May 23, 2008
Day 10 | Une soiree a Antibes

Its 4:15am, so just under 2 hours left until I can get in a car to take me to the airport, and 4 hours left until I can sleep on a crowded airplane. Coca Cola Light and MTV Europe are my keep-awakes, with MTV Europe playing a 40 minute loop of videos over and over and over. I've heard "I Wanna Make Love (In This Club)" and "4 Minutes" about 6 times each now and I'll admit its making me feel mildly insane. But I'm not asleep. So that's all that matters.

Anyway, I figured I might as well throw out another (last? I have stuff I could post when I get back to Montreal and regain my mind, but we'll see) blog entry to pass the time. Because I'm not exactly capable of anything more, I'm basically just gonna throw up some photos from today's indieWIRE excursion to Antibes. We did the same thing last year, walking the same sidewalks and eating at the same restaurant. Its nice closure to nearly two weeks of basically 24 hour company with your co-workers, which is surprisingly doable (mostly because they be good people). But in the end I always compare the end of any film festival to the emotional experience of ending summer camp. Except now we're old and its about work and instead of campfire sing-a-longs its drunken karaoke or drunkenly having an American national anthem-Canadian national anthem sing off in the street (I'm sure the French loved that, and on an extremely embarrassing note, I forgot the words to the Canadian anthem). But anyway, today's trip to Antibes was summer camp's end, and now I'm waiting for my metaphorical parents, a cab driver, to pick me up.

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Day 10 | Synecdoche

I'm about 4 hours from leaving for the airport (Its 2am and Im staying up until my 6am car arrives to try and put myself on Montreal time before I get there, which may or may not prove disastrous). I was also not really festival savvy today.. me and the rest of the indieWIRErers made a day trip to Antibes. So I'm instead posting this very clever video posted on Mike Jones' Variety blog, interviewing people around the festival about the difficulties saying the name of the film I'd really wish I'd been able to see (It plays Friday night, when I'll be somewhere over the Atlantic drugged up and passed out), Charlie Kaufman's Synecdoche, New York (I'd been calling it Sin-Eck-Douche all week, which is very wrong). Enjoy:


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May 22, 2008
Day 9 | Cannes Flaneuring

After 8 days in the basement of the Palais, I finally came out of daytime hiding today and decided to avoid any festivaling and just tour around outside the centre of the action. It was thankfully a nice day, and Cannesians make it really easy to be entertained just walking around. Perhaps it was inappropriate to take photos of them as a result, but I did, and I'm sharing:

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May 21, 2008
Day 8 | Changeling/The Exchange

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One of the most interesting things about seeing films at a festival, for me, is that I get a chance to really challenge the idea of pre-conceived notions effecting my opinion of a movie. I get to see something before there are any reviews or much buzz. Today, an example of this came in The Exchange (or is it Changeling? I keep hearing contradictions about what this eleventh hour name change is all about?), Clint Eastwood's second child-gone-missing drama in the past 5 years.

Before I get into what I thought of the film, which I got a last-minute ticket to today, let me just say that the reviews, particularly Todd McCarthy and Richard Corliss, shocked me. McCarthy in particular went all out for the film, comparing it to Chinatown and L.A. Confidential, and opening by announcing:

A thematic companion piece to "Mystic River" but more complex and far-reaching, "Changeling" impressively continues Clint Eastwood's great run of ambitious late-career pictures.

Well you can easily argue that the film could indeed by a companion piece to River, the only thing it is "more" than that film is overwrought and melodramatic. And that's saying a lot compared to a River, a film that (barely) pulled itself off despite considerably harbouring both of those tendencies.

Changeling, which I'll call it just to make things easier, frankly, is a mess. It stars Angelina Jolie as Christine Collins, a working class single mother circa 1928 Los Angeles. Her son, Walter, "her everything," goes missing when she is called into work one day, leaving a corrupt LAPD department as her only hope to get him back. A few months later, they do. Except its not Walter, and no one (except a goofy John Malkovich as a local Reverend) believes her. This initial incident and its aftermath provides entry into a giant bucket of content and thematic possibilities: the socio-political elements of the position of women in the 1920s, the power of motherhood, courtroom drama, police corruption, even a Girl, Interrupted style stint in a psych ward. Except the film handles this mishmash poorly, taking on too much and expressing too little, exhausting itself less than an hour into its 140 minute run and leading me to stop caring about where the twists and turns even led.

The problems lie primarily in the script, by Walker Texas Ranger and Babylon 5 vet J. Michael Stracyznski (what is it with Clint hiring ex-Walker scribes?). Adapted from a true story, it could have trimmed down 30% of the content, and spared audiences from witnessing some truly horrible dialogue. One example finds a fellow psych ward inmate (played by Amy Ryan, who is admittedly fantastic in her ten minutes despite the material) empowering Christine by giving her a speech about the doctors at the hospital (who are horrendously mistreating them despite the fact that they are basically there because they were had the power to give the LAPD bad PR) that ends with the exclamation point: "Fuck him and the horse he road in on." A few scenes later, Jolie repeats the line with over the top enthusiasm when she finally confronts him herself. It was one of many occasions when I mouthed the words of the upcoming lines before they happened. But the direction must be at fault as well. The film feels like it was directed by Clint Eastwood channelling Ron Howard (who produced), turning mind numbingly sentimental whenever it can. The performances, particularly Jolie's, are way too over the top as a result.

