All posts by Raymond Tomlin

About Raymond Tomlin

Raymond Tomlin is a veteran journalist and educator who has written frequently on the political realm — municipal, provincial and federal — as well as on cinema, mainstream popular culture, the arts, and technology.

Music Sundays | Mimi & Josefin | Life Affirming

mimi-and-josefin.jpg

Amidst our current pandemic, in these most difficult and trying of times, when sometimes things seem as if all is lost, with the dysfunction and division extant in America just down south, with the passing of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and, locally, with this morning’s revelation by Charlie Smith in the newspaper where he has been the publication’s respected editor since 1991, The Georgia Straight, that Raymond Young, long one of our city’s and our nation’s most esteemed lawyers, whose practice focuses on all things municipal, recommending that Green Party of Vancouver City Councillor Michael Wiebe resign his seat on Council, arising from an egregious conflict of interest … well, these are not easy times for Michael, one imagines in particular today, nor for any of us.
Yesterday, I scrapped a Stories of a Life column I had written that, in essence, held my daughter to account for not using her many gifts to make a difference in the world that would benefit us all — if there was ever a person capable of achieving such, it is my very bright and compassionate daughter, Megan. The column was neither hopeful nor helpful — and who needs that given our current dire collective societal circumstance?
With that thought in mind, I looked to publish something today that is possessed of hopefulness, something inspiring and life affirming, and that has been for me much of last year and all of this year, the début of sisters Mimi & Josefin — the daughters of soprano Hélène Lindqvist, and music professor Philipp Vogler — on the German version of The Voice Kids, whose harmonies in their unique and compelling rendition of Thom Yorke and Radiohead’s 1993 hit, Creep, is both transporting and almost otherworldy.
So, without further adieu, Mimi & Josy …

VIFF 2020 | Compassion, Class, Isolation & Humanitarianism

The 2020, 39th annual Vancouver International Film Festival

In the midst of our globe’s current COVID-19 pandemic, VanRamblings has chosen to present “previews” only of films that will be offered for screening online, and leave the In Cinema films on offer at the 39th annual Vancouver International Film Festival to other “critics”, all in the interest of keeping you safe from any harm, and any potential exigency of COVID-19.
Today, for your edification and enjoyment, four more well-curated VIFF 2020 films for you to consider, even as you traverse the rocky shoals of the upcoming 42nd British Columbia provincial election.

There Is No Evil (Germany/Czech Republic/Iran). Winner of this year’s top prize, the Golden Bear, at the Berlinale, Iranian filmmaker Mohammad Rasoulof could not attend the ceremony in Berlin, due to an Iran-sanctioned travel ban and possible prison sentence for his politically charged film.
Long banned from filmmaking in Iran but still active, screenwriter and director Rasoulof returns to the great moral themes that underlie all his work, as he orchestrates a cautionary tale comprised of four discrete chapters, creating a powerful moral case against Iran’s death penalty, tracking four military men tasked with executions, where to resist Iran’s authoritarian regime brings dire consequences, each compassionate story a standalone short film exploring a different facet of the subject.
Slow burning, at times enigmatic, one quasi-escapist tangent morphs into a sentimental romantic drama. But even so, overall Evil offers troubling film fare, sometimes didactic but always tension-filled and enthralling, the underlying moral conundrum of the film percolating through each chapter of There Is No Evil, set to emerge as one of VIFF 2020’s must-see films.

Citizen Penn (USA | Documentary). On January 12th, 2010, a devastating 7.0 earthquake struck Haiti, altering the landscape and lives of millions. Aid workers from around the globe descended on the island, along with one unlikely leader — actor and filmmaker Sean Penn. What began as a brief relief attempt turned into a decade of dedicated effort on the part of Penn to not only save lives but to revitalize a community.
Citizen Penn chronicles the moment Penn arrives on the island, and the ten years since, as Penn the humanitarian carts supplies, builds tents, procures medicine, and calls on his Hollywood friends to join with financial support. Acclaimed documentarian Don Hardy (Pick of the Litter), with unprecedented access to this once very private figure, offers an intimate look at the challenges faced when one man decides to do something in the face of adversity. — Deborah Rudolph, Programmer, Tribeca Film Festival.

