Category Archives: A & E

VIFF 2021 | Whither Now the Vancouver International Film Festival

In the weeks leading up to the 40th annual Vancouver International Film Festival, VIFF’s Board of Directors met with Executive Director Kyle Fostner, and a handful of senior programming administrators at the Festival, to map out a business plan for the upcoming hybrid Festival, and the return to in person, in-cinema screenings.

Arising from those series of meetings, the VIFF Board and senior staff drafted and agreed on a business plan which calculated full in-person, in-cinema attendance at all VIFF 2021 screenings. The only possible way that VIFF could be successful as an organization in 2021 — and maintain its integrity, sense of purpose and the Festival’s ability to survive into the future — was if the Festival was to sell every available ticket for each venue screening during the 11-day run of the Festival.

Those senior VIFF administrators not included, those lower down the ladder, in the decision-making process only rolled their eyes when the VIFF’s business plan was published. Never in the entire history of the Festival has every VIFF screening sold out, nor come close to achieving that goal. In fact, this fiction of full attendance has been borne out at VIFF 2021 as in-cinema attendance, although good, has proved below projection, with attendance at screenings at this year’s truncated film festival anywhere from half to two-thirds, and on rare occasion, fully sold out.

Which begs the question, “Whither now the Vancouver International Film Festival?”

The pandemic has changed a lot of things around the world. In times of stress, sadness, and world upturning events, nothing beats going to the movies. Unfortunately, pandemics and crowded movie theatres don’t mix, either at Cineplex or Landmark Cinemas, or the Vancouver International Film Festival.

Film festivals have long been an exploration of art through storytelling, best experienced in a darkened movie theatre surrounded by fellow cinephiles. But for a great while now that has not been possible. A recent survey of film festival directors and creators across the globe told those who organized the research study that they see the future of film festivals as more of a place to express art and storytelling, and less about the medium itself — although nothing quite beats the in-person experience, and the anticipation of sitting in a Festival movie theatre.

Truth to tell, most film festivals were already facing an identity crisis, even before the pandemic. An impenetrably dense media landscape, the proliferation of on-demand content, and market instability created a mounting sense of uncertainty: What should festivals be doing — and how can they possibly persevere?

Last year, Nicole Guillaumet — who worked as Sundance’s co-director from its early days in 1985 all the way through 2002 — told IndieWire’s Eric Kohn …

“Film festivals are accessible only to those who can afford them. Attending in person has become an exclusive experience. It is very expensive and excludes many young people who cannot afford to pay often exorbitant rates for access, or passes,” says Guillaumet.

Over the past 19 months, as we have continued to live through history in the making, it was only a matter of time — and survival — that moved film festival administrators to adapt to unprecedented circumstances by going online for the very first time. Guillaumet sees the move toward hybrid film festivals as a needed shift toward democratized access. “The impact on future audiences and future filmmakers will be enormous,” she said. “We need both virtual and in-person festivals.”

Existential questions about the future of cinema-going are nothing new for Festival administrators. Over the past number of years, the rise of streaming services and the accompanying decline in ticket sales have prompted much hand-wringing over the relevance of the in-cinema experience, with the coronavirus pandemic amplifying those anxieties as Festivals faced an apocalyptic reality: with theatres darkened across across the globe, and with previous film festival fare bypassing theatres almost entirely — in favour of streaming services such as MUBI, Festival Scope, Docsville, IndiePix and BFI Player, among other festival streaming services, what does the future hold for film festivals like our beloved homegrown VIFF?

Director Christopher Nolan, long a champion of the theatre experience, wrote an op-ed for The Washington Post underlining the human toll of closed theatres and diminished film festivals, urging distributors to re-consider their release plans.

“The theatrical and the festival exhibition community needs strategic and forward-thinking partnership from the studios and distributors,” Nolan wrote. “Much of the current short-term loss is recoverable. When this crisis passes, the need for collective human engagement, the need to live and love and laugh and cry together, will be more powerful than ever. The combination of that pent-up demand and the promise of great new movies will boost local and national economies, and allow film festivals to thrive into the future.”

Perhaps Nolan is right to sound the alarm. The future of the blockbuster Hollywood movie and independent film festivals alike may not be lost, but theatres, festival administrators and independent film studios must prepare for the possibility — and perhaps even, probability — of a grim post-pandemic reality.

