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#wsff09

Sparks

“What I’ve always wanted to do is direct.” More cringe­worthy words have never been uttered, when it comes to Hollywood stars wanting to switch sides of the camera. But is that fair? Lots of actors have gone on to respect­able careers as dir­ectors (Clint Eastwood and Ron Howard to name just two, though I’m not a fan of either). So here are six shorts: vanity pro­jects or first forays into a new career? I’ll let you know.

  • Glock (12 minutes, USA, Director: Tom Everett Scott): Written, dir­ected by and star­ring Tom Everett Scott, this is a harm­less bit of fun con­cerning a newly-trained spy who waits for his phone to ring with secret mis­sions. Extremely broad humour and a standard short film “punch line” ending. (7/10)
  • Eve (22 minutes, USA, Director: Natalie Portman): Olivia Thirlby plays a young woman vis­iting her grand­mother (Lauren Bacall) who drags her along on a date with a wid­ower (Ben Gazzara). The younger woman is eager to dis­cuss her mother Eve but the older woman avoids the sub­ject. There’s some indic­a­tion that Eve is troubled. I thought Bacall brought a real sense of grav­itas to the pro­ceed­ings, even as her char­acter rather shal­lowly pur­sues Gazzara for his money. Thirlby was also strong as a ser­ious young woman looking for some answers. Portman was wise to keep the story small and tightly-focussed, and her dir­ec­tion is any­thing but showy. Sufjan Stevens’ piano score added another layer of class. (8/10)
  • Monday Before Thanksgiving (19 minutes, USA, Director: Courteney Cox): Filled with the worst sort of clichés and plot con­triv­ances, including some wisdom-spouting voi­ceover at both begin­ning and end. A truly bad script, too, about being happy and single or some­thing. Sad to see Laura Dern in this sort of dreck. (5/10)
  • One Of Those Days (14 minutes, UK, Director: Hattie Dalton): Derek Jacobi’s per­form­ance lifts this rather shop­worn sub­ject matter, playing a man who finds him­self and his wife caught up in some bur­eau­cratic bungling on Judgement Day. Slickly shot, though not ter­ribly ori­ginal. (7/10)
  • The Spleenectomy (12 minutes, USA, Director: Kirsten Smith): Similarly, Anna Faris rises above some mediocre material, playing twin sis­ters, one a scattered and unsuc­cessful com­munity theatre act­ress, and the other a prim sur­geon. Of course, there’s a case of mis­taken iden­tity. And a pre­co­cious cute son with glasses. Meh. (6/10)
  • Sparks (24 minutes, USA, Director: Joseph Gordon-Levitt): Based on a short story by Elmore Leonard, Sparks is the most overtly showy of the films I saw tonight. Gordon-Levitt takes a risk with some of his tricks but I thought he mostly suc­ceeded. Eric Stoltz plays an insur­ance invest­ig­ator trying to determine if Carla Gugino’s char­acter burned down her own house. The noirish plot and dia­logue are con­trasted with some jar­ring editing decisions and oddly arti­fi­cial props and sets. Beginning and ending with scenes of Gugino singing with a rock band added some great energy. (Director’s site) (8/10)

In my research, I dis­covered that both Monday Before Thanksgiving and The Spleenectomy were part of Glamour Reel Moments, a com­pet­i­tion run­ning annu­ally since 2005, sponsored by Glamour magazine and Suave shampoo! Each film was appar­ently “inspired” by an idea sub­mitted by a Glamour reader. Another film from this year’s edi­tion, Streak was dir­ected by Demi Moore and starred her daughter Rumer Willis. Initially, I wondered why that one didn’t make it into this pro­gramme, but seeing as the two Glamour-sponsored films were my least favourite, I’m not really bothered to track down Demi’s effort now.

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The Survivor of The Hippocampus (Le rescapé de l'hippocampe)

Space. The final fron­tier. To boldly go where no short film­maker has gone before…I was looking for­ward to this col­lec­tion of sci-fi shorts for two reasons. First was to see the sort of kitschy retro-camp stuff where the effects and cos­tumes are crappy on pur­pose. But secondly, I wanted to see if some of these dir­ectors could use the lim­it­a­tions of the short film format to explore some idea about the future in an inter­esting way. I’m happy that this pro­gramme came through on both fronts.

