Interview: Matt Gallagher

Matt Gallagher

Matt Gallagher’s latest documentary Grinders (review) just premiered at Hot Docs. I spoke to him about the film and about his own time as a struggling poker player on Toronto’s underground circuit.

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Grinders

Grinders

Grinders (Director: Matt Gallagher): A “grinder” is someone who plays poker to pay their bills, typically reaping small to modest winnings. Grinders, which received its premiere at Hot Docs, is the latest documentary from director Matt Gallagher and it takes an inside look at this unconventional manner of making a living, specifically in Toronto’s illegal underground poker circuit. Finding himself out of work amidst the global recession a couple of years ago, Gallagher decided to try his hand at grinding and the filmmaker soon realized that the scene, and some of its personalities, was ample fodder for a film.

The focus of Grinders isn’t to provide an in-depth exposé on the actual circuit, although there is plenty of eye-opening insight into the subculture. Gallagher’s main objective is to use the poker setting as a backdrop for telling the individual stories of a few characters (including himself), which makes for more compelling viewing than watching scene after scene of people sitting at tables playing cards (even if they are breaking the law while doing so). Gallagher’s own story arc sees him faced with the pressures to provide for his wife and newborn daughter, including the added financial burden of a new mortgage. A second baby is then soon on the way, with complications from the pregnancy resulting in the film’s most emotionally resonant content. Another grinder, Andre, is a 25-year-old self-described “degenerate” who feels restless and wants more for himself. His annoying Type A personality is perfectly suited to what he feels is his ticket to the big time – a spot on an upcoming poker reality TV show. Danny is another family man and a talented player who shows the most promise to move from the grinding circuit upwards to the considerably more lucrative pro level. His journey reveals unfolding layers as we learn that he used to attend Gamblers Anonymous and has battled substance issues in the past, facts that make for unsettling viewing when we see him occasionally over-indulging in alcohol and, well, gambling for a living. The other main character is Lawrence, an immigrant who runs one of the illegal poker clubs. There’s a moving sadness to the scenes involving Lawrence, who struggles with having his club, which he derives significant pride and satisfaction from running, extorted from him by a greedy landlord.

Gallagher, who provides a first-person narrative, adds some inspired elements to the film with Las Vegas-set scenes (including a requisite Elvis impersonator) that depict the elusive mirage of success, as well as interviews with one of the most successful professional poker players in the world, Daniel Negreanu. Negreanu, a Toronto native who worked his way up grinding on the city’s underground circuit, is filmed at his opulent Vegas residence, which includes a Jack Nicklaus-designed chipping and putting green. The bright Vegas scenes (and seeing the fruits of Negreanu’s success) contrast nicely against the scenes of Toronto’s gritty, unglamorous grinding world that takes place at night.

Not everything in Grinders works (the Andre storyline isn’t as interesting as the others and his personality grates), but the film’s broader themes should strike a chord with non-poker fans.

Official site of the film

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Wiebo’s War

Wiebo's War

Wiebo’s War (Director: David York): David York opens his engaging film with an interesting scene. Wiebo Ludwig, the subject of the film, is sitting around a table with several of his sons and the film crew, and Wiebo is concerned that most of what he stands for “won’t come across” because the director and crew are atheists.

It’s a bold move, and potentially one that will put many people off Ludwig right away. But it’s also a necessary tactic, because for the next 90 minutes, it will be difficult not to be pulled in by Wiebo’s charisma, passion and evident good sense.

In the mid 1980s, Wiebo Ludwig, an ordained minister with the historically Dutch Christian Reformed Church, decided to uproot his family from their Ontario home to go and live “apart from the world” in northern Alberta. It was an experiment in holy living, but also in self-sufficiency and community-building. Along with another couple and all of their children, they settled on a parcel of land they dubbed Trickle Creek. As their children grew older, they intermarried and had their own children. They raised animals and were able to support themselves in both food and energy.

But these were not technology-shunning ascetics like the Amish. They wanted to farm and worship God, but were happy to be part of the wider world when they needed it. Unfortunately, the world quickly impinged on their bit of paradise.

In the late 1980s, the oil and gas industry moved in when they discovered that Trickle Creek was sitting over a huge reservoir of natural gas. One of the most shocking revelations of the film is that despite the Ludwigs’ deed to their land, they only own the top six inches, and have no ownership or control of the mineral rights that the EnCana gas corporation is so eager to exploit. Whether this is Canadian law or just Alberta’s, I still think it’s something that needs to be challenged.

York’s film uses lots of material shot by the Ludwigs over the years, including flaming tap water, an image used more recently by Josh Fox’s Gasland (review), which would make a great companion piece to this film. There’s also horrific footage of dead and deformed livestock, and in one indelible scene, a stillborn infant.

In the 90s, the Canadian news media was abuzz at a campaign of sabotage against the oil and gas industry including explosions at well sites. Ludwig was convicted in connection with these acts and served 18 months in prison. Many years pass but now there is another string of bombings in northern British Columbia, and Ludwig is again the prime suspect. Even though York follows him for several years as these events play out, we never really know the extent of Ludwig’s involvement. We do, however, begin to understand the extent of his family’s desperation to live unmolested.

Since Wiebo is eager to declare that his actions flow from his biblical principles, I think it’s cogent to examine them. Ludwig and his family are in a unique position, able to fulfil the biblical function of the prophet, which is to speak the truth to power. But in the process they are also subject to another biblical maxim: that a prophet is without honour in his own country. Their separation from the community allows them the freedom to criticize the oil and gas industry because they are not economically dependent upon it. The people in the towns around them don’t have that luxury, and so there is a built-in resentment that is only stoked higher by the Ludwigs’ religious beliefs and practices, which are subject to small-town gossip and distortion. It’s a fascinating dynamic to watch at work, and it is behind another of the film’s unsolved mysteries, the shooting death of a local girl on the Ludwig’s property after two truckloads of drunken teenagers arrive in the middle of the night to harass them.

