Monday, April 26, 2004

Hot Docs is a doc­u­mentary film fest­ival here in Toronto now in its 11th year. This year, I finally decided to see some films. It’s a huge con­trast to the massive, glitzy, and celebrity-obsessed Toronto International Film Festival that I’ve been attending for the past ten years. Lineups are more man­age­able, for one. And nobody’s looking for stars all over town. In other words, it’s great.

I saw four films this weekend:

  • Slasher (US, Director: John Landis) — This film fol­lows Michael “Slasher” Bennett, a sort of used-car super­salesman who’s brought in to strug­gling deal­er­ships to “slash” prices in spe­cial weekend sales. He boasts of selling 200 cars once in four days. He brings in his DJ pal, as well as a “mer­cenary” salesman just to turn up the heat on the dealership’s guys. He hires pretty girls to “register” cus­tomers to win prizes, including an $88 car. His legendary skills only go so far in eco­nom­ic­ally depressed Memphis, where his cru­sade only man­ages to sell 35 cars on Memorial Day weekend. This was enjoy­able, but bogged down when the sale started to turn sour. (7/10)
  • The Take (Canada/Argentina, Director: Avi Lewis) — Directed and written by Canada’s royal couple of the left, Avi Lewis and Naomi Klein (author of the best­selling No Logo), The Take is a fas­cin­ating look at what hap­pens when the unem­ployed decide to take mat­ters into their own hands. After Argentina’s spec­tac­ular eco­nomic col­lapse in 2001, many factories simply locked their doors and fired their workers. Rather than see the bank­rupt busi­nesses sell off all the equip­ment for pen­nies on the dollar, the workers have begun reclaiming the factories, first occupying them and then restarting pro­duc­tion, without the bosses. Lewis and Klein made the film after their anti-globalization mes­sage met with the ques­tion: “What would you replace glob­al­ized cap­it­alism with?” Though the film doesn’t attempt to por­tray the “occu­pied factory” move­ment as the answer for every situ­ation, it raises inter­esting ques­tions in an emo­tion­ally enga­ging way. (10/10)
  • The Ritchie Boys (Germany/Canada, Director: Christian Bauer) — This film tells the story of a group of Jewish refugees who enlisted in the US Army during WWII and were recruited for a spe­cial intel­li­gence unit and sent back to Nazi Germany, where they worked mostly as inter­rog­ators of POWs. Their story makes for a fas­cin­ating and moving film. Surprisingly, it’s also full of humour and fond memories. (10/10)
  • Super Size Me (US, Director: Morgan Spurlock) — I’d wanted to see this since I’d heard about it at SXSW, where it was screened in March. Director Morgan Spurlock, inspired by a court case involving two obese teens who attempted to sue McDonald’s for their health prob­lems, decides to live for a month on nothing but McDonald’s food. He inter­sperses footage of his daily “meals” with inter­views with health care pro­fes­sionals, lob­by­ists for the food industry, edu­cators, even a former Surgeon General. The film has been cri­ti­cized by some as a bit of a stunt. Of course, eating fast food for thirty days isn’t going to be good for you. (Boy, see the film and you’ll see how much of an under­state­ment that is!). But Spurlock uses his stunt as a way to raise some good ques­tions about per­sonal as well as cor­porate respons­ib­ility. This film makes a good com­panion piece to Eric Schlosser’s excel­lent book Fast Food Nation. A har­rowing, and yet enter­taining, exper­i­ence. And it’s opening the­at­ric­ally on May 7. Check out the film’s web site, too. (10/10)

So, a great start. I’ve got six more films to see in the next week, plus a few more to choose. I’ll try to say some­thing about each one.

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