subtle acting of both Going and Grokvich) that Lola succeeds. The excellent editing, acting, and lighting make this a film to watch out for. Lola won the festivals Best Canadian First Feature award.
If youre wondering what really went on behind the scenes of the renowned all-women Lilith tour, Lilith on Top, a Canadian documentary from Lynne Stopkewich, follows Sarah McLachlan et al. in the final year of their life on the road. Editing together over 400 hours of recorded material and 200 of archival footage, Stopkewich has documented what McLachlan set out to prove that women musicians could successfully tour the continent, creating culture along the way. There are a few scenes that stand above the rest, most notably any in which the indefatigable Sarah Bernhard appears. Chrissie Hynde spent her days on the tour trying to get Sarah to stop being such a "good girl," succeeding at last, to her surprise, when the two of them were playing on stage together. Suffice it to say, Ms. Hynde ends up on her knees mumbling into the mike about Sarahs beautiful breasts. The great thing about Lilith was the camaraderie and playfulness between the musicians, and Lilith on Top highlights that well. The film won the festivals award for best documentary. The VIFVF 2002 Audience award went to The Business of Fancydancing, in which Sherman Alexie (writer of Smoke Signals) makes his directorial debut. The story follows two young men Seymour (Evan Adams) and Aristotle (Gene Tagaban) from a Northwest reserve who head off to college together. Seymour makes it and stays, becoming a famous poet, discovering along the way that hes gay, hooking up with a white partner. Ari doesnt make it and moves back to the reserve, resenting Seymour for stealing the tribes stories. After a friends death, Seymour returns to the reserve for the first time in ten years where he must learn to come to terms with who he is on his own and in relation to his friends, his culture, and his tribe. Fancydancing is based on Alexies own poetry, which weaves its way throughout the film, adding a delightful lyrical feel. The Victoria Independent Film and Video Festival has a mandate to screen at least 50 percent Canadian films, which they surpassed this year with a showing of 66 percent. Given the ubiquitousness of Hollywood, thats a really good thing for us Canadians. April 2002 | Issue 36 ACCESS: Skedaddle to this worthy festivals home page. ALSO: More film festivals, plus Joanne Bealy reviews the French-Canadian documentary In the Shadow of Hollywood. |
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New book from the
editor and writers of
Bright Lights Film Journal
Action! Interviews with Directors
from Classical Hollywood to
Contemporary Iran
(Anthem Art and Culture),
by Gary Morris (Editor),
Bert Cardullo (Introduction),
Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword).
London and New York:
Anthem Press, 2009.
"I dare anyone to squeeze between
two covers a more varied, useful and
flat out entertaining sampling of
the personalities that make the
seventh art the liveliest."
David Hudson, IFC.com
Interviews
Robert Bresson
Roger Corman (with Bruce Dern
and David Carradine)
Allan Dwan
Clint Eastwood
Douglas Sirk
Robert Wise
Mania Akbari
Lars von Trier
Michael Haneke
Allie Light
Melvin and Mario van Peebles
Otto Muehl
The Brothers Quay
Barbara Kopple
Federico Fellini
Abbas Kiarostami
François Truffaut
Caveh Zahedi
Peter Bogdanovich and
Joseph McBride
on Orson Welles