Tabloid

Tabloid
eOne released Tabloid on DVD in Canada on November 1, 2011. Help support Toronto Screen Shots by buying it on Amazon.ca.

Tabloid (Director: Errol Morris): Joyce McKinney first came to the attention of director Errol Morris back in 2008 when she paid a huge sum to a Korean lab to have her beloved dog Booger, recently deceased, cloned. As interesting as that story was, it was nothing compared to Ms. McKinney’s earlier exploits. Back in the late 1970s, she’d been a tabloid sensation in the UK due to her involvement in a bizarre kidnapping plot involving a Mormon missionary. Ex-beauty queen McKinney claimed that her boyfriend Kirk Anderson had been brainwashed by Mormons and taken to England against his will, and that she was simply setting out to rescue him. But the rescue involved a fake gun, chloroform, and Anderson’s confinement (involving either ropes or chains, depending on the source) in a rural cottage where he was raped over a period of several days. McKinney’s version reads much more romantically. She took Kirk to a “honeymoon cottage” where they cooked meals and made love. She wanted to take him to a “quiet” place where she could essentially deprogram him from what she considered the cult-like indoctrination that was keeping them apart. She was eventually arrested and charged, and as the story emerges, the British papers had a field day. After three months in custody, she was granted bail along with her accomplice Keith “KJ” May, and they promptly fled the country, disguised as deaf-mutes. To hear her describe it today, it all sounds like a lark, rather than criminal behaviour.

Once back in the US, she contacted one of the tabloids, the Daily Express, to sell her story. Meanwhile, its competitor, the Mirror, was attempting to dig up some dirt on the woman loudly proclaiming her innocence. And boy did they succeed. I won’t spoil any more of the film’s many entertaining surprises, but I promise you that you’ll be riveted. And that’s surely Morris’ intent, but I believe he’s also very consciously implicating all of us in a continuing tabloid story. Why do we love these kind of lurid tales, and what makes us so happy to see someone pour out details of their life that any rational person would keep private? It’s interesting to note that although Joyce McKinney participated readily in the film’s production, she’s since disavowed it, going so far as to turn up at some of the film’s festival screenings to dispute certain aspects of her portrayal.

And that’s where the film makes me a bit uncomfortable. McKinney is charming and a born storyteller, perfectly happy to explain her side of the story, and sounding reasonable most of the time. But as I continued to watch, it became more and more clear that she’s almost certainly mentally ill. Her obsession with the romantic fantasy of Kirk being “the one” for her has condemned her to a lonely life where this bizarre tale is her only narrative. She has the likeability of most professional liars, and when parts of her story don’t add up, she simply throws another curveball to distract us. At one point, referring to Kirk’s supposed brainwashing, she says, “you can tell a lie often enough that you believe it.” It’s all terribly sad, and I wonder if Morris should have simply let this story, great as it is, go past him.

On the other hand, it’s a chance to have a discussion about these kinds of issues. Are films and stories like this exploitative, or are they simply a part of human experience? I’m sure Joyce McKinney, no matter what she claims after the fact, was delighted to be able to tell her unforgettable story to a whole new audience, and sad as it may be to give any more attention to something that happened so long ago, she seems to relish the opportunity to revisit it. It’s both unfortunate and completely understandable that the Prince Charming in her romantic fable, Kirk Anderson, has refused all requests for interviews over the years. He’s busy living a regular guy’s life.



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Toronto After Dark Film Festival 2011

It’s been a long 14 months since the last edition of Toronto’s best genre film festival. Toronto After Dark decided to move back to their traditional October (think Hallowe’en!) time slot after a couple of years in August. It was just too hot to wear zombie makeup in the summer, I expect.

Although the fall can be pretty crowded with film events in our city, After Dark attracts a fiercely loyal audience. Even the move to a new venue (all screenings are being held at the Toronto Underground Cinema while the storied Bloor Cinema undergoes renovations) shouldn’t hurt attendance. It also helps that Adam Lopez and his crack team of programmers have put together a very solid-looking lineup of horror, sci-fi and other genre cinema. Here are a few I’m excited about:

  • Friday October 21, 7:00pm Exit Humanity – a zombie western? Why not? It seems like blending genres is the thing to do now, and this promises to be more campy fun than Cowboys & Aliens.
  • Saturday October 22, 4:15pm Redline – a Japanese anime film seven years in the making, with character designs from the truly wacky Katsuhito Ishii (Funky Forest), this film promises Speed Racer thrills in its story about a high-stakes race that takes place on a distant planet.
  • Sunday October 23, 4:15pm Love – a cerebral sci-fi tale about an astronaut stranded on the International Space Station after he hears that civilization on Earth has been destroyed. If this reaches the heights of Moon or Silent Running, I’ll be very pleased indeed.
  • Monday October 24, 9:45pm A Lonely Place to Die – Drawing comparisons to The Descent, this film is about a group of young mountaineers climbing in the Scottish highlands who stumble across a kidnapping plot and soon find themselves on the run from a pair of professional killers when they try to save the young victim.
  • Tuesday October 25, 7:00pm The Divide – Eight people survive the Apocalypse in the basement of their apartment building only to slowly turn on each other. Promises to be suitably bleak for a film about the end of the world.
  • Tuesday October 25, 9:45pm Manborg – at After Dark a few years ago, I saw a short called Lazer Ghosts 2: Return to Lazer Cove from director Steven Kostanski and thought it was just brilliant. Hilariously campy and yet affectionate, his work is here extended to feature length in a Robocop homage/sendup about a dead soldier brought back to life as a cyborg killing machine.

