Monthly Archives: September 2012

VIFF2012: Sights, Sounds and Films

Vancouver International Film Festival

The first three days of the 31st annual Vancouver International Film has proved to be nothing less than spectacular.
Although VanRamblings’ Festival started out a bit on the meh side, Friday and Saturday were knockout punches in terms of film quality. As was mentioned yesterday, the counterintuitive (at least for us), heartfelt drama, Any Day Now , has emerged as the most well-acted, poignant, and accomplished piece of indie filmmaking we’ve seen thus far at VIFF2012.

Nuala (Grade: B+): Renowned Irish journalist, feminist TV producer and host, book reviewer, teacher and New York Times best-selling author Nuala O’Faolain, who passed on May 9, 2008, was the second eldest of nine children, the daughter of neglectful parents — a raffish social affairs columnist father, and a book-loving, alcoholic mother. Somehow, through her love of literature, a beauty which brought her many (many) lovers, and the undampened spirit she carried within her throughout her life, Nuala prevailed. As British poet Philip Larkin wrote, “They fuck you up, your mum and dad. They may not mean to, but they do.” Odds-on favourite to win Best Non-Fiction Film at VIFF2012 (no mean feat that considering the superior quality of VIFF docs this year), Nuala is must VIFF viewing in 2012. One final screening, Wednesday, October 3rd at 11am, Vancity Theatre.

Any Day Now, Alan Cumming, Garret Dillahunt
Any Day Now (Grade: A-): The Audience Award winner at Tribeca this year, winner of Best Actor (Alan Cumming) and Best Director (Travis Fine) at the Seattle Film Festival in June, among a raft of other awards, this touching, tragic, sentimental and (fortunate for us) at times wildly comic 1979-set apparently true period drama explores the discrimination to which gay men have long been subjected, and the lengths to which one must go to engender tolerance and civil rights. Far from pedantic or a polemic, the at all times honest and beautifully-etched story of Paul, a closeted deputy district attorney who falls in love with Rudy (Alan Cumming), a flamboyant, lip syncing drag queen, and the fight the two wage to adopt Marco (Isaac Leyva), a teen with Down syndrome, offers as intimate and nuanced a character-driven drama as you’re likely to see this year. A film not to miss. Screens again next Saturday, October 6th at 11am at the Vancity Theatre, and on Monday, October 8th at 9:30pm, Empire Granville 7.

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VIFF2012 Is Well Underway, and the Moanin’ Will Out

VIFF 2012, Empire Granville 7

Most casual filmgoers attending a VIFF screening feel pretty darn good about the experience. What one sees up on screen is paramount, and the politics of the Festival remains of not even blithe concern.
Not so for the passholders.
Yes, those folks who hold a Festival pass ($400 for unlimited filmgoing, $325 if you’re a senior or a student), including the media, volunteers and Festival guests are a kvetchin’ and a moanin’ and a whinin’ this year. Who likes change? So, as part of today’s post we’ll address the early concerns that have plagued passholders, and see if we can’t put rumours to rest by getting the facts out for public consumption.

1. VIFF adopted a new, $64,000 ticketing system this year which, on the first day, proved to be slow, inept, frustrating, not particularly well thought out, and of great concern to diehard Festival passholders. Throughout Thursday all VanRamblings heard (and we spoke repeatedly with senior VIFF staff) was that VIFF was “wedded to” the new system, and it would remain in place Friday. Apparently, at some point during the VIFF opening gala, someone (one would have to think Alan Franey, Festival Director) made the decision to scrap the new VIFF ticketing system, and on Friday morning VIFF returned to distributing tickets by hand. VanRamblings sorta liked the new system, and thought it could work if the bugs were worked out. But, alas, the bugs weren’t gonna get worked out (for instance, when taking passholder film info, staff had to scroll through all films to find the specific passholder request(s) — a cumbersome at best process). At any rate, all that is old is new again.

2. When VISA pulled out as a VIFF sponsor this year, VIFF senior staff changed a passholder entry system that had long been in place. Passholders are the bread-and-butter of VIFF, the passionate movie catholics who give VIFF ‘meaning’ (not to mention a great deal of money, and much enthusiasm for the work VIFF staff perform throughout the year). VISA, as part of their sponsorship arrangement, demanded that their ‘VISA passholders’ receive “early entry”; VIFF staff extended that to all passholders. So, for years, passholders were pulled out of line to gain early entrance to screenings, followed by ticket holders, a de facto recognition of the value of the passholder contribution to the Festival. This year, with VISA gone, and no preferential demand by VISA on the table, VIFF adopted a new system, which VIFF accounts/business manager Mickey Brazeau refers to as “the new egalitarianism”, in which all those in the passholders / ticket buyers lineup gain entrance at the same time. My oh my, has this created a kerfuffle. VIFF Exhibitions Manager Teresa Weir relented on Friday night, and gave advance entrance to passholders for the 9:30 p.m. screening of Nameless Gangster. Apparently the passholder advance entry decision taken on Friday night represented a one-off; we’ll see.