My Wonderful Wanda (Switzerland). Award-winning Swiss director Bettina Oberli’s entry this year to the Tribeca Film Festival, My Wonderful Wanda offers a story about an underpaid personal nurse from Poland, Wanda (Agnieszka Grochowska), who works for low wages for a well-to-do-family, who live in a spectacular Swiss villa alongside a picturesque lake.
Wanda’s job is to care for Josef (André Jung), the patriarch who is recovering from a stroke. As his 70th birthday approaches, in addition to nursing Josef, Wanda takes on some cleaning chores, while deriving yet another source of income from Josef that no one else knows about.
Originally set to début at Cannes this year, although the pandemic changed that plan, My Wonderful Wanda emerges as a caustic satire and comedy of errors, tackling issues of class, family, complacency, reputation, and money — which contrary to the belief of some, does not buy you happiness.
Anchored by Teen Spirit’s Grochowska, Downfall’s Birgit Minichmayr, with a brilliant turn by Marathon Man’s always wonderful Martha Keller, My Wonderful Wanda keeps the twists and turns coming, especially when Wanda’s father Pawel Kowalski (Cezary Pazura) steps into the chaos.

Siberia (Italy/Germany/Mexico). On the one hand, Siberia is a traditional story of an aging, existentially tortured artist who grapples with the decisions he’s made, a character who almost certainly serves as an avatar for the director, played by regular Ferrara leading man Willem Dafoe.
On the other hand, Siberia is an experiment in dream logic, filled with unhinged, almost Lynchian imagery and symbols. Yet, even so, the film is often quite evocative and affecting, Siberia the latest rumination on life from agent provocateur Abel Ferrara. As VIFF programmer Tom Charity writes on VIFF online, “This is pure cinema that takes no prisoners, and the darkest trip that 2020 has offered up — either on-screen or off.”
Visually striking, meticulously composed and a self-mythologizing existential journey, Wendy Ide writes in Screen Daily, “the film looks like the insta feed of a well-traveled psychopath, lacking honesty or meaning. Perhaps the Ferrara name and the extreme response to the picture following its première in Berlin might be enough to secure further festival bookings, and perhaps even sales to VOD platforms based on oddity value.”
Abel Ferrera. You either love him and his oeuvre, or he’s decidedly just not your cup of tea. British film critic Guy Lodge writes in his review in Variety, “There’s certainly feeling and fury in its study of disaffected masculinity left to fester in isolation, as the viewer is pulled along by the film’s strong, seductive, dreamlike current. As we are woken from our reverie when the darkness lifts, as a viewer we are left to wonder, “What just happened?”.

BC Poli | BC NDP To Win Coveted Majority October 24th | Part 2

Elections BC prepares for a snap October 2020 provincial electionIn 2020, Elections BC staff will wear masks, when inviting voters into polling stations

British Columbia autumn election speculation continues to rise, with some insider BC NDP folks telling VanRamblings that Premier John Horgan will call a snap election as early as this upcoming Saturday, with voters set to go to the polls on Saturday, October 24th. If that is the case, and should the election call take place, there’ll be a number of distinct differences in 2020 …

  • Advance polling stations will open seven days a week, from 8am to 8pm, beginning as early as Monday, September 28th;

  • A process will be put in place to provide absentee voters an earlier opportunity than ever before to vote early;
  • An enhanced, secure protocol for the provision of mail-in ballots for voters has been established by Elections BC.

As of this writing, VanRamblings has not been apprised of information related to the prospect of voters being allowed the opportunity to vote securely online, but such a venture remains a distinct possibility should British Columbians ‘go to the polls’ next month.

Michelle Mungall, Member of the BC Legislature representing the riding of Nelson-Creston

Meanwhile, there’s pre-election news galore to report. For instance, yesterday morning 42-year-old Michelle Mungall, currently our province’s Minister of Jobs, Economic Development and Competitiveness, and since 2009 the sitting MLA for Nelson-Creston, announced that she would not seek re-election, and would be leaving the Legislature.
Earlier, B.C. NDP Ministers of the Crown Shane Simpson (Vancouver-Hastings, Minister of Social Development and Poverty Reduction), Doug Donaldson (Stikine, Minister of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development), Scott Fraser (Mid Island-Pacific Rim, Minister of Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation), and Carole James (Victoria-Beacon Hill, Minister of Finance and Deputy Premier) announced they would not seek re-election to the British Columbia Legislative Assembly.
And just today, Judy Darcy (New Westminster, Minister of Mental Health and Addictions), first elected in 2013, became the fifth Minister of the Crown to announce that she will not be seeking another term in office.
All is not lost for our British Columbia New Democratic Party government.
A couple of weeks back, two retired federal NDP MPs, the incredibly charismatic and competent Nathan Cullen (who is more amiable, and even a better story teller, than the gregariously engaging Dave Barrett was, and that’s no mean feat), who represented the riding of Skeena - Bulkley Valley from 2004 through last year — who will seek the Stikine nomination, to replace outgoing Minister Doug Donaldson - and Finn Donnelly, the B.C. NDP MP who represented the good folks who elected him to office in Port Moody - Coquitlam for ten years, from 2009 through last year, announced they would be seeking to represent constituents in their old federal ridings, in the next session of the B.C. Legislature. And, just yesterday, Murray Rankin, MP for Victoria from 2012 through 2019 — and current Chair of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency — announced he would seek the B.C. NDP nomination in outgoing former B.C. Green party leader, Andrew Weaver’s riding of Oak Bay-Gordon Head (with, apparently, Mr. Weaver’s endorsement and full support). A veritable cornucopia of riches.