The fun starts tonight, so what are you waiting for? See you AFTER DARK!

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From the Sky Down

From the Sky Down

From the Sky Down (Director: Davis Guggenheim): When asked to choose the best two albums in U2’s catalogue, most fans and music critics will pick 1987’s The Joshua Tree and 1991’s Achtung Baby. That the band’s strongest work is on albums that sound so radically different from one another is, even two decades later, fairly astounding, and points emphatically to the group’s renowned disdain for creative passivity. As frontman Bono has famously said, Achtung Baby was “the sound of four men cutting down The Joshua Tree“, as U2 struggled to cope with superstardom and needed to “go away and dream it all up again.” That hard-fought musical and personal journey for the band forms the foundation of From the Sky Down, directed by Davis Guggenheim (best known for An Inconvenient Truth and Waiting for Superman). Guggenheim, who had previously directed U2 guitarist The Edge in his underseen 2008 film It Might Get Loud, was approached by the band to put together some sort of visual document to tie in with the upcoming 20th anniversary reissue of Achtung Baby.

From the Sky Down takes a surprisingly brief glimpse at the band’s overall history and I was also somewhat taken aback by the complete absence of any mention of what they might have up their sleeve for the future. No, the focus here is almost entirely on the late 80s-early 90s era of the group, a refreshing approach from a rock documentary format that traditionally only offers a quickly moving biographical summary, with little allowance for a truly in-depth examination of particular periods or albums. Perhaps the band was inspired by The Promise: The Making of Darkness on the Edge of Town, another high profile doc that deconstructed the making of a classic album from their friend and peer, Bruce Springsteen. From the Sky Down features extensive one-on-one interviews with each member of the band (they’re rounded out by drummer Larry Mullen Jr. and bassist Adam Clayton) that provide a comprehensive revisiting of a period that began just after the band’s explosion in popularity with the release of The Joshua Tree, through to the beginning of their landmark Zoo TV Tour in 1992. Not surprisingly, the interviews with the sharp-witted Bono are the most revelatory and entertaining. Special attention is paid to 1988’s Rattle and Hum, the much-derided and misunderstood documentary (with a companion album) that chronicled U2’s burgeoning interest in American roots music. Personally, I’m a huge fan of the film, but the band admits their message was misinterpreted and only reinforced many people’s opinion of the Irish quartet as self-important and insufferable personalities. Guggenheim makes good use of some previously unseen Rattle and Hum outtakes, including one that shows an irate Bono ripping on some incompetent stage workers.

Achtung Baby‘s difficult recording sessions form the heart of the film, with additional perspective provided by the album’s producers (Daniel Lanois and Brian Eno), engineer (Flood), and longtime photographer (Anton Corbijn). Guggenheim reconvenes the group at Berlin’s Hansa Studios, where recording began, but where little results were produced due to creative friction and roadblocks. Bono and The Edge wanted to take U2’s sound in a more electronic, experimental direction, with which Mullen Jr. and Clayton couldn’t come to terms. The occasional animation sequences that Guggenheim employs (accompanied by band member voiceovers taken from their interviews) are used to best effect here, with one sequence showing metaphorical walls being erected between the four bandmates. The visual takes on even more symbolic meaning, considering they were in the city during the fall of the Berlin Wall. The band digs out and reflects on old demos, and talks about their songwriting process, which frequently features Bono using gibberish (dubbed “Bongolese”) in place of unwritten lyrics. Two songs get the most attention: “Mysterious Ways” and “One.” The former, originally titled “Sick Puppy,” helped the band turn a corner from their creative difficulties and eventually led to the creation of “One,” which sprang from an idea used in the original bridge in “Mysterious Ways.” The two tracks were the only ones from the album that were completed in Berlin, with the rest finished back home in Dublin.

