Y’en aura pas de facile (Tough Luck)

Y'en aura pas de facile (Tough Luck)
Y’en aura pas de facile (Tough Luck) is screening as part of Cinefranco on Friday March 25 at 9:30pm at TIFF Bell Lightbox.

Y’en aura pas de facile (Tough Luck) (Director: Marc André Lavoie): After seeing the amiable Rémy Girard in Incendies last fall, I thought it would be good to see some of his other work. In this comedy, he plays Réjean, a professional biographer who must submit a video introducing himself to a dating website. This framing device lets him spin a number of tales that are meant to tell the story of his life, but it quickly becomes clear that he’s actually making most or all of it up.

There are vignettes about him as a child, relating to his prostitute mother Christine. And about the man who eventually becomes his stepfather, who has been looking for Christine, his lost first love, since high school. And another story about a time in Réjean’s life when he lost his wife and job and hired a hit man to kill him, and then changed his mind. And another story about a man who has a winning lottery ticket stolen. And another about a beautiful woman who disguises herself as a frump, only to have the man of her dreams fall in love with the frump. These are all mildly amusing stories, though none of them are that funny. And worse, they have no relation to the original framing story of Réjean. In fact, there are so many anachronisms that it started to become distracting. Réjean’s future stepfather finds Christine’s photo on a website. Réjean’s younger self and his colleagues carry iPhones. There are numerous dropped threads and additional minor characters and the whole thing just doesn’t add up to much.

Though I’m not familiar with all the actors, I get the impression this was meant to be a showcase for a large number of Québecois stars. The star power might be enough to make local audiences overlook the thinness of the story, but I’m not sure how it will play here in Toronto. An amusing diversion for a few hours, but nothing more.


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxvKxHeUqNE
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Cinéfranco 2011

Cinéfranco 2011

Cinéfranco is Toronto’s festival of films in the French language. The 14th annual festival takes place for the very first time at the TIFF Bell Lightbox (with additional screenings at the NFB Mediatheque) from March 25th through April 3rd, featuring films from all over the French-speaking world, with selections from France, Canada (Québec, Ontario, and New Brunswick), Algeria, Morocco, Belgium, and Switzerland. All films are subtitled in English, and tickets are available at the cinema for $12 each.

This year’s festival will screen 27 features, 7 documentaries and 10 shorts. There will also be a series of debates on various topics, and a master class with Moroccan filmmaker Driss Chouika. I’ve been a big fan of this well-run festival for the past several years and it definitely gives you a sense of the breadth of francophone cinema. Watch for some reviews in the weeks to come and definitely check out the Cinéfranco site for the schedule and a description of the films.

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Controversial Directors in Nayman’s Terms

Eye Weekly film critic Adam Nayman has been teaching a series of film classes with the cheeky tag “in Nayman’s Terms.”

I was privileged to attend a couple of classes in the last series, on the concept of national cinema “New Waves” and am excited that he’s running another series, beginning March 21st. This time, he’s tackling controversial directors and will focus on a different one each week. All classes are held at the Miles Nadal JCC (750 Spadina Ave., at Bloor St.) and run from 7:00pm to approximately 9:00pm:

In addition to his work for Eye Weekly, Adam is a regular contributor to Cinemascope, Cineaste, Reverse Shot, POV, Montage, LA Weekly, Film Comment, and The Village Voice. He’s also the best sort of critic, someone who is able to actually educate you about film without coming across as a pompous ass. The classes are an invigorating blend of low-key lecture and generous selections of clips.

You don’t need to pre-register or commit to the whole series. Classes are $12 each ($6 with student ID) and as a past attendee, I can bring someone along for free! Wanna be my +1? Just let me know!

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Sound It Out

Sound It Out
Sound It Out is screening again on Tuesday March 15 at 8:45pm at the Alamo Ritz 2, and Thursday March 17 at 3pm at the Alamo Ritz 1.

Sound It Out (Director: Jeanie Finlay): Nostalgia is bound to be a part of any examination of record shop culture, and there have been a number of recent documentaries on the subject (I Need That Record!, Red Beans & Rice). But nostalgia works best when it’s specific and personal, and the fact that director Finlay grew up three miles from the record shop she profiles in Sound It Out gives it a lovely handmade and intimate feeling.

Sound It Out is actually the name of the last remaining record shop in Stockton-on-Tees, a struggling post-industrial town in England’s Northeast. Amiable owner Tom has been selling records for two decades, often to the same customers. We meet many of them in the course of the film, and there are more than a few memorable characters. All have an opinion as to why almost all record collectors are male, although no one really seems to worry about it too much. But the truth is that for people with obsessive and geeky pursuits, the shop is like liquor store and AA meeting rolled into one. This almost seems like a perfect description, given that it is located between a job centre and a fishing tackle shop.

It’s clear that Stockton is a rough town, with very few decent jobs and almost no interesting activities for young people. The shop has become a meeting place not just for nostalgic thirty- (not to mention forty- or fifty- or sixty- ) somethings. It’s also a hangout for young men with widely different musical tastes, from the hard dance types seeking “makina” (a type of Spanish techno popular in the Northeast) to metalheads looking for obscure subgenres. Everyone enjoys the personal touch that Tom and his sidekick David provide, along with their encyclopedic knowledge. It’s clear that they care about music, not just about selling music. Especially in an economically depressed place like Stockton, this authenticity means a lot.