VIFF 2021 | Sandy Gow’s Knock-Out, Must-See International Shorts

Year-in, year out, at the very heart of the Vancouver International Film Festival lies the always spectacular, phenomenally moving — and sometimes, downright funny — International Shorts programmes, as curated by VIFF’s International Shorts programmer, Sandy Gow.

In the past VanRamblings has written this about Sandy …

“Every now and then, we get to be our true selves, our best selves. Sandy, who like many of us is ‘of an age’, has come into his own in recent years — honest and forthright, humane and caring, employing wit and warmth and intelligence and an unparalleled love of cinema, in the job he has undertaken. As mentioned above, Sandy curates the International Shorts programme. How very, very fortunate we VIFF cinéastes are to have in place for us, a VIFF staff person of such unparalleled integrity, as well as an abiding warmth of spirit, an individual who prioritizes films not just as ‘craft’, but of immense heart and cinematic intelligence.”

Three notes should be made about the International Shorts programme …

  • The International Shorts programme is too often overlooked by VIFF patrons who while striving to see the best in world cinema neglect to consider that the birth of the features that emerge as life-changing events at VIFF often occur within the realm of ‘the short’, a film in the truest sense (despite its abbreviated length) that garners the necessary attention to allow the novice filmmaker a film career;
  • For years, Sandy Gow has curated International Shorts programmes, that offer VIFF patrons one surety: most, if not all, of the films in any given International Shorts programme will come to represent the best experience to be had inside a darkened theatre, or at home through VIFF Connect. Sandy’s heart, intellect and wisdom are poured into the decisions he makes in choosing from among the 1600 entries that culminate in the 29 shorts included in the four curated programmes at VIFF2021, a winsome combination of intimate, humane, thoughtful, provocative, revelatory, and heartbreaking chronicles of the human condition;
  • Competition. Take a gander at your Facebook feed, or listen to the conversations in the lineups as passholders “discuss” how many films they’ve seen that day, and what their “count” of films screened is as of any given day — in some sense VIFF is, at times, a “competition” to see the most films (and why not? what a treat to see 100+ films!). Imagine the following: take in a screening of every one of the 29 shorts in the four IS programmes, and your number of films screened will burgeon! Although a gentle humility defines the approach of the VIFF veteran to her fellow Festival patrons, a bit of boastfulness from time to time surely cannot be out of place. Twenty-nine films added to your list of feature films seen at VIFF2021, and a glorious and transformative 465 minutes in the cinema! At VIFF, we call that bliss .

In a recent conversation with the slightly rumpled professorial-looking Sandy Gow, he told VanRamblings that over the past year he and his team have screened a record 1600 short films — 200 more entries than last year — while on the way to creating the curated and juried four International Shorts programmes that have found their way onto VIFF’s 2021 film schedule.

In these waning days of the 40th annual Vancouver International Film Festival, if you’re looking to be delighted, moved, informed and to be introduced to a ‘new’ filmmaker, who very well may become the next David Fincher, Kathryn Bigelow, Ava DuVernay or Pete Docter, Sandy’s International Shorts programme is the place to be, and the very best part of VIFF 2021 yet to be explored.

Mr. Gow discusses each of the 4 International Shorts programmes this year …
(click on each programme link to go to the VIFF page for the programme)

International Shorts: Animation
Available on VIFF Connect through October 11th

“The animation programme in 2021, we had so much good animation, so many great submissions. The programme last year was hugely successful, probably the most successful shorts programme in VIFF’s entire history. The animation programme this year is a little more mature, with more serious themes, in a wonderfully diverse programme, where every short is different: in style, in approach, in theme, ranging from the various serious to the humorous. I love animation, and never more so than this year. In 2021, this great animation programme is simply not to be missed.”

International Shorts: Life Labs
Available on VIFF Connect through October 11th

“This series is about choices people make in their lives, and how that affects other people. In each of the shorts in the Life Labs series, someone is making a choice that is going to have serious implications. Some of my favourites are included in this programme. I really loved MeTube: August Sings ‘Una Furtiva Lagrima’, which is so hilarious, a loud and crazy mash up of sci-fi and opera.”