Guggenheim’s decision to bookend the film with scenes from the group’s much-hyped appearance at this past summer’s Glastonbury Festival is only moderately effective, but he captures some great footage of the band rehearsing various Achtung Baby songs in preparation for the big gig (one of the filming locations is Winnipeg’s Burton Cummings Theatre, during a tour stop in the city this past spring). The standouts include a rough run-through of “Who’s Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses,” which really jumped out of the speakers of the Ryerson Theatre’s sound system, and a rare solo vocal performance from The Edge of the album’s haunting closing song, “Love Is Blindness.” U2 has always been a band that has been quite protective of their creative process, and judging by the looseness and candour demonstrated by the band as we see them revisit old songs and experiment with arrangements (we see Bono yelling out upcoming chord changes to the rest of the group), it’s clear that Guggenheim was able to cultivate an intimate level of trust with his subjects.

Shot over the course of six months earlier this year and completed just a week before its world premiere last month at TIFF, Guggenheim’s documentary digs deep down into the inner workings of a band at a pivotal and tumultuous phase in their career. My only complaint about From the Sky Down would be that the director doesn’t quite dig deep enough when it comes to looking at the whole of Achtung Baby, an album that Bono says in the film “is the reason we’re still here now.” An inordinate amount of attention is paid to the creation of “Mysterious Ways” and “One” (which are important songs, to be sure), while other notable tracks such as “The Fly,” “Even Better Than the Real Thing,” “Who’s Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses,” and “Until the End of the World” are included only as performances or over the soundtrack, with little or no detail or insight into their origins. One of the album’s best songs, “Ultraviolet (Light My Way),” isn’t mentioned at all, nor can I recall even hearing a snippet of it in the film. Despite this relatively minor negative, From the Sky Down is loaded with positives that make it essential viewing for any U2 fan.


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Lc_taZ0GbU
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The Tree of Life

The Tree of Life
eOne released The Tree of Life on DVD and Blu-ray in Canada on October 11, 2011. Help support Toronto Screen Shots by buying it on Amazon.ca.

The Tree of Life (Director: Terrence Malick): When I first saw Terrence Malick’s long-awaited fifth film back in the spring, I simply couldn’t write about it. Certainly still in the top spot for my Film of the Year, it hasn’t become any easier to articulate my thoughts about a film so personal and yet so universal. I can say with certainty, though, that the film looks every bit as stunning on Blu-ray as it did projected theatrically, and that means that you should certainly add it to your collection.

The Tree of Life has been described as Malick’s most personal film yet, featuring a family very much like his own in a time and place very similar to where and when he grew up. At the heart of the story is a tragedy, the loss of a beloved child, and the oldest son’s remembrances of his brother, his own childhood, and especially his relationships with his mother and father. As young Jack (Hunter McCracken) leaves childhood behind for the turbulence of adolescence, he’s torn between the comfort of his mother’s (Jessica Chastain) unconditional love and his more conflicted feelings toward his strict father (Brad Pitt). There is an ever-present narrator, though the voices change. Sometimes it’s the voice of his mother, sometimes his father, and sometimes you wonder if it might even be God.

Quite apart from the remembrances of Jack (played as an adult by Sean Penn), there is an entire sequence visualizing the formation of the Earth and the beginning of life itself. Malick worked with special effects expert Douglas Trumbull to make these look as natural as possible, depending on computers only when absolutely necessary. The imagery is stunning throughout, both the special effects stuff and the warmly nostalgic cinematography by Emmanuel Lubezki, who worked with Malick on his previous film The New World.

The Tree of Life is Malick at his most Malickian, and by that I mean that plot and character are not revealed through traditional narrative, but more by the accumulation of details and impressions. Music is important and the camera sweeps around like a paintbrush on a canvas. The voiceovers can seem a bit ponderous to someone not expecting a film about the Big Questions, but if you’re prepared to be stirred emotionally, existentially and, dare I say spiritually, this film will simply knock you out.

The most helpful thing I can say about this film is that it’s a mirror. What you end up thinking or feeling about it will be very much determined by what you bring into the experience. That’s why I’m so excited to have such a beautiful work of art in such a pristinely presented package. The Tree of Life is a film that will deeply reward patience and repeated viewings, at least for me.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WXRYA1dxP_0
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EstDocs 2011

Celebrating 20 years of Estonian independence, this year’s EstDocs will feature a special focus on films that revisit that small country’s struggle against the powerful Soviet state. Now in its seventh year, EstDocs will run from October 14-18, screening 12 films (10 with English subtitles). Of particular interest is a rare screening of the newly-restored Year of the Dragon (Draakoni Aasta), originally filmed in 1988, a year of democratic awakening in Estonia. Quarter-million-strong all night song vigils led to a courageous declaration of Estonian sovereignty and to eventual independence as the Soviet Union collapsed. This will certainly be an emotional screening for members of Toronto’s Estonian community and would be a great way to discover the passion and unquenchable patriotism of the Estonian people. Here’s a still from the film:

Year of the Dragon (Draakoni Aasta) [still]

Most screenings take place at Tartu College (310 Bloor St. West) and tickets are available at the door. Full program information available at the EstDocs website.

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