After Dark

Black

by James McNally on August 16, 2009

in After Dark,Film Festivals

Black

Black (Director: Pierre Laffargue): I was a little con­cerned when I saw that the Toronto After Dark Film Festival had pro­grammed two films with sim­ilar blax­ploit­a­tion styles (and even sim­ilar titles). After seeing the rol­licking Black Dynamite (review) a few nights ago, I wondered if any­thing could top that exper­i­ence for pure fun. The nice thing is that Black doesn’t really try to do the same things. I sus­pected that the film’s French origin would lead to a more stylish and less slap­stick film, and I was right.

French rapper MC Gab’1 is the essence of cool as the tit­ular Black, leader of a gang of bank rob­bers in Paris. But after a heist goes spec­tac­u­larly wrong, he’s receptive when his cousin calls from Dakar to offer him an irres­ist­ible job. A briefcase full of uncut dia­monds is being kept in a safety deposit box at the bank where his cousin works as a security guard, and Black is con­fident that he and his French pals can easily rob the unsoph­ist­ic­ated Senegalese and be back in Paris quickly. Of course, things don’t go exactly to plan.

Before he knows it, the plan is com­plic­ated by a cor­rupt banker, Russian mer­cen­aries, wrest­lers with machetes who can make them­selves invis­ible, and a man whose snake­like appear­ance hints at his true char­acter. Black ulti­mately meets his match though in Pamela, a woman as tough as she is beau­tiful. When they team up, it’s refreshing to see her take charge. By the end, the plot has taken us to some very strange places, and the pacing is a bit slow in spots, but it’s all gor­geous to look at. There is some dazzling camera work during some of the chase scenes through the streets of Dakar, and the opening set piece (an armored car rob­bery in Paris) is bril­liantly dir­ected, ratcheting up the ten­sion and making the res­ulting flight to Africa feel like an escape.

Adding to all the style is a fant­astic propulsive soundtrack of African artists like 70s Afro-jazz trum­peter Don Cherry, the inim­it­able Fela Kuti and modern inter­preters like Antibalas.

Official site of the film

Here is the Q&A with dir­ector Pierre Laffargue and pro­ducer Lauranne Bourrachot from after the screening:

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Duration: 19:17

Black opens at the AMC Yonge-Dundas on August 28th

7/10(7/10)

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Franklyn

Franklyn (Director: Gerald McMorrow): Featuring a fairly high-profile cast (Ryan Phillippe, Eva Green, Sam Riley), this film from first-time dir­ector Gerald McMorrow was making its North American premiere at Toronto After Dark, nearly a year after it premiered in London. Digging around a little on the IMDB site, I found that it’s done very little busi­ness the­at­ric­ally and will have a dif­fi­cult time recouping its $12 mil­lion budget. Now nor­mally I don’t care about such mat­ters, but in the case of Franklyn, it may be some­what instructive.

The film gradu­ally weaves together four sep­arate threads. Three of the char­ac­ters live in present-day London, while one (Phillippe) exists in a futur­istic steam­punk world called Meanwhile City. The trailer and mar­keting mater­ials lean heavily on the steam­punk angle to try to lure genre fans such as those who attend Toronto After Dark, but in reality, the steam­punk seg­ments, though beau­tiful to look at, are the least sat­is­fying parts of the film. The blame for this lies squarely at the feet of the casting dir­ector. Phillippe is simply dreadful in a role that by all rights should have gone to a British actor. Playing a masked vigil­ante atheist in a city where reli­gion is the law, Phillippe attempts action-hero stuff by fighting “clerics” and deliv­ering a pon­derous voiceover.

When the film cuts back to the other char­ac­ters, it feels like we’re in a com­pletely dif­ferent movie. Eva Green plays a sui­cidal artist whose bizarre video pro­jects seem to exist in the film only to show her in dif­ferent out­fits and with dif­ferent makeup. Sam Riley is a heart­broken young man whose child­hood ima­ginary friend sud­denly reappears. Bernard Hill plays a quietly reli­gious man looking for his son who has escaped from a mental asylum. Although I don’t want to spoil any­thing, I think you might be able to figure out where this is headed.