Of course the kvetchin’ wasn’t limited to the two items above: concerns have been raised about what many consider to be the failure of the online ticketing system, the snail’s pace system for ordering 20/30 ticket packs, the website (e.g. one can’t search by actor any more, and when placing a title into the search engine, more often than not you’ll come up with two dozen responses), the VIFF app (film lengths are not listed), ad nauseum.

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The 50th Annual New York Film Festival and Our VIFF

The 50th annual New York Film Festival

Each year for many, many years now, the esteemed and prestigious New York Film Festival has kicked off its run on the Friday, following the Thursday kick-off of our very own and much-looked-forward-to international film festival by the sea. And each year for many, many years, the number of films crossing over between the two festivals — meaning the number of films playing both Festivals simultaneously — has been quite substantial, a feature of both film festivals which continues on to this day.
In 2012, there are 14 films which will screen at both VIFF and the NYFF (New York’s is a much smaller, heavily-juried Festival).
Can’t make it to New York this autumn for the NYFF, well folks not to worry cuz here’s what VIFF has on tap in 2012 that the folks in the big smoke will be viewing the same time as us west coast denizens (note should be made that there are a number of films which you’ll find listed below to which VanRamblings has not made previous reference, which is all to the good for VIFF filmgoers who are still putting their VIFF film schedule together).

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Aqui y Alla (Here and There)

Aquí y allá (Here and There)
Antonio Méndez Esparza 2012
Mexico/Spain/USA | Spanish with English subtitles | 110 minutes
Pedro returns home to a small mountain village in Guerrero, Mexico after years of working in the U.S. His daughters feel more distant that he imagined, but his wife Teresa is delighted he’s back. With the money he’s earned he can create a better life for his family, and maybe even start the band with his cousins he’s dreamed about for years. But work back home remains scarce, and the temptation of heading back north of the border remains as strong as ever. Antonio Mendez Esparza has made a most remarkable début; rarely, if ever, has a film about US/Mexican border experience felt so fresh or authentic. Using non-professionals, Mendez Esparza gets remarkably nuanced performances that gives a richness of nuance and detail to each of his characters that goes way beyond cliché and stereotype. Winner of the Grand Prize at this year’s Critics Week in Cannes.

Amour
Michael Haneke 2012
France/Austria/Germany | French with English subtitles | 127 minutes
The universally acclaimed winner of the Palme d’Or at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, Amour is arguably Michael Haneke’s crowning achievement to date, a portrait of a couple dealing with the ravages of old age that is as compassionate as it is merciless. The great veteran French actors Jean-Louis Trintignant and Emmanuelle Riva are staggering as Georges and Anne, long-married music teachers living out their final years surrounded by the comforts of books and music in their warm Paris apartment. After Anne suffers a stroke, Georges attends to her with firmness shot through with love. The underlying unease, as well as some abrupt surprises, are hardly unexpected from Haneke, who challenges the viewer to confront the experience of his characters as directly as he does. But he rewards the effort with a film that is all the more moving for its complete avoidance of sentimentality. An unquestionable masterpiece.

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VanRamblings Recommends 20+ (more) VIFF Films, Part 2


VANCOUVER INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

Well, the day has finally arrived. The 31st annual Vancouver International Film Festival is underway! While VanRamblings will find ourselves cozying up with a few hundred other enthusiastic filmgoers at Festival venues across Vancouver’s welcoming and autumnal downtown peninsula, as promised earlier in the week — please find 20+ more VIFF films VanRamblings is recommending as worthy film festival film fair. See you at the movies!
Note: The VIFF iPhone app became available yesterday, which for iPhone folks makes life so, so much easier. Just put “VIFF” into your search function in your App Store iPhone app, and you’ll be off to the races.

Tabu: Tim Robey in The Telegraph writes, “We’re lucky if a single Tabu arrives each year: a film that knows cinema inside out, and uses it to work pure magic,” while ViewLondon gives Tabu an unparalleled five-star rating (“beautifully shot, brilliantly directed, superbly written, hugely rewarding, achingly emotional. Unmissable). Do we need to go on? For screening times, click on the title link at the outset of this capsule recommendation.

Helpless: One of the VIFF films to which VanRamblings is most looking forward to (and we’re seeing it back to back on Tuesday, October 2nd with Tabu) this Korean suspense thriller from female Korean director Byun Young Joo has emerged as a Korean box office smash, a critic’s darling, as well as winning Ms. Young Joo the 48th annual Baeksang Arts Festival Best Director award. Russell Edwards, in Variety, writes …

Fear and loaning lead to emotional mayhem and murder in the taut South Korean psychological thriller Helpless. Adapted by Byun Young-joo (Ardor) from a Japanese novel known in English as All She Was Worth, this tale of a man whose fiancée goes missing taps into present-day economic anxiety as well as the terror of emotional commitment.

A haunting, desperate, mystery-thriller addressing the theme of female agency (all too rare in Korean cinema), TwitchFilm’s take on the film: “With great stylistic panache Helpless marries noir with the current zeitgeist of the financial distress suffered by many across the globe. Kim Min-hee, whose knock-out portrayal as the mysterious, seductive, and ultimately ruthless femme fatale is the film’s compelling, and riveting, heart of darkness.”

Continue reading VanRamblings Recommends 20+ (more) VIFF Films, Part 2