Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Skhizein

As is their custom, the organ­izers of the CFC Worldwide Short Film Festival ded­icate the Opening Night pro­gram to award-winning shorts from around the world. This means that these films have screened lots of other places, but for me, they’re still discoveries.

  • Next Floor (12 minutes, Canada, Director: Denis Villeneuve): Eerily remin­is­cent of the ban­quet scenes in Peter Greenaway’s The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover, this stun­ningly art-directed short provides a nausea-inducing chron­icle of a dec­adent ban­quet. The comedy is provided by the recur­ring event of the table crashing through the floor and the waiters rushing down stairs to the “next floor.” The dark edge came when I couldn’t stop thinking that this was a stinging indict­ment of con­sumerism and envir­on­mental degrad­a­tion. (9/10)
  • Skhizein (13 minutes, France, Director: Jeremy Clapin): Another one that starts out with humour and ends with tragedy. Our anim­ated hero suf­fers a sense of dis­place­ment after a meteor hits the earth. He’s pre­cisely 91cm “off” which provides the anim­ators with plenty of sight gags. But by the end, we realize that what’s really being por­trayed is a form of mental ill­ness. Powerful. (9/10) (Note: The image above is from this short.)
  • Jerrycan (14 minutes, Australia, Director: Julius Avery): A kid stands up to a bully with explosive res­ults. Aims at the gritty realism of some­thing like Andrea Arnold’s Wasp but a little too heavy on the meta­phor and light on dia­logue. (7/10)
  • Coffee and Allah (14 minutes, New Zealand, Director: Sima Urale): An Ethiopian Muslim woman recently arrived in New Zealand feels out of place, but ulti­mately bonds with her neigh­bours over bad­minton and coffee. Too “cute” for my taste and actu­ally seemed much longer than its 14 minute run­ning time. (6/10)
  • Gone Fishing (Director: Chris Jones): Part tall tale and part sober remem­brance. Grasps at magic realism and comes up empty. Technically pol­ished but ulti­mately let down by its mawkish script and manip­u­lative music. (6/10)
  • The Secret Life of Beards (6 minutes, USA, Director: Melanie Levy): This whim­sical doc asks sev­eral men about their beards. For some it’s an expres­sion of their reli­gion, while for others it rep­res­ents freedom, or just lazi­ness. Fun but feather light. (7/10)
  • Teaching the Alphabet (4 minutes, Germany, Director: Volker Schreiner): Someone recites the alphabet over clips from Hollywood movies which high­light each letter. Underwhelming. (6/10)

Stay tuned for more reviews as the fest con­tinues to June 21st. Tickets are avail­able online and at the venues (Cumberland and ROM theatres).

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