INSIDE OUT 2012 – Boy Scandinavia Program Review (Paolo Kagaoan)

INSIDE OUT 2012 (Toronto)

The Boy Scandinavia program includes:

Baldguy (Skallaman)

Directed by Maria Bock

A Day in the Country (En dag pa landet)

Directed by Pella Kågerman and Hugo Lilja

Pura Vida

Directed by Anders Hazelius

Tord and Tord (Tord och Tord)

Directed by Niki Lindroth von Bahr

XY Anatomy of a Boy

Directed by Mette Carla Albrechtsen

The journey through Boy Scandinavia includes love triangles, boy talk, animation, older men in dresses, and outrageous coming out scenarios, and perfect regional diction. This program has it all. The first movie in this Inside Out short movie program is A Day in the Country, which was already shown during the Sagat screening. But it has a hot sex scene in it so I’m not complaining. Because I’m creepy and I couldn’t find him on iMDb and on the InsideOut page, I found one of the actors – Robert Styrbjorn – on Facebook and Linkedin.

That short is followed by XY Anatomy of a Boy. It has the essence of a conceptual, avant-garde, student film, beginning by showing cubicles occupied by the skinniest Danish young men you’ll ever see. And a ‘medium’ sized one. The cultural divide makes the movie’s setting difficult to figure out. Is this a gym or a tamer version of a bathhouse? Either way, there are bathtubs. The guys, ranging from 18 to 26, are paired up and talk frankly – and without titillation – about their sexual beginnings and ambivalences. The movie ends where it starts, with a bit of loneliness despite these men sharing some emotional times together.

In Tord och Tord, a rabbit, standing upright and dressed in corduroys, accidentally goes into the apartment next door, thinking that it’s his. He realizes that it’s a fox’s apartment, but he realizes that he and he fox might have a lot in common. That doesn’t stop them from going to coffee dates with each other. I was led to believe that the animation is going to give me to a quirky, Fantastic Mr. Fox-y kind of time. It’s more sombre than that, and the voiceover by an older man isn’t helping to elevate the movie’s downer of a mood.

Our male protagonist seeks a vacation in Pura Vida, also the title of this short. He also hopes to alleviate his loneliness by going to a bar. He finds a man there to take to his place but their middle-age means that they’re not as easily sexually excited as younger men might be, thus they try to take it slowly. But despite their adult cautiousness feelings between them surface, and the other man’s life presents tragic boundaries against the two men.

The last is called Skallaman, the Norwegian word for Baldguy, finally informing me from where the term ‘scallywag’ might have come. A man and his wife are waiting for their young, gothy son to come home, only for him to say that he has made out with a short, fat, bald guy. And not only does he say it, he leaves the apartment and goes out on the street to sing it! While his musical celebration continues his mother also sings, this time it’s about social rejection, voicing a heightened, comical version of homophobia. Watching characters burst out into song isn’t always my thing. However, I have the word ‘Skallamann’ stuck in my head for days now so that goes to show how surprisingly better this is than I previously thought.

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INSIDE OUT 2012 (Toronto) – The Crown Jewels re-cast (Paolo Kagaoan)

INSIDE OUT 2012 (Toronto)

The Crown Jewels (2011)

Starring Alicia Vikander, Bill Skarsgård and Loa Falkman

Directed by Ella Lemhagen

A friend of mine said that she liked my recasts/remake pitches so here am I to do it again. This time it’s for the Inside Out selection The Crown Jewels, a part of this year’s Scandinavian spotlight. And boy does it need a remake. It’s a movie set in the middle to the latter portion of the 20th century when well-tailored conservatism is starting to make way for the new generation and their punk rebellion. It’s the setting for a murder mystery or two, with some strange subplots involving a goldfish accompanying an underwater entity, a working class immigrated alchemist, a cruel shoe factory owner and a gay hockey player.

You’re thinking that the world doesn’t need any more English-language remakes of Scandinavian movies. But look at David Fincher, adding restraint to the vulgar Dragon Tattoo boo/movie. And mind you, I like the emotional weight of the conversations between characters in The Crown Jewels. However, the movie doesn’t establish its time-frame quite well. Some supporting characters are caricatures. It also needs to harness the fantasy better, this aspect feeling cluttered, thus asking its audience for too much to believe. And where are the titular crown jewels? In fixing these problems we first need a writer/director before looking at the characters.