It dawned on me that if this film had been set in the developing world, audiences would feel immediate sympathy and even solidarity with someone who was resisting a greedy corporation and an apathetic government. Because it’s so close to home, I think reaction will be more mixed. The oil and gas industry has been quick to brand Ludwig an “eco-terrorist” and the Canadian media has been happy to advance this characterization. York’s film will help shade the black and white caricature we’ve been provided with, although Ludwig remains a complicated man. His initial misgivings are not groundless, and for a man who claims to answer only to God, his participation in the film is pretty remarkable. If it brings some additional critical attention to the practices of an industry that powers so much of Canada’s economy, it will be worthwhile.


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The National Parks Project

The National Parks Project

The National Parks Project (Directors: Louise Archambault, Keith Behrman and 11 others): What a disappointment. Like most of the audience, I thought The National Parks Project was going to showcase 13 of Canada’s national parks with a homegrown soundtrack. Instead of a typical documentary, I felt like I was watching an experimental film from the 60s.

During the premiere at TIFF Lightbox, a handful of people walked out early. I was tempted to join them a couple of times but I stuck it out till the bitter end. It didn’t help that the old guy beside me was coughing, sneezing, sleeping and passing gas. Another senior down the the aisle was snoring, much to the amusement of the people in front of me. I can only imagine that they were desperately looking for something to entertain them.

The film is comprised of 13 short films by different directors. Each filmmaker spent five days with three musicians exploring a national park in each of the provinces and territories. The idea was for these artists to collaborate and capture their experience of the landscape. It sounds like a great idea on paper but it doesn’t work very well as a film.

How can you not create a stunning film to celebrate Parks Canada’s centennial year? I think the problem is that each of the short films is a little too avant-garde. Scrap the heavy metal bass that drones on throughout Gros Morne or the grainy surveillance camera footage in Night Vision. And don’t get me started on the Goldilocks-like character who passes out after eating some wafer cookies in Mystic Mornings.

I don’t want to sound like the crusty old man who blasted the filmmakers during the Q&A so I’ll try to say something positive. There are moments in the film when the experimental visuals are set aside for some landscape images that give you a true sense of the park environment. The footage of Mingan Archipelago National Park along the north shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence is stunning.

Some of the feedback on Twitter, immediately after the Hot Docs premiere conveys the sense of disappointment others experienced:

Twtr isn’t being kind to National Parks Project. Apparently half the audience left, the other half was asleep

#hotdocs national parks project epic doc fail. Felt like watching someone failing to know how to pick that low-hanging fruits

National Parks project is not a nature lover’s doc, unfortunately. Two hours, not a single money shot. Kept waiting for it. Too bad #hotdocs

National Parks Project is terrible. 20-30 walk outs. Self-absorbed outsider’s view of the parks. Shame.

British photographer David Noton recently said “for a landscape photographer Canada is heaven, but it’s such a vast country it’s difficult to know where to start.” It’s a shame that The National Parks Project didn’t have much in the way of voiceover narration, simple maps or stunning visuals to show how magnificent our national parks really are.

Official site of the National Parks Project


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=QjLTBj1bVYc
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POM Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold

POM Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold

POM Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold (Director: Morgan Spurlock): I absolutely loved this movie. It was funny, clever and it had the Hot Docs audience buzzing as they left the theatre. People were on their cellphones telling their friends that they have to see this film. To make this movie-going experience even more memorable, there were girls serving POM Wonderful beverages in the lobby of Isabel Bader Theatre after the screening.

Morgan Spurlock, the man behind Super Size Me is back with a film that seems to be a real crowd pleaser. In The Greatest Movie Ever Sold Spurlock takes a critical look at product placement, corporate branding and advertising in TV and film. Instead of making a boring academic film, Spurlock sets out to make blockbuster documentary that is fully funded by product placement, sponsorship and advertising.

How do products like POM Wonderful, Ban and Old Navy worm their way into a film? What does it cost Sheetz to be featured in this film? Spurlock takes us behind the scenes to pitch meetings and marketing presentations with various corporate brands to better understand how much of our entertainment is influenced by corporations. He covers a lot of ground by speaking to Hollywood directors (Quentin Tarantino, Peter Berg, J.J. Abrams) educators (Sut Jhally, Noam Chomsky), musicians, advertising executives and more.

At one point, Spurlock questions whether we need product placement and advertising. He flies to São Paulo, Brazil in search of some answers where the entire city has banned outdoor advertising yet commerce seems to thrive. He also visits Florida where the public schools would love to be able to advertise on school buses and school property to offset growing budget cutbacks. Is advertising really a necessary evil?

Spurlock’s journey of making a “doc-buster” that is fully funded by product placement is very entertaining. I don’t know that the film really educates the viewer but it makes you realize how receptive we’ve become to brands in popular culture. Almost everywhere you look, you see advertising. At one point in the film Ralph Nader says that the only place you can avoid advertising is when you sleep.

Before I saw this film I had no idea that POM Wonderful is pomegranate juice. I’m sure it will be the best million dollars that POM Wonderful has ever spent on advertising their product.

It’s hard to imagine this film without its man from West Virginia – Morgan Spurlock. He has become his own brand in the same way that Michael Moore is now a brand. Spurlock shines in The Greatest Movie Ever Sold and without his sarcastic wit this film would be as exciting as prune juice.

****

Films are rated from 1 to 4 stars.

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