I’m not opposed to this sort of psy­cho­lo­gical thriller. In fact, just a few weeks ago I men­tioned Paperhouse (1988), another British film which sim­il­arly blended genres to come up with some­thing fresh. And I will give McMorrow credit for an inter­esting idea which he is able to tie together nicely by the ending. But for most of the run­ning time, audi­ences are likely to be con­fused, and for genre audi­ences like those at Toronto After Dark, I sus­pect most would have pre­ferred to watch a film that was com­pletely set in the steam­punk uni­verse. To make mat­ters worse, the casting of Ryan Phillippe was a huge mis­step; his line read­ings had me rolling my eyes very early in the film.

I sus­pect that this will head straight to DVD on this side of the pond, and it would make an inter­esting rental, but one can only hope that McMorrow will get another chance to do a genre-blending film the right way.

6/10(6/10)

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Black Dynamite

Black Dynamite (Director: Scott Sanders): I don’t think the pro­gram­mers of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival could have picked a more per­fect film for their Opening Night gala. A nearly-sold-out Bloor Cinema was rocking with laughter from prac­tic­ally the first frame of Scott Sanders and star/writer Michael Jai White’s affec­tionate spoof of 70s blax­ploit­a­tion movies.

The first thing I have to say is that Michael Jai White was a rev­el­a­tion. At 41 years of age and a well-muscled 240 pounds, he seems almost incap­able of the flying mar­tial arts kicks he reg­u­larly delivers to the dope dealers and pimps who pop­u­late the story. But not only can he whoop ass. His comic timing is per­fect as well, which isn’t that sur­prising when you con­sider that he’s the writer of the film. Director Sanders revealed in the post-screening Q&A that he and White had been working on the idea behind the film for many years, and they put together a cheap trailer using clips from old films mixed with their own dia­logue. The trailer was enough to get the film funded, even though they spent a sig­ni­ficant amount of the budget on licensing old footage from 70s shows like Charlie’s Angels and The Rookies.

The cruddy 70s look is essen­tial to main­taining the “grind­house” feel of the many cheaply-made films Black Dynamite is mocking. Sanders even goes so far as to include “mis­takes” like boom mikes intruding into the frame (an homage to Dolemite, he says) and hil­arious con­tinuity errors like a character’s tears dis­ap­pearing and reappearing between scenes. The audi­ence lapped it up, even when the plot’s ludicrous twists and turns brought Black Dynamite face to face with President Nixon, who seemed pretty handy with a set of nunchuks.

A film like this could easily have been fun but for­get­table. Gunplay, mar­tial arts, and the spot-on kitschy art dir­ec­tion keep our eyes amused, but for me the real cre­ativity was on dis­play in the writing. The many mem­or­able one-liners and hil­arious song lyrics give this tre­mendous repeat viewing poten­tial. Within the first ten minutes, I was already eager to bring my friends to see Black Dynamite.

Here is the Q&A with dir­ector Scott Sanders from after the screening:

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Duration: 14:23

8/10(8/10)

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Post image for Toronto After Dark Fest Opens Friday

Wow. When the Toronto After Dark Film Festival decided to move from October to August, I never real­ized how quickly it would come up again. But even though I’ve been spending most of my time thinking about TIFF lately, I’m still plan­ning to see a bunch of great genre cinema over the next week. Here’s my tent­ative schedule:

Dead Snow

All screen­ings are at the Bloor Cinema (Bathurst subway stop) and indi­vidual tickets are usu­ally $10 in advance, $12 at the door. It’s good to see that all the fest­ival VIP passes sold out again this year, so the Bloor should be rocking at every screening with some of the most enthu­si­astic audi­ences at any fest I’ve attended.

Black Dynamite

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Toronto After Dark Film Festival

Just a heads-up to any film­makers, local or oth­er­wise, who haven’t yet sub­mitted their work to Toronto’s best horror, sci-fi and action film fest­ival. They’ve moved the dates this year to August 14–21, so that means the sub­mis­sion dead­lines are also dif­ferent this year. You have just TWO DAYS before the final dead­line of May 15th, and I know that the more work they receive, the better the even­tual pro­gramme will be.

Stuff I’d like to see at Toronto After Dark this year:

Not sure if any of these film­makers have sub­mitted or been invited, but here’s hoping!

P.S. I’m sure the lads over at Twitch have a few on their wish list as well.

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