Writer/director: Guillermo del Toro. He can juggle genre hybrids of fantasy, horror and real-life tragedy. His monsters and creatures don’t really scare as much as engender wonderment. His peers like Amenabar and Bayona, all three working within the Spanish-language horror, can only do this genre with a little bit of fantasy, but those guys probably have less on their plate than him. Now we move on to the actors.

Fragancia Fernandez, the strong-willed, tomboyish protagonist accused of the crime that occurs in the movie’s first scene. Originally played by Alicia Vikander.

My pick – Vanessa Hudgens. She’s the only character her (my?) age who can be conceivably called Fernandez. She’s normally too voluptuous and sweet but she shows slivers of toughness in movies like Sucker Punch. And there’s something castable about her, despite the mediocre stuff she’s been in. Carrying material like this might expand her horizon as well as our perspective of his former Disney good girl.

The movie also shows the younger characters played by two or three different actors, which is problematic. It’s hard enough to cast adult-aged characters and it’s going to be more difficult to cast younger actors, most of whom are unknown. But a younger Fragancia can be played by Hailee Steinfeld.

Richard Peerson, the poor little rich boy who dies within the first scene but returns in flashbacks, his life forever intertwined with Fragancia’s. He’s also bratty and destructive, a product of an abused childhood. Originally played by Bill Skarsgard, relation to Stellan and Alexander is questionable.

My pick – Michael Cera. He’s known to be weasel-like in most of his TV and movie work. But watch Scott Pilgrim again. Despite playing the same guy over and over again he’s a master of line readings and pacing. And I know someone reading this has seen Youth in Revolt and can vouch that he can play bad.

Mr. Peerson, Richard’s father who accidentally drops the latter when he was a baby. This trauma causes him to be abusive to his own son and wife. Originally played by Loa Falkman.

My pick – Jim Broadbent. I’m starting to notice that most Anglophone actors play more adorable roles than their gritty Swedish counterparts, but this Oscar winner has played his share of baddies, like a football club honcho in the underrated and underwatched The Damned United.

Petersson-Johnson, the new blonde boy in town who does flying pirouettes in the hockey rink. Age doesn’t stop him from those tricks but he can shoot a puck and land both Fragancia and a boyfriend. Originally played by Bjorn Gustafsson.

My pick – Anton Yelchin, who might be tired of playing high school kids but his young looks give him that versatility to play the character in two stages of his life. His acting gets mixed reviews but I like the physicality and sensitivity he’s shown in movies like Fright Night, where he also grows up to be a man.

Fernandez Fernandez, Franacia’s father who never gives up on his dreams to turn lead into gold. He also works in Mr. Peerson’s show factory. Originally played by Michalis Koutsogiannakis. He also played Lisbeth Salander’s boss in the original Dragon Tattoo movies.

My pick – Hugo Weaving, and I haven’t seen him in a movie in a long time. Known for playing tough villains like his role in The Matrix, the most vulnerable and paternal I’ve seen him is as V in V or Vendetta. And there’s something about his facial features that make him seem like a canvas of emotion.

Pastor Hjalmar, a minor role. Like most of the paternal characters, he is named after his profession. He also takes Fragancia in after a gas leak blows up her house. Killing her mother and disabling her father. Originally played by Michael Segerstrom.

My pick – Tom Wilkinson. Like every British man, the stocky actor played his share of tough characters, and that has been his expertise within the past half-decade. He can also be the soft mentor within a warped fantasy world as he was in Michel Gondry’s 2004 movie Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.

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Fright Nights (Toronto) – Viscera Short Film Festival Coverage (Kirk Haviland)

Fright Nights at the Projection Booth

Viscera Short Film Festival, May 15th 2012

For Kelly Stewart’s May presentation of Fright Nights at the Projection Booth in Toronto he decided to do something different. Hooking up with Curio Media and Director/Producer Karen Lam, Kelly was able to bring the Viscera Film Festival to Canada for the first time ever! Viscera is a traveling festival of short genre based films directed by women that was created to inspire and forward the amount of women involved in genre filmmaking. To top it off, Kelly managed to pull together a three-woman panel of directors for a Q&A/panel discussion after the film as well. This panel included Lam herself, whose short Doll Parts was showing, Dara Jade Moats whose short Adventure Girls 3 was also showing, and Jovanka Vuckovic, a local filmmaker who is in the midst of directing her first feature. A truly lively and knowledgeable panel indeed.