  • Die Schneider Krankheit (11 minutes, Spain, Director: Javier Chillon): I had higher hopes for this film, a mock 50s short filmed in pro­pa­gand­istic style. A space­ship crashes in West Germany with a chim­panzee astro­naut aboard. He quickly infects the whole country with a strange virus, which changes life for everyone. The fact that it’s made to look like a German film though actu­ally made by Spaniards may have dif­fused some of the impact, as we heard the Spanish nar­rator dub­bing the German soundtrack, with English sub­titles as well. Some great visuals, though (and not a frame of archival footage, though it all looks archival). (Official site with trailer, poster and even lobby cards.) (7/10)
  • Civilian (4 minutes, USA, Director: Seaton Lin): Based on real inter­views with a woman who claimed to be abducted by aliens, this short film focuses too much on por­traying the act of hyp­not­izing her and not enough on what she claims to have seen. Far too short to be mem­or­able, even with such com­pel­ling sub­ject matter. (See the whole film here.) (6/10)
  • Marooned? (15 minutes, USA, Director: Ryan Nagata): Filmed in Death Valley, Marooned? got quite a few laughs with its story about a live-action role­playing game that goes very wrong. Michael McCafferty is well-cast as the middle-aged sci-fi nerd who hires a couple of guys to play in the desert with him before a knock on the head has him won­dering if he really is stranded on an alien planet. (Official site) (8/10)
  • Star Games (3 minutes, UK, Director: Jasmin Jodry): Stunningly cho­reo­graphed gym­nasts and divers are com­bined with archival footage of zep­pelins and Art Deco New York to create a gor­geous nar­rative of ath­letes becoming lit­eral stars. (Watch the whole film here.) (9/10)
  • The Attack of The Robots From Nebula-5 (El ataque de los robots de nebulosa-5) (7 minutes, Spain, Director: Chema García Ibarra): A men­tally dis­turbed man believes that a robot inva­sion is imminent. His attempts to warn his family are futile, mostly because his draw­ings of the invaders are so childish. A great mix­ture of sweet­ness and menace, with great deadpan nar­ra­tion from the mis­un­der­stood mes­senger of doom. (Official site) (8/10)
  • The Survivor of The Hippocampus (Le res­capé de l’hippocampe) (13 minutes, France, Director: Julien Lecat): French chanteuse Juliette Noureddine (above, left) is bril­liantly cast as a madam who enters her friend’s brain on his request to delete the memory of his brother. Wildly inventive on a tiny budget and extremely short pro­duc­tion schedule (the film was cre­ated for a con­test). (Official site) (9/10)
  • 2000: A Documentary Science Fiction (7 minutes, Bulgaria, Director: Andrey Paounov): From the dir­ector of quirky doc The Mosquito Problem and Other Stories comes this pseudo-doc, sup­posedly made in 1973 by the mem­bers of a metal­works’ cinema club in Communist Bulgaria. Its view of the year 2000 is charm­ingly off-kilter, fea­turing inter­mar­riage between humans and robots, and fam­ilies of space explorers. Certainly loses some­thing out­side of Eastern Europe, where its satire would feel sharper. (7/10)
  • Cold and Dry (Tørt og kjølig) (12 minutes, Norway, Director: Kristoffer Joner): Essentially a thought exer­cise: what would happen if we could freeze-dry people and revive them in the future? Scientist Torstein thinks he’s helping society by freezing the crim­in­ally insane, the sick and the old, reas­oning that surely society will be able to help these people in the future. But soon, freezing begins to appeal to anyone with a problem that can be solved in the future; that is, everyone. Smart and lean. (9/10)
  • Postman Returns (3 minutes, Netherlands, Director: Mischa Rozema): So short as to be essen­tially plot­less and char­ac­ter­less, this anim­ated short nev­er­the­less pushes the bound­aries of whatever type of 3-D ren­dering soft­ware was used to create it. (Watch the whole film here.) (8/10)
  • Captain Coulier (Space Explorer) (13 minutes, Canada, Director: Lyndon Casey): Inspired, according to the dir­ector, by Canadian win­ters, this campy space sitcom felt like being trapped in a van with four of your friends driving across the prairies. The humour is as spon­tan­eous as the sniping is inev­it­able, but it’s all hil­arious. Purposely cheesy art dir­ec­tion serves the overall goal of por­traying an inad­equate space­ship crew whose cap­tain struggles with his own, um, inad­equacy. (Official site) (9/10)

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Skhizein

As is their custom, the organ­izers of the CFC Worldwide Short Film Festival ded­icate the Opening Night pro­gram to award-winning shorts from around the world. This means that these films have screened lots of other places, but for me, they’re still discoveries.

