After Dark

Audience of One

Audience of One (Director: Michael Jacobs): I’m finally reviewing this utterly unique doc­u­mentary that screened at the Toronto After Dark Film Festival way back in October. I was lucky enough to speak to the dir­ector by phone tonight and though my recording is (at this point) almost unus­able (crappy analog “phone taps”!!), I’ll try to work in some of the stuff we talked about into the review proper.

Richard Gazowsky is the pastor of the Voice of Pentecost church in San Francisco, and didn’t see his first movie until he was 40. But what an exper­i­ence it must have been, for soon after he dis­covered the joys of cinema, he exper­i­enced a “divine call” to make the greatest bib­lical epic ever. Audience of One fol­lows Gazowsky as he takes his con­greg­a­tion along on the almost incon­ceiv­able journey of making Gravity, a sci­ence fic­tion epic based on the bib­lical story of Joseph. Though he’s never dir­ected a film before, Gazowsky con­fid­ently takes the reins, and forms WYSIWYG (“What You See Is What You Get”) Christian Film Works. Accustomed to dreaming big, he announces that Gravity will be shot in 70mm at 60 frames per second. Despite an all-volunteer cast and crew, the pro­duc­tion soon decamps to Italy for some loc­a­tion shooting. Many prob­lems ensue, from bad weather to mech­an­ical prob­lems to a gen­eral lack of pre­par­a­tion. Gazowsky presses on, con­fident that God wants him to com­plete the film.

Michael Jacobs’ camera cap­tures the drama over a period of 18 months, from the con­fident begin­ning through the trials of pro­duc­tion and finally to what appears to be Gazowsky’s very public melt­down. Throughout, the pastor seems like an affable man, albeit a little obsessed with the idea of being a film­maker. Mysteriously prom­ised European funding fails to mater­i­alize, the bills pile up and the erstwhile dir­ector becomes more and more para­noid, sus­pecting the major stu­dios of trying to steal his script. The whole enter­prise spins fur­ther out of con­trol and by the film’s end, it appears that Richard Gazowsky has painted him­self into a corner. His obses­sion is com­pounded by his faith that God wants him to devote his life to making this film.

Though it doesn’t shy away from the reli­gious aspects of Gazowsky’s “quest,” this is really a uni­versal char­acter study. We see the pastor’s mother, a preacher her­self who founded the church, haunting the pro­ceed­ings with a sad look on her face. “I never should have turned the church over to him,” she laments. Gazowsky is a familiar char­acter, reminding me of Klaus Kinski’s indelible Fitzcarraldo and Harrison Ford’s Allie Fox (from The Mosquito Coast). But in this case, Gazowsky’s pride is unas­sail­able since he claims to be doing God’s work. But it also means he can never admit he was wrong.

Jacobs told me that Gazowsky has sup­ported the film and even par­ti­cip­ated in some Q&A ses­sions after screen­ings. But instead of admin­is­tering a much-needed wake-up call, it seems to have re-energized him to con­tinue raising funds to com­plete the film. Despite the immense amount of time and money spent already, only two scenes have been com­pleted, and although they weren’t shown in the film, Jacobs prom­ises to include them on the DVD release.

It seems ironic that, des­pite the title of his film being Gravity, nothing seems to be able to bring Richard Gazowsky back down to earth.

Official site for the film

8/10(8/10)

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Aachi and Ssipak (Achi-wa ssipak)

Aachi and Ssipak (Achi-wa ssipak) (Director: Jo Beom-jin): There’s not much point in trying to ana­lyze a film about a dystopic future world where the source of energy is human feces, but I can say that this anim­ated fea­ture from Korea was loads of fun. Our tit­ular char­ac­ters are a couple of lowlifes trying to get by in this miser­able future by stealing juicy­bars, the government’s reward for each citizen’s, uh, con­tri­bu­tion to the energy supply. The fact that these druggy pops­icles are highly addictive has cre­ated some prob­lems, not least of which is the emer­gence of a whole swarm of addicts whose bodies can no longer pro­duce the required material. These smurf-like creatures band together to form the Diaper Gang and ter­rorize the police and anyone else trying to con­trol the supply. The plot is a little more com­plic­ated, but this basic premise means lots of action scenes between the police, the Diaper Gang and our heroes. Ssipak’s infatu­ation with a porn star with prodi­gious pooping abil­ities leads them into a rescue mis­sion, since she’s been kid­napped by the Diaper Gang. If it all sounds ridicu­lous, it is, but you have to give the film­makers some credit for ori­gin­ality. Some of the best parts of this film (and any film which sat­ir­izes the future) were the mock ads and public ser­vice announce­ments telling people how to max­imize their poop. This foul-mouthed, polit­ic­ally incor­rect, scata­logical and glee­fully violent film is prob­ably not suit­able for actual chil­dren, but it will appeal to the stunted adoles­cent that lives within most of us.

Trailer (no subtitles)

English sub­titled DVD avail­able from YesAsia.com (Region 3 NTSC)

7/10(7/10)

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Toronto After Dark Film Festival

For a film fest in just its second year, the Toronto After Dark Film Festival (October 19–25) is run like a well-oiled machine. Adam Lopez, Twitch’s Todd Brown, and the rest of the staff are well-organized and pro­fes­sional, not to men­tion gen­erous. They’re ready to bring another col­lec­tion of cutting-edge horror, sci-fi, and fantasy films to town. After all the hype and celebrity-watching of TIFF, it’s refreshing to look for­ward to a fest­ival on a more human scale (and with more zom­bies!). Though I’m not a huge horror fan, After Dark brings enough weird stuff here that I’m sure I’ll find a lot to like. They’ve just announced their first seven fea­tures, and I’m par­tic­u­larly thrilled to see that Audience of One will be making its Canadian premiere. I missed it at SXSW this spring and have been prac­tic­ally beg­ging dir­ector Mike Jacobs to bring it Toronto.

Audience of One

It’s the story of Pentecostal pastor Richard Gazowsky, who believes that God is calling him to make an epic sci-fi film based on the bib­lical story of Joseph. Despite the fact that he didn’t see a movie at all until he was 40 years of age, he decides that he must be the dir­ector. Anything and everything that can go wrong, does, and Jacobs’ camera is there to cap­ture the whole train wreck on film. I’m hoping to get an inter­view with the dir­ector when he’s here.

If that’s not up your alley, check out the fest’s excel­lent web site for more premiere announce­ments. Single tickets go on sale September 26th, and if you’ve been paying for tickets to “that other film fest­ival,” you’ll be delighted at the prices. An even better value is the $99 VIP Pass (but hurry, there are only 100 available).

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Toronto After Dark Film Festival

Yeah, I know. I should be com­pletely film fest­i­valed out by now, but this one looks inter­esting. The Toronto After Dark Film Festival fea­tures sci-fi, horror and fantasy films with a strong dose of Asian cinema. It runs from October 20–24, and I’ll miss the weekend sec­tion, but I’m def­in­itely trying to get to the Monday screen­ings at the Bloor Cinema:

Funky Forest
Still images from “Funky Forest: The First Contact”

I’m bummed to miss the opening night film, Special, star­ring two of my favourite char­acter actors. Michael Rapaport in a rare leading role, and Jack Kehler. Check out the trailer. Just the fact that the music in the trailer is “Popcorn” by Hot Butter makes me want to see it. But it looks equally funny and sad. Apparently there’s some problem with the film get­ting North American dis­tri­bu­tion, too, so this might be a rare oppor­tunity to see it.

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