Vancouver-Point Grey MLA David Eby seeking another term in office in the 2020 election

In addition, yesterday afternoon, British Columbia Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, and sitting Member of the Legislature for Vancouver-Point Grey wrote to VanRamblings asking us to formally nominate him to a further term in office — which of course we did, also donating $50 to his soon-to-be upcoming campaign, with more monies definitely set to come.

Aaron Sumexheltza, the B.C. NDP candidate in the riding of Nicola-Fraser, in 2020First Nations lawyer Aaron Sumexheltza, appointed BC NDP candidate for Fraser-Nicola.

All is not necessarily roses & sunshine for B.C. New Democratic land, tho.
When party headquarters appointed Aaron Sumexheltza as the B.C. NDP standard-bearer in Fraser-Nicola, in the upcoming election — a key battleground riding on the eve of a potential election — the entire 13-person riding association resigned en masse, accusing B.C. NDP president Craig Keating and executive director Raj Sihota of “disrespectful behaviour” by thwarting the wishes of local members, each member who quit pledging to work against the election of Aaron Sumexheltza to office.
Gosh, you just gotta love politics. Not.

B.C. NDP Executive Director Raj Sihota, and former Park Board Chair Niki Sharma seeking Vancouver-Hastings nomination

What was that? Raj Sihota, you say? Twenty-five year activist resident of Vancouver-Hastings, and current B.C. NDP executive director, that Raj Sihota, the nomination candidate in Shane Simpson’s riding who is challenging the party’s chosen candidate, the very bright and young and gifted climate change activist Niki Sharma for the nomination in Vancouver-Hastings? The Raj Sihota who so alienated the B.C. NDP riding executive in Fraser-Nicola that they all just up and quit? You mean that Raj Sihota?
And what else has that fella, Craig Keating, been up to, you ask?

Former Vancouver School Board trustee Carrie Bercic in Twitter conversation with Brenda Bailey

Well, it seems that the party is none-too-thrilled with either Morgane Oger, and her former best friend and riding president, Catherine Jenkins, seeking the B.C. NDP nomination in Vancouver-False Creek. So, what does the party do? Yep, identify a disaffected B.C. Liberal, Brenda Bailey, and with party support, talk her into seeking the nomination to run against Sam Sullivan.
As Irish Liberal leader Pat Cox told the Irish Times back in 2014, “All’s fair in love, war … and politics.” And so it seems in B.C. NDP politics, as well.
There are a few few more points to be made, as we wend our way towards the end of today’s overlong VanRamblings column.
B.C. New Democrats Believe They Can Pick Up 19 Seats
B.C. New Democrat internal polls show them with such a commanding lead across Vancouver Island that the party could very well sweep the entire Island, picking up four seats, taking B.C. Liberal Michelle Stilwell’s riding of Parksville-Qualicum, former B.C. Green leader Andrew Weaver’s soon-to-be-vacated seat in Oak Bay-Gordon Head, Green Party house leader Adam Olsen’s Saanich North and the Islands seat, as well as the riding of Cowichan Valley, the seat currently held by new B.C. Green leader Sonia Furstenau — little wonder Ms. Furstenau doesn’t want a provincial election.
Across the Metro Vancouver region and the Fraser Valley, the NDP look to turn several B.C. Liberal seats orange, defeating Stephanie-Cadieux (Surrey South), Joan Isaacs (Coquitlam-Burke Mountain), Ian Paton (Delta South), Mary Polak (Langley), Simon Gibson (Abbotsford-Mission), Marvin Hunt (Surrey-Cloverdale), Jane Thornthwaite (North Vancouver-Seymour), Sam Sullivan (Vancouver-False Creek), and taking both seats in Chilliwack, sending Laurie Throness and John Martin onto the scrapheap of history.
In the Interior, Peter Milobar (Kamloops-North Thompson) is gettable the NDP believe; the same goes for Jackie Tegart in Fraser-Nicola. Tom Shypitka (Kootenay East) also looks to be on his way out, as does Linda Larson (Boundary-Similkameen), and Ellis Ross (Skeena).
With B.C. Liberal leader Andrew Wilkinson’s low approval rating (21%), a silver-spoon, elitist leader absolutely lacking in anything approaching the ‘common touch’, and a provincial party leader possessed of the charisma of a kumquat, the B.C. Liberals will accept winning only 25 seats come October 24th, if it means ridding themselves of their Howe Street harridan.
One can easily see why pundits on the right are expressing concern about a pending election: the B.C. Liberals are all but going to be wiped out.
Why the B.C. NDP May Want to Hold Off on Calling an Election