It might be due to the presence of a female director in a generally male-dominated hobby, but all the lads seem like genuinely lovely people. Especially the younger set. From the two most sensitive headbangers you’ll ever meet, to the goofy but kind-hearted DJs playing music in the shed behind their house, to the more ambitious DJ duo of Frankey and John-Boy, their shared love of music and their ability to verbalize how it helps them express their feelings is heartwarming.

The thirtysomethings are perhaps the most cerebral. Veteran Status Quo fan Shane knows exactly why he collects so obsessively, prefacing many of his comments with “I know this will sound…” But when he confesses that after his death, his will specifies that all his vinyl be melted down and made into a coffin, he knows he’s going beyond the boundaries of the rational. Longtime customer Chris, the only one with a well-paying job, deposits money monthly into a credit account at Sound It Out. He knows he’s running out of room to store records, but seems sad at the prospect of giving up his regular purchases at the shop.

One of my favourite characters shows up a few times during the film. Since the shop is located near several pubs, he probably represents a certain type of customer who might be entertaining in a film, but maybe not so much in reality. He comes in early in the film, clearly in the clutches of a few pints, asking for Dire Straits “Sultans of Swing,” which he has just heard on the jukebox. He makes several more appearances throughout the film, and almost every time leaves the staff trying hard to suppress their giggles.

It’s this sense of “warts and all” community that makes the film so charming. Sound It Out doesn’t try to tell the story of the music industry. It just tells the story of Tom’s little record shop on Yarm Street in Stockton-on-Tees. If I had only one criticism of the film, it’s that I’d like to have learned more about Tom himself. He comes out with some of his own record shop philosophy, such as “records hold memories” and “the shop is an escape,” but in the end, I felt I knew more about the nameless man in the pub than about Tom. In that respect, this is not quite the real-life version of Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity that I’d expected, but it remains a lovely and generally positive portrait of life in a provincial English town.

Official site of the film


oehttp://www.vimeo.com/16062814
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A Bag of Hammers

A Bag of Hammers

A Bag of Hammers (Director: Brian Crano): Based upon the trailer I watched before SXSW, I guessed that this film might make a funny little diversion from my schedule. The jokey title and the pair of likeable goofs in formal wear reminded me quite a bit of Dumb and Dumber and I was fully expecting this to be the indie version. I was in for quite a surprise.

Alan (Jake Sandvig) and Ben (Jason Ritter) are longtime best friends who live a happy slacker existence by running an unusual scam. They set up a free valet parking sign at cemeteries and then steal the car of the first mourner to hand over keys. It’s a funny gag, even if you don’t believe it could keep working over and over again. They live in their own house, and even have another house next door to rent out. They mock Alan’s sister Melanie (Rebecca Hall) affectionately at her job as a waitress in a pancake restaurant. She thinks they should grow up. There are shades of some family tragedies amongst the trio that have led to an unusually strong bond.

Life is funny and carefree for the boys until they rent their house out to a desperate single mom (Carrie Preston) fleeing hurricane-ravaged New Orleans with her 12-year-old son Kelsey (Chandler Canterbury). It’s clear that Lynette is having a lot of trouble finding a job and taking care of her son. While Melanie shows concern, the boys choose to ignore the situation lest it interfere with their easy lives. When the movie takes a sharp turn toward the dramatic, it’s as if these two characters are dragged out of the comedy they’d prefer to be in into a much more grown-up film. And that’s the surprise.

It’s extremely difficult to pull off this delicate mix of styles, but it mostly works. The script, co-written by Crano and Sandvig, does a great job of playing Alan and Ben’s relationship for laughs. Even when the bromance is revealed to be quite a serious family relationship, there are still some fresh comedic moments. And even at their worst, you never believe that Alan and Ben are the slackers they keep desperately trying to remain.

But at times there are some elements that, while perfectly adequate for a comedy, are a little stretched when placed in a serious film. Melanie’s character is underwritten, which is a shame because Rebecca Hall is wonderful. We don’t even know where she lives and why, for instance, she wouldn’t have rented the house next door to her brother. As well, as I mentioned earlier, their valet parking grift is funny but doesn’t really hold water in anything other than a farce.

I also got the impression that Crano didn’t quite know how to handle the ending. A very funny montage turns out not to be the ending I was expecting and then after the real ending there are more scenes that appear to be outtakes. All very enjoyable but a little bit muddled.

Nevertheless, there are moments that are genuinely moving, and that was altogether unexpected in such a funny film. Young Chandler Canterbury has the sort of open and innocent face that could melt a heart of stone. Or two. And there is a real warmth to the film that doesn’t diminish the humour. I also want to especially recognize the work of Carrie Preston, who brings real depth to a character who could have been one-dimensionally unsympathetic.

In the end, it turns out that A Bag of Hammers (the expression, and the film itself) isn’t what you think it’s going to be at all, and that sense of surprise and discovery is rare, and commendable.


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=moTz8b0YK3w
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