October 2007

Oh, happy day! Paul McGann and Richard E. Grant are reunited in a short, called “Always Crashing In The Same Car.” If the Bowie song title and the reunited Withnail and I stars appeal to you, it’s freely down­load­able from The Times web site.

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Aachi and Ssipak (Achi-wa ssipak)

Aachi and Ssipak (Achi-wa ssipak) (Director: Jo Beom-jin): There’s not much point in trying to ana­lyze a film about a dystopic future world where the source of energy is human feces, but I can say that this anim­ated fea­ture from Korea was loads of fun. Our tit­ular char­ac­ters are a couple of lowlifes trying to get by in this miser­able future by stealing juicy­bars, the government’s reward for each citizen’s, uh, con­tri­bu­tion to the energy supply. The fact that these druggy pops­icles are highly addictive has cre­ated some prob­lems, not least of which is the emer­gence of a whole swarm of addicts whose bodies can no longer pro­duce the required material. These smurf-like creatures band together to form the Diaper Gang and ter­rorize the police and anyone else trying to con­trol the supply. The plot is a little more com­plic­ated, but this basic premise means lots of action scenes between the police, the Diaper Gang and our heroes. Ssipak’s infatu­ation with a porn star with prodi­gious pooping abil­ities leads them into a rescue mis­sion, since she’s been kid­napped by the Diaper Gang. If it all sounds ridicu­lous, it is, but you have to give the film­makers some credit for ori­gin­ality. Some of the best parts of this film (and any film which sat­ir­izes the future) were the mock ads and public ser­vice announce­ments telling people how to max­imize their poop. This foul-mouthed, polit­ic­ally incor­rect, scata­logical and glee­fully violent film is prob­ably not suit­able for actual chil­dren, but it will appeal to the stunted adoles­cent that lives within most of us.

Trailer (no subtitles)

English sub­titled DVD avail­able from YesAsia.com (Region 3 NTSC)

7/10(7/10)

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Get Animated!

October 28 is World Animation Day and our National Film Board is hosting Get Animated!, a series of screen­ings and present­a­tions on the sub­ject across the country. The best part? Everything is FREE! (Our tax dol­lars at work, yet again!). The Toronto Mediatheque at 150 John Street (at the corner of Queen, across from the nasty “Scotiabank” mega­plex cinemas) has a full pro­gramme run­ning from Thursday October 25th through Sunday the 28th.

I’d par­tic­u­larly recom­mend the October 25th present­a­tion and dis­cus­sion of Madame Tutli Putli, a jaw-dropping and eerie puppet anim­a­tion that fea­tures the most real­istic eyes I’ve ever seen in an anim­ated film. The film has already picked up two awards and is a favourite to win an Oscar.

More inform­a­tion about other coun­tries’ par­ti­cip­a­tion is avail­able at the web site of the Association Internationale du Film d’Animation, where it is referred to as International Animation Day.

International Animation Day 2007

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For The Bible Tells Me So
Editor’s Note: Doc Soup is a monthly doc­u­mentary screening pro­gramme run by the good folks at Hot Docs. It gives audi­ences in Toronto (and now Calgary and Vancouver!) their reg­ular doc fix each year from the fall through to the spring, leading up to the Hot Docs fest­ival itself.

For The Bible Tells Me So (Director: Daniel Karslake): This doc­u­mentary came to my atten­tion through Joel Heller’s excel­lent site Docs That Inspire, before it played at Sundance this past January. The film explores the inter­sec­tion of homo­sexu­ality and reli­gion, par­tic­u­larly among con­ser­vative Christians, and as such, it tackles a sub­ject near and dear to me. I spent many years immersed in the evan­gel­ical sub­cul­ture and went through the very painful coming-out exper­i­ence of a close friend. This is exactly the sort of film I wish we’d had in the early 90s. Through the exper­i­ences of five Christian fam­ilies, each with a gay or les­bian child, we watch as real people struggle to integ­rate their love for their fam­ilies with their own beliefs and exper­i­ences. But this isn’t the typ­ical con­front­a­tional sort of film many of us have seen before. Instead, we meet clergy who have wrestled hon­estly with what the Bible says, and who are able to recon­cile their faith with accept­ance of gay and les­bian people. It’s gut-wrenching stuff, and not everyone will be con­vinced by the theo­logy, but at least it gets people dis­cussing the meaning of the dis­puted bib­lical pas­sages, rather than just quoting them.

I par­tic­u­larly liked that not all the fam­ilies are the same. Some still struggle to accept what they per­ceive to be their child’s “sinful” life­style, while others have gone on to polit­ical act­ivism (in some cases, even to the point of being arrested!). Karslake has made a very wise choice by adopting the name of a par­tic­u­larly obstinate opponent of gay rights, Focus on the Family, as his theme. By focus­sing on the real fam­ilies and exper­i­ences of gay people, he removes much of the appre­hen­sion and fear of straight people, espe­cially reli­gious straight people. I loved the way he intro­duced each family by having the par­ents explain how they them­selves met and fell in love. It showed us that attrac­tion and romance are at the root of all of our fam­ilies, and that the rela­tion­ships of gay people are really not much dif­ferent than anyone else’s.

If I have any mis­giv­ings about the film, they are rel­at­ively minor. One is the use of a short anim­ated seg­ment to try to explain some of the recent sci­entific research around homo­sexu­ality. I thought the tone was a little too self-consciously light-hearted and I thought the seg­ment was largely unne­ces­sary. The other quibble was that earlier in the film, Focus on the Family’s Dr. James Dobson is (right­fully) called out for com­paring advoc­ates of gay mar­riage to Hitler, but then later, actual footage of Hitler is used to describe the per­se­cu­tion of gay people. I don’t think you can have it both ways.

Nevertheless, this is a fair, gen­erous, and incred­ibly moving por­trait of real people trying to recon­cile their deepest-held beliefs with their very iden­tities of them­selves or of those closest to them. I’m not ashamed to tell you that I was moved to tears sev­eral times. Despite that, I think it’s a film that would move others who are per­haps not quite so close to the issues. My wife and I have a run­ning joke. We’ve got the great idea that if only fun­da­ment­alist Christians and gay people could actu­ally meet each other instead of hurling insults across the divide, much under­standing and even recon­cil­a­tion could be achieved. I’ve offered to hold a series of dinner events called “Fags and Fundies” to which we could invite quite a few of our friends. I think I’ve found the per­fect film to get the dis­cus­sion started.

NOTE: The film is showing in various venues in the US in the coming months, but so far, there are no Toronto screening dates. Check the film’s site for any changes, and look for a DVD release in the coming months.

UPDATE (January 9, 2008): The film’s Toronto premiere will be tonight at the Bloor Cinema as part of the Doc Soup pro­gramme. Director Daniel Karslake will be in attend­ance. Screenings at 6:30pm and 9:15pm.

Official web site of the film

Docs That Inspire’s Joel Heller inter­views dir­ector Daniel Karslake

Soulforce, an organ­iz­a­tion of gay and les­bian Christians and their straight allies fighting reli­gious bigotry

PFLAG (Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays)

9/10(9/10)

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