Traditional BC New Democrat supporters come out against the Site C dam project

Every Friday for more than a year, protesters — to a one, longtime members of the B.C. New Democratic Party — gathered outside Vancouver-Point Grey MLA David Eby’s office to protest the John Horgan government moving forward on the Site C dam project. The strong contingent of climate action B.C. New Democrats are also vehemently opposed to the $40B Shell Global liquid natural gas project in northern B.C., the fracking, and the environmental harm associated with the LNG project.

Mark Bowen, the B.C. Liberal candidate in Vancouver Point Grey

A significant number of VanRamblings’ friends with whom we’ve worked on the left for 50 years — folks once associated with In Struggle, the Workers’ Communist Party, Maoists, Trotskyites, the Marxist-Leninist Party of Canada, Black Flag anarchists, and more — have told us that under no circumstances will they cast a vote for the NDP in the next provincial election. Although VanRamblings believes David Eby will win again in Vancouver-Point Grey, it will likely be by a much slimmer margin than in 2017, due in no small part to the B.C. NDP’s position on Site C and LNG.

Teachers, parents and students across British Columbia are unhappy with the BC NDP's back to school plan

At the outset of their mandate in 2017, the John Horgan government made the decision to prioritize the seismic upgrading, or where necessary replacement, of schools across the province, and complete this work by 2022. Well, whaddya know — a political party that actually keeps its promise, in the process keeping our children (and teachers) safe. Kind of.
Parents, students and teachers across the province have continued to express grave concerns about the B.C. NDP government’s back to school plan. Daily, on social media, one can read one horror story after the other (following Patti Bacchus on Twitter oughta come with a disclaimer).

Parents and teachers express concern with B.C's back to school plan


VanRamblings believes that October 2020 is the right time for British Columbians to go to the polls

VanRamblings was around when Premier Dave Barrett went to the polls in December 1975, only three years and a bit into his government’s mandate. The NDP lost that election — even though they increased their vote, and during their term in office had transformed our province for the better.
In 1990, Ontario Premier David Peterson, much loved by the electorate, even with his majority government, decided to go to the polls on September 6th, dropping 59 seats, losing to Ontario NDP leader, Bob Rae.
For some weeks now, VanRamblings has told anyone who would listen that John Horgan would be foolish to go to the polls.
We no longer believe that panjandrum. Why?
For the first time in modern British Columbia political history, we have a government in Victoria that is utterly (and thankfully) scandal free. Imagine. John Horgan, his Ministers and the NDP caucus go to work for us, and never conduct themselves in a foolish or self-serving manner.
In John Horgan, we have a Premier — a true working class man of the people, and how unusual is that? — who allows his Ministers to get the job they’ve been assigned to do to get done, to find their efforts well-financed, the B.C. NDP caucus united, and ready and prepared always to get to work to make B.C. a better place to live, an inclusive and fairer place to live for everyone, no matter their nationality, country of origin, gender, or home community across our far flung province, a government committed to ensuring fair wages for working people, well on their way to constructing 110,000 units of affordable housing across British Columbia where citizens would pay no more than 30% of their income for housing, a government that removed tolls on our bridges, and payments for our medical services plan, who have met their commitment to the people all across our province.
As well, B.C. Health Minister, Adrian Dix has emerged as the hero we have always known him to be, steady, incredibly bright, compassionate, organized, a communicator who instills confidence each and every day.
Even while addressing the pandemic, Adrian Dix has assured what the B.C. Liberal party said was impossible: ensuring that every British Columbian has a family doctor, no matter where they live in our province, no matter what community they live in across Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley, or on Vancouver Island, where in every community across the province of British Columbia, the government of John Horgan has committed to constructing 24-hour urgent care centres, staffed by doctors and nurse practitioners, and are well on their way to meeting that commitment.
Where Ontario Premier Doug Ford, and Québec Premier François Legault have put themselves out front on COVID-19, taking to the airwaves daily, in British Columbia Premier John Horgan has encouraged Adrian Dix and Dr. Bonnie Henry to emerge as the faces of the fight against the deadly COVID-19 pandemic that has all of us and the world in its unforgiving grip.
The government of John Horgan moved forward on the construction of a new Patullo bridge — which seemed for the longest time as if it would never get built — is moving forward on the twinning of the George Massey tunnel, has funded an extension of the Millennium Skytrain line, first to Arbutus, and next to UBC, has begun a discussion on a new crossing to Metro Vancouver’s North Shore, has completed the construction of a new and much safer Island highway, while engaging in an an historic initiative that has brought the Premier, First Nations, and local decision makers together to discuss the Island Rail corridor the B.C. Liberal party had mothballed.