  • Next Floor (12 minutes, Canada, Director: Denis Villeneuve): Eerily remin­is­cent of the ban­quet scenes in Peter Greenaway’s The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover, this stun­ningly art-directed short provides a nausea-inducing chron­icle of a dec­adent ban­quet. The comedy is provided by the recur­ring event of the table crashing through the floor and the waiters rushing down stairs to the “next floor.” The dark edge came when I couldn’t stop thinking that this was a stinging indict­ment of con­sumerism and envir­on­mental degrad­a­tion. (9/10)
  • Skhizein (13 minutes, France, Director: Jeremy Clapin): Another one that starts out with humour and ends with tragedy. Our anim­ated hero suf­fers a sense of dis­place­ment after a meteor hits the earth. He’s pre­cisely 91cm “off” which provides the anim­ators with plenty of sight gags. But by the end, we realize that what’s really being por­trayed is a form of mental ill­ness. Powerful. (9/10) (Note: The image above is from this short.)
  • Jerrycan (14 minutes, Australia, Director: Julius Avery): A kid stands up to a bully with explosive res­ults. Aims at the gritty realism of some­thing like Andrea Arnold’s Wasp but a little too heavy on the meta­phor and light on dia­logue. (7/10)
  • Coffee and Allah (14 minutes, New Zealand, Director: Sima Urale): An Ethiopian Muslim woman recently arrived in New Zealand feels out of place, but ulti­mately bonds with her neigh­bours over bad­minton and coffee. Too “cute” for my taste and actu­ally seemed much longer than its 14 minute run­ning time. (6/10)
  • Gone Fishing (Director: Chris Jones): Part tall tale and part sober remem­brance. Grasps at magic realism and comes up empty. Technically pol­ished but ulti­mately let down by its mawkish script and manip­u­lative music. (6/10)
  • The Secret Life of Beards (6 minutes, USA, Director: Melanie Levy): This whim­sical doc asks sev­eral men about their beards. For some it’s an expres­sion of their reli­gion, while for others it rep­res­ents freedom, or just lazi­ness. Fun but feather light. (7/10)
  • Teaching the Alphabet (4 minutes, Germany, Director: Volker Schreiner): Someone recites the alphabet over clips from Hollywood movies which high­light each letter. Underwhelming. (6/10)

Stay tuned for more reviews as the fest con­tinues to June 21st. Tickets are avail­able online and at the venues (Cumberland and ROM theatres).

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Post image for CFC Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009

I must admit that I’ve been paying a lot more atten­tion to shorts lately, and not just the leg-revealing ones that have arrived with the warmer weather. The last time I covered the CFC Worldwide Short Film Festival, in 2007, I expressed a cer­tain befuddle­ment when it came to actu­ally writing about these mini-movies. But I’m con­vinced that short films are not only the training ground for fea­ture dir­ectors, but may even be the future of film. During the most recent Sundance Film Festival, the pro­gram­mers made a number of the short films screening there avail­able for free through the iTunes music store. As more and more of us acquire mobile devices that are cap­able of playing video, the market for short films will grow. We may not have time to watch an entire fea­ture film during our morning com­mute, but some­thing in the 5–30 minute range might just be perfect.

So if you want a glimpse at the future of film­making, whether it be a dir­ector who remains a spe­cialist in shorts, or someone who gradu­ates to longer work, don’t miss this year’s fest­ival. As in pre­vious years, the screen­ings are organ­ized into them­atic “loot bags” with lots of poten­tial for dis­covery. Here are the themes for this year:

And those are just the Official Selection com­pet­itors. There are lots of other them­atic screen­ings, including sec­tions focused on horror, comedy, music, and a spe­cial focus on Belgium this year. This year’s fest­ival runs from June 16–21 at the Cumberland and R.O.M. cinemas. The excep­tion is the opening night screening (fea­turing award-winning shorts from around the world) which takes place Tuesday June 16 at 7pm at the Bloor Cinema.

P.S. You just might find me at the Celebrity Shorts pro­gram on Thursday June 18 at 7pm at the R.O.M. cinema. It will fea­ture the Canadian premiere of Eve, Natalie Portman’s dir­ect­orial debut, star­ring Lauren Bacall, Ben Gazzara and Olivia Thirlby, and with a score by Sufjan Stevens. I’m also inter­ested in seeing Sparks, which is the dir­ect­orial debut of actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt. It’s based on an Elmore Leonard short story, and stars Eric Stoltz and Carla Gugino. Will these just be celebrity vanity pro­jects or has acting actu­ally taught these two some­thing about film­making? Come and see!

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