International Shorts: Have We Ever Learned?
Available on VIFF Connect through October 11th

“We as human beings like to think of ourselves as intelligent and rational, as having accomplished so much during our time as a species on this Earth — and yet there are aspects of our behaviour as individuals and in society that causes us to continue to make the same mistakes over and over again. You’d think we’d  have learned by now, but clearly we haven’t. Those are the issues that are addressed this year in the Have We Ever Learned? Shorts programme. Topical, political, adventurous, serious, humourous — like A Roll in the Hay which, by the way, is also a great little thriller that will have you on the edge of your seat the whole time.”

International Shorts: Seniors Day
Available on VIFF Connect through October 11th

“The common theme in the Seniors Day programme is that the protagonists in every film are, essentially, older people. They’re not the lay down and die people, they’re a pretty feisty bunch. The Seniors Day programme, again, is a great collection of some really humourous films, as well as those tending to the more serious. My favourite film in all of the International Shorts programmes is Don vs Lightning — which is the best comedy I’ve screened in a long time, starring Peter Mullan (pictured above), a really established actor. In fact, that’s one of the common themes in the Seniors Day programme, three of the shorts — including Roy and Charon — have really established actors, who have lent their talent to young, up and coming filmmakers. It really pays off is all I can say.”

VIFF cinephiles: You’ve got your work cut out for you as this year’s glorious —  yet somewhat truncated —  40th edition of the Vancouver International Film Festival draws to a close this upcoming Thanksgiving Monday, October 11th.

Arts Friday | The Much Anticipated Autumn Film Festival Season Underway

In 2021, wherever a film festival may take place, appropriate COVID protocols will be in place, including mandatory masks in the screening rooms and common areas, and proof that cinephile patrons have been vaccinated.

The pandemic – particularly given the ravages of the COVID-19 fourth wave – will probably mean, and has meant at the Telluride and Venice film festivals, prejudiced attendance numbers at fall film festivals. As was the case in 2020 – and once again will be so in 2021 – films on offer will be made available for home viewing, with a small number of films  available exclusively for in-person screenings. In other words, in order for film festivals to “work” in 2021, festival directors have adopted a “hybrid model” to satisfy the viewing demands of their loyal patrons.

At Telluride and Venice, major film studios made their star-driven, Oscar contending film slates available to these two prestigious film festivals, as will be the case in Toronto – which got underway yesterday – and later this month in Gotham City, at the 59th annual New York Film Festival, which will share half their slate with VIFF.

At Telluride and Venice, Hollywood stars turned out in all their finery, engaging in post screening discussions with audiences, sitting in rapt & appreciative attention.

Above is a clip of Japanese-English director Will Sharpe’s The Electrical Life of Louis Wain, a whimsical Victorian biopic starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Claire Foy which, it was announced at the annual Vancouver International Film Festival media conference has been selected as VIFF40’s opening night film, on October 1st.

“Movies are a distraction from reality,” says a character in Paolo Sorrentino’s Hand of God — which débuted at Telluride a sprawling, funny-sad, autobiographical coming-of-age story. That’s a good thing. Reality is drab and painful — “lousy,” according to the film’s English subtitles — and film provides a much needed respite.

The break-out Oscar contenders that débuted at Telluride include …

Cyrano, a lovely new telling of the classic story of Cyrano de Bergerac, which had its world première at Telluride, and took that film festival by storm with guaranteed Oscar nods all around;

https://youtu.be/MUnsoxe7K4g

The North American première of Spencer, the mesmerizing new drama starring Kristen Stewart (a guaranteed Best Actress Oscar nominee) as Princess Diana; and

The crowd-pleasing King Richard, a drama charting the rise of tennis superstars Venus and Serena Williams, expected to launch Will Smith into the Oscar race for his portrayal of the girls’ demanding dad and coach, Richard Williams — a loving, egocentric father who, it turns out, did know what was best for his daughters.

Céline Sciamma’s exquisite Petite Maman — which débuted at the Berlinale, and has been set as VIFF40’s closing night film (cuz it’s VIFF programmer, Curtis Woloschuk’s, favourite film at VIFF this year, he told VanRamblings earlier in the week — don’t tell anybody, though, cuz it’s a secret) — a delicate film full of surprises. Sciamma, whose Portrait of a Lady on Fire was a VIFF standout in 2019 (at the pre-pandemic VIFF festival), examines female intimacy from a different angle.