Premier Blaine Higgs wins a majority government in New Brunswick

On the evening of Monday, September 14th, New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs won a majority government mandate from the people of his province.
In the last provincial election in New Brunswick, in 2018, the New Brunswick Liberal party under leader Brian Gallant won 42.72% of the vote, to Blaine Higgs’ 34.64% of the vote for his Progressive Conservative Party. Even so, as was the case in 2017 in British Columbia when John Horgan signed a Confidence and Supply Agreement with the B.C. Green Party, Mr. Higgs was able to cobble together a working minority government.
Even so, mid-pandemic, Premier Higgs decided to call an election, and go to the polls, in order that he might feel assured that he had the confidence of the people — because, let’s face it, when one lives in a democracy, as we do, it is critical that the government has the support of the populace, particularly during these very trying, unprecedented times, in order that government might function effectively, in the best interests of the people.
And that is why — because John Horgan is a democrat to his core — our Premier will call for an election this autumn in British Columbia, at some point over the next week, to allow John Horgan and his British Columbia New Democratic Party to lead our province towards the safety and prosperity we all desire, to build the housing we need, to fund $10-a-day child care as an economic and a feminist initiative, to move our province forward towards a fairer, more just and inclusive, and more secure future.
When the people of New Brunswick were asked on election night why they voted for a majority Blaine Higgs government, the answer was a simple, straightforward one: stability. The people of New Brunswick wanted good government, steady, competent & caring, with a true leader at the helm.

“A lot of people wondered why Mr. Higgs called a general election during a global health crisis when he could have called the necessary by-elections and continued to govern with the support of the People’s Alliance. A steady hand at the wheel, Mr. Higgs turned the election into a referendum on managerial competence,” writes Donald Wright, a professor of political science at the University of New Brunswick, in an opinion piece published in The Globe and Mail this past Tuesday.

“Voters trusted Elections New Brunswick to run a safe election. Mail-in ballots were sent to anyone who wanted one, and record numbers voted at the advance polls. Providing masks, ensuring physical distancing and cleaning contact surfaces, returning officers ran a tight ship.

At the end of the day, Mr. Higgs got what he wanted when, half an hour after the polls closed, it was clear that his party would form a majority government with just under 40% of the popular vote.

Mr. Higgs won because he could credibly say that he had steered the province through the worst of the pandemic, something Liberal opposition leader Kevin Vickers, who failed to win a seat and resigned as leader, couldn’t say.”

In British Columbia, Premier John Horgan has proved a steady hand at the tiller, providing us with the government we have long needed. As VanRamblings has recently said to those in our life, “The citizens across our province are not about to change horses mid-stream. They know we have a good thing in Premier John Horgan, and Health Minister Adrian Dix, and a government that we all can rely on to best serve our collective interests.”
And so it is, and so it must be.
In forty-one days from today, on Saturday, October 24th, the people of B.C. will elect a majority John Horgan government that will allow him, and his colleagues, to get on with the job of keeping us safe & building prosperity.