The standouts of the programme included Moat’s Adventure Girls 3, at only a minute it really leaves you thirsting for more, and stealing dialogue directly from Sailor Moon was ingenious (see it here). Lam’s Doll Parts is a great little twist on the serial killer genre in which the protagonist gets his comeuppance, a short I had already seen and enjoyed at last year’s Toronto After Dark Film Festival (TAD). Nursery Crimes is a brilliant little stop-motion re-imagining of the story of Little Bo Peep and many other Nursery Rhymes that was an award winner at TAD last year, where I saw it as well. Blood Bunny was a hilarious take on a stylized grindhouse era movie trailer that works extremely well and is quite ingenious (see it here). 12/15/1996 features a road trip between 2 characters, Adam and Quentin, where one is covered in blood and they keep referring to the “business” in the trunk. A fun homage to filmmakers like Tarantino. And The Party’s Over, a cautionary tale of a drunken one-night stand with serious repercussions.

After the screening we were treated to a lively Q&A that ran a full half-hour in which I personally gained a whole lot of respect for the women filmmakers on the panel and the jobs they are doing. Lam, Moats and Vuckovic were all very open and unguarded with their answers and even provided many helpful tips to some budding filmmakers in attendance. They also stuck around for another half an hour after the panel to talk directly with the attendees in the theater and lobby. A great night out was had by many in attendance.

Next Month Kelly returns with the TAD crowd pleasing hit Father’s Day (review here) from filmmaking conglomerate Astron 6. The film will be preceded by some of the Astron 6 group’s most infamous shorts and features a Q&A with lead actress Amy Groening. This film is disturbing, graphically violent, repulsive and downright hilarious. If you missed it at TAD, DO NOT MISS it at Fright Nights. Father’s Day plays on June 9th.

Till Next Time.

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INSIDE OUT 2012 (Toronto) – Positive Youth Review (Paolo Kagaoan)

INSIDE OUT 2012 (Toronto)

Positive Youth

Directed by Charlie David

Positive Youth’s screening was preceded by a documentary short called Still Here, about New Yorker Randy Baron. This intelligent man talks about himself, his former partner who died of AIDS and the latter’s relatives, and his new boyfriend who has no problems with his own status. He discusses the harrowing nature of having seen his former boyfriend and other friends waste away, his justified health paranoia, the innate physical mutation that stops the virus from killing his T-cells and what he does as a constant survivor of the illness.

Positive Youth is a made for TV documentary by first time director Charlie David. It aims to be inspirational, a few gradations sunnier than last year’s We Were Here, a movie about the first generation affected by the AIDS epidemic. That movie, despite showing enough tears, was also a realistic view of the gay sex culture and how people infected with HIV/AIDS and their friends and neighbours can learn to smile again despite knowing that nothing was going to be normal again. Positive Youth is a tastefully sunnier version of that, this time covering the second generation of HIV positive twenty-somethings. My generation, as the kids in this movie range from 18 to 26 years of age.

The focus of this documentary are HIV-positive Jesse Brown, Floridian Youtube personality Christopher Brooks or TheRedLife, Phoenix entertainer Austin Head and AIDS advocate Rakiya Larkin, whose mother and boyfriend are HIV positive.

The main thing to keep in mind with this doc is its realism and multi-faceted view of the illness. It’s less militant (or maybe more so) as it doesn’t play the blame game. One of the movie’s talking heads is a doctor telling the camera that many sexually active, non-monogamous people of any sexuality have had at least one instance of unprotected sex. This is a fact brushed off by many heterosexual homophobes but is also not factored in by those within LGBT circles and thus has to be acknowledged.

It also explains the disease’s social implications. Like how one in something of the active youths in cities like New York City and Vancouver – as well as the gay enclaves within those cities – are HIV positive, some of whom, not knowing their status, are spreading the illness unknowingly. Three of the four of the documentary’s subjects are also well-versed in their ambivalence with taking HIV medication because of financial concerns and eligibility. There was a question from an audience member to the movie’s director/panel pointing out these youths as middle class, but despite how well these people dress and how happy they seem, their financial struggles are well-documented here in this movie.

In micro effects, Jesse’s boyfriend gets judged for dating an HIV positive man. Rakiya has to work to support her mother. In showing these hardships no one can brush off the movie for being too blindly optimistic.

But again, it’s probably a quality within our generation that helps these youths build up themselves. Instead of the corseted normalcy of past generations we’re armed with smiles, extroversion, and resilience. Jesse and Rakiya, working within the same area, are connected to each other and keep raising awareness and outreach. Christopher doesn’t stop with his search for a day job. And Austin writes and sings, sharing the good and the bad aspects of his life. It is uplifting to watch these four youths, their realism-bound optimism can make audiences of any status and age reach out and be ambitious.