Nelly and Marion (played by young twins named Joséphine and Gabrielle Sanz) are 8-year-old girls living in similar houses in the woods. They strike up a friendship tinged with elements of fairy-tale supernaturalism, magical realism and time travel. The twists packed into the film’s compact 72 minutes arrive gently and matter-of-factly. The intense emotions they leave behind — this is one of the quietest tear-jerkers you’ll ever see — are at once familiar and wholly new.

Soon, the sane and responsible among us will be fully vaccinated and in possession of our province-issued vaccine card — making attendance at movie theatres, restaurants, bars and pubs safer and more enjoyable for the vast majority of us.

As much as COVID’s fourth wave will keep us in its troubling grip, for the most part it is the anti-social unvaccinated amongst us who will bear the malignant brunt of the coronavirus — for the rest of us, a return to a near normal state of being holds promise for our immediate future, and the prospect of an autumn movie-going season sitting amongst our brothers and sisters inside a darkened movie theatre.

Arts Friday | Animation as An Expression of Human Experience

Canada's National Film Board, the Animation division

All animation, whether it depicts a whistling mouse, a walking dinosaur, or a leaping superhero, is a kind of magic trick. It’s right there in the name of one of the earliest devices used to project slides: the magic lantern.
If you take an image of an open hand and an image of a fist and project the two in sequence, you’ll convey the illusion of a clench.

“What happens between each frame is more important than what happens on each frame,” Scottish-Canadian experimental animator, the late Norman McLaren — a director and producer with the National Film Board of Canada (NFB), and a respected pioneer of hand-drawn animation and drawn-on-film animation — once explained, stating that ‘Animation is the art of manipulating the invisible interstices between frames.”

Arising from VanRamblings’ coverage this week of the meaning behind the majority BC NDP win in the recent provincial election, we failed to make mention of International Animation Day — which occurred this past Wednesday, October 28th — celebrated by the National Film Board of Canada through the streaming of 12 films, all of which are permanently available now – for free viewing – on the National Film Board website.
As Mercedes Milligan wrote this past Tuesday in Animation Magazine

Now in its 14th year, this annual NFB event gives Canadian audiences the opportunity to explore a host of new works by Canadian and European filmmakers working in the National Film Board’s cutting-edge, internationally renowned studios. The rich 2020 selection puts women in the spotlight — both female directors and strong female characters — and features a wealth of different animation techniques.

Award winning Vancouver animator Ann Marie Fleming new 2020 animation short, <em>Old Dog</em></ br>Vancouver-based animator Ann Marie Fleming’s new animated short, Old Dog

 

Made by world-renowned animators, the outstanding animated films in this year’s International Animation Day programme have won prestigious awards and screened throughout the global festival circuit.

Long one of VanRamblings’ favourite arts and culture writers, Katja De Bock is now a publicist with the NFB (lucky, lucky them!). Here’s what she wrote to VanRamblings earlier in the week on one particular film she cherishes …

Old Dog, the latest film by Vancouver’s Ann Marie Fleming, started off as a way of talking about aging, inspired by Ms. Fleming’s namesake, Ann-Marie Fleming, whom she often gets mixed up with in Internet searches.

Ann-Marie has a company in 100 Mile House, B.C., that makes technologies for aging dogs, and also for their humans. Animator Ann Marie was struck by the compassion her namesake has for these vulnerable animals, as she helped them to navigate the latter stages of their lives, and by how much dogs have to teach human beings.

The COVID-19 pandemic made Ms. Fleming (the animator), whose elderly parents live overseas, reflect on how we take care of our elders and how our global values are being put to the test.

According to Ann Marie, animation is the perfect medium to tell this story. It makes the experience of the human and the dog more universal and helps us understand the unbearable lightness of being.

Now, as it happens Ms. De Bock informs us — and now, you — Old Dog is also featured at this year’s SPARK Animation Festival in Vancouver — which, by the way, began yesterday, and is set to run through Sunday, November 8th, and in addition to films will feature workshops, panels and talks by the world’s most talented artists, directors, and studio luminaries.

Vancouver's annual SPARK Animation Festival, in 2020 starting October 29th and running through November 8th

This year’s SPARK Animation Festival pass is only $25 — which will give you access to the dozens of films SPARK has on offer in 2020.
Guess what VanRamblings is going to be doing for the next nine days!
On Arts Friday, VanRamblings will leave you with this special treat …

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Ann Marie Fleming’s Old Dog, a presentation of the National Film Board of Canada