VIFF 2020 | Nostalgia, Dystopia, Malfeasance, and Hydrous Myth

The 2020, 39th annual Vancouver International Film Festival

Today, four more films brought to you by the fine folks who programme the Vancouver International Film Festival, two documentaries, a France-German co-production from an acclaimed director, and the auspicous début of a young Japanese director. VIFF ticket and pass sales continue online.

The New Corporation: The Unfortunately Necessary Sequel (Canada). As Norman Wilner writes in his Georgia Straight review of Joel Bakan’s and Jennifer Abbott’s follow-up to their 2003, made in BC-made documentary, The Corporation, “The New Corporation concludes we’re all pretty much screwed.” The 2003 doc was that rare political film with the power to remove the scales from our eyes, not simply asserting that big companies were destroying the world, but looking at the legal frameworks that created corporations that consistently placed profit over social or ethical concerns.
Investigating the evolution of corporate greed, in The New Corporation Bakan and Abbott provide a dense yet fast-paced exposé on how corporations profit from the carnage they’ve created both environmentally and politically, and their embrace of nihilism as an economic raison d’être, as elucidated by the MAGA folks who’ve latched onto the fear-mongering these corporations promote, those who march in the streets denying our current pandemic, all the while allowing Charles Koch and his cohorts to profit through the misery of others while netting profits through privatized prisons and schools — and working to make our lives as miserable and disconnected as possible — not just in North America, but across the globe.

Undine (Germany/France). Winner of the Silver Bear (Best Actress) for Paula Beer at the Berlinale this year, Undine represents an odd new beauty from German auteur Christian Petzold (Transit) who explores and updates the myth of the water nymph who has to kill her lover should he betray her.
Unsurprisingly, water plays an important role throughout the film — Undine comes from the Latin word for “wave,” suggesting both water & movement — and there are several beautifully shot underwater scenes that work on a visual level while making room for Petzold’s usual thematic concerns, capturing frantic characters doomed by dark obsessions. At its core, a haunting, fantastical and passionate female-centred supernatural romance revolving around a doomed love, Undine also questions the fixed nature of human behaviour in a world whose borders are constantly shifting.

The Town of Headcounts (Japan). One of the five Canadian premières that represent a constituent element of this year’s VIFF Gateway Asian series, Japanese director Shinji Araki’s The Town of Headcounts — a chilling, beguiling and electrifying thriller — makes its international début at the 39th annual Vancouver International Film Festival.
One of the most politically astute films to come out of Japan in years, as well as a potent and disturbing sci-fi classic, Headcount offers viewers an allegory of a dystopian Japanese society dedicated to keeping its citizens docile and dependent on sexual abandon, instant gratification and transactional sex — where rules of etiquette are nonetheless strictly enforced — in order that the state might direct the attention of the populace away from the near constant threat of terrorism, the incessant intrusion of the surveillance state, the unrelenting malaise that has the globe in its grip, and the decimation of democratic institutions.

“With contributions from our programme consultants — Maggie Lee for Japan & Korea, and Shelly Kraicer for China, Hong Kong & Taiwan — the Gateway series offers VIFF members an intimate window into the vibrant cultures of East Asia,” avers PoChu AuYeung, VIFF programme manager and senior programmer. “This year’s eclectic collection of cinematic experiences is at times sentimental, inquisitive, and occasionally even shocking — but what unifies them is the authenticity of voices and beauty of expression from one of the film world’s most exciting creative regions.”

The Town of Headcounts is Shinji Araki’s riveting directorial début.

Jimmy Carter: Rock & Roll President (USA). The Canadian première of director Mary Wharton’s infectiously charmingly and wistful remembrance of an earlier and, perhaps, more sane time in American politics, in its 96-minute running time tells the tale of an enlightened U.S. commander-in-chief who was a true aficionado and lover of American popular music.
Jimmy Carter: Rock & Roll President is more than just a record of Carter’s knowledge of our musical history. This lively documentary explores his belief that American music reflects the country’s soul: “I think music is the best proof that people have one thing in common no matter where they live, no matter what language they speak.” Director Mary Wharton, in collaboration with writer Bill Flanagan, help make Carter’s case by weaving together interviews with entertaining, at times inspiring, archival and concert footage. The film will make you nostalgic for great music and for a return to true spiritual leadership down south. The Man from Plains was not a mere peanut farmer who stumbled into the country’s highest office; he was a principled leader whose spiritual beliefs and southern roots brought youthful passion and moral direction to the presidency.
After the misery, cynicism, and division of the past four years in America, Jimmy Carter: Rock & Roll President is a breath of fresh air.