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ChickFlicking the Summer Away – Summer Movie Preview (Nadia Sandhu)

As I wade further into the world of ChickFlicking, it is becoming clear that “chick flick” is really a catchall term for several distinct but related genres. For the purposes of this preview a simple litmus test was employed – does the official synopsis mention a romantic relationship?  If the answer is yes, then that film is included here.

Ladies and Germs, these are the Chick Flicks of Summer 2012 (click links for trailers):

MAY 18


 

 

 

 

What to Expect When You’re Expecting (Alliance Films) – The Hangover with strollers and JLo?

MAY 25

Hysteria (Entertainment One) – This one’s all about the invention of the vibrator AND it’s a period piece.  I’m so there.

Jesus Henry Christ (Entertainment One) – A single mother, a sperm donor, a precocious 10-year-old boy and Toni Collette. Could this be another About a Boy?  Here’s hoping!

JUNE 1

Moonrise Kingdom (Entertainment One) – Are Wes Anderson films really chick flicks at heart? Those are musings for another post, but this particular film involves young love, so it qualifies here.

Snow White and the Huntsman (Universal Pictures) – Snow White has resided under the “flicks for chicks” column since the time of Uncle Walt, and while this darker retelling turns our princess into a warrior, it also gives us Kirsten Stewart as Snow and Liam Hemsworth as the Huntsman.  Women are definitely still the key market for this tale.

JUNE 8

Lola Versus (Fox Searchlight Pictures) – Mumblecore darling Greta Gerwig stars in this tale of a jilted bride who decides to take charge and reinvent her life on the verge of her thirtieth birthday. Classic chick flick material.

Bel Ami (Magnolia Pictures) – Robert Pattinson and an all-star cast of actresses lead by Uma Thurman make this period piece seem reminiscent of Dangerous Liaisons. Sign us up!

JUNE 15

Rock of Ages (Warner Bros. Pictures) – It’s a musical that features 80’s hair metal.  Incidentally, ladies in the 80’s were known to adore a certain Tom Cruise, who appears buff and shirtless here, and as an aging Rock God no less.

JUNE 22

Seeking a Friend for the End of the World (Entertainment One) – Steve Carrell and Kiera Knightley face the end of the world together.  Do romantic sparks fly as the end draws nigh?

Your Sister’s Sister (Mongrel Media) – Sisters Emily Blunt and Rosemarie DeWitt square off over the heart of a man who is trying to come to terms with the death of his brother. Sounds melodramatic but this one is labelled a comedy on tribute.ca

JUNE 29

Magic Mike (Warner Bros. Pictures) – This one is hitting its quadrants, no doubt about that, but with the promise of shirtless eye candy like Channing Tatum, Matthew McConaughey, Alex Pettyfer, Matt Bomer, and Joe Manganiello, and romantic complications against the back drop of a male strip club, this one will get its Chickflicking due.

Take This Waltz (Mongrel Media) – A steamy Toronto summer provides the backdrop for a love triangle between Seth Rogen, Michelle Williams, and Luke Kirby.

JULY 6

To Rome with Love (Mongrel Media) – Woody Allen follows up Midnight in Paris with four intersecting stories set in Rome.

JULY 20

Trishna (Mongrel Media) – Tess of the d’Urbervilles gets an update and a change of location to modern-day India. Freida Pinto stars in this doomed romance.

JULY 27

Step Up Revolution (Entertainment One) – Professional dancers, flash mobs with a message, and young love.

AUGUST 3

Celeste and Jesse Forever (Mongrel Media) – Can a recently divorced couple remain friends while pursuing new relationships? Andy Samberg and Rashida Jones find out in this “anti-rom com”.

AUGUST 10

Hope Springs (Columbia Pictures) – Meryl Streep, the titular Hope, decides to shake things up in her 30 year marriage to Tommy Lee Jones with the help of a relationship guru played by Steve Carrell.

AUGUST 15

The Odd Life of Timothy Green (Walt Disney Pictures) – A happily married couple unexpectedly become parents when young Timothy shows up on their doorstep one night.  This one stars would be rom-com queen Jennifer Garner.

AUGUST 17

Sparkle (Columbia Pictures) – Jordin Sparks starts as a budding singer who must juggle romance, career and the disapproval of her mother in this coming of age story that also features Whitney Houston‘s last performance.

See you at the movies!

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