The lone great quality of the film is its cinematography by Tom Stern, nostalgic and as Todd McCarthy correctly identified it, graceful and elegant. And some individual scenes are randomly affecting, particularly Jolie's discovery of the missing child and initial realization of the returned child not being her's, which is where initially I thought she was heading for a very strong performance. But as the film starts piling up its plot (which though apparently true, is sometimes quite unbelievable.. her returned son was really obviously not hers, and I can't imagine how so many heartless individuals, one after another, could so quickly deny this heartbroken mother her suspicions), it feels like Jolie loses her concentration, and, so did I. The many sums of Changeling cannot add up to anything whole because they are all trying to do different things.

Obviously, not everyone agrees with me, and maybe this proves I know nothing about film criticism and that I've only largely agreed with critical consensus because I subconsciously leech onto it when making my own opinion. But at the risk of sounding as overdramatic as Changeling itself, if this wins the Palme or god help me some major Oscars, maybe I'll start focusing this blog on something I'm clearly well-attuned to, like checking the weather or making poorly shot Flip videos of drunk people.

(Also, for another criticism of Clint very evident in Changeling, especially considering its 1920s Los Angeles setting, check this out. Nary a non-white extra could be found in Changeling)

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May 20, 2008
Day 7 | German Party

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Last night, the Germans went all out with their national party at Cannes. A 20 minute (coach) bus ride from Cannes took you to their extravagant villa, complete with a buffet a good 100 feet long, a dozen bars, a pool, and about a thousand Germans. Elaborate lights gave it a really interesting aesthetic, though the odd way that the carpet's colour on the stairs merged with the raising floor around it left at least 3 (I saw 3) people collapse face first on the ground due to the optical illusion. Either way, some pics:

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Unfortunately, around midnight the largely outdoor space fell victim to Cannes 08 weather. But instead of crowding into tents, most of the attendees danced in the rain, and in some cases, danced quite aggressively in the rain:




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May 19, 2008
Day 6 | indieWIRE 2007 and 2008

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Day 6 | Cannes Karaoke

On the street outside the Petit Majestic, many many Americans (and one Canadian, though I did not sing.. which I will never do again after a drunken rendition of Tori Amos's Cornflake Girl a few years back that might have lost me some friends) annoyed many a neighbour:



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May 18, 2008
Day 5 | Indiana Jones and Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Its Indiana Jones day here in Cannes. Check out Eugene's blog if you want a play by play of the new Indiana Jones flick (or don't if you want a spoiler-free screening).

Also, this is a photo taken of Penelope Cruz on the red carpet yesterday that is just absolutely stunning. The umbrellas in the back. The facial expressions of the photographers. That dress. That face. She is her generation's Sophia Loren (the photo is also care of Eugene's blog).

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And I was lucky enough to catch her performance in Woody Allen's Vicky Cristina Barcelona, which was the sort of thing the phrase "tour-de-force" was created for. She plays Maria Elena, the suicidal ex-wife of Javier Bardem's character, who himself is creating moral/existential crisis for two young women and best friends - Vicky (Rebecca Hall) and Cristina (Scarlett Johannson). Vicky plays by the rules romantically, is engaged to a Wall Street bore, and has come to Barcelona for a summer to study Catalan culture. Cristina is a bit slutty, doesn't know what she wants, and seems determined to keep it that way by choosing partners that put her in a cyclical path of lust-pain-confusion-lust-pain-confusion. She's come to Barcelona to try and figure herself out.

The basic core of the film - these two women, their contrasting beliefs, and how Javier Bardem's sexy beast brings them both to question them, is typical Allen territory. But there are many things about its execution that made me like it more than perhaps any Allen film since at least Match Point and maybe even Bullets Over Broadway. First, I found the characters atypically (for an Allen film, which often lately have been mismashes of actors and actresses that just seem like names were drawn out of hat - especially late 90s/early 00s examples) well-cast: Everyone, with the exception of maybe Scarlett (I'll get to that), is fantastic here, and some scenes in particular have the ability to be either very sexy, very relatable, or very funny because all of the players - Bardem, Hall, Patricia Clarkson and especially Penelope Cruz, are so good. Which brings me to another reason:

The film is very sexy, very relatable, and very funny. Little skin is actually shown, but Bardem shows off a unique brand of sexiness in that he's kind of a player, a bit of an asshole, but in one scene when he jointly offers both Vicky and Cristina an invite to a weekend island getaway (Vicky says no, Cristina says yes, of course), you want to have the morals of Vicky, but you know you're carnally siding with Cristina. And even though the slut vs. saint thing is sort of a tired evaluation, Allen really fleshed out his script, and I found myself wrestling with the dual nature of my own, and people I know's, Vicky/Cristina dichotomy on the walk home from the cinema. And as far as the funny goes, a lot of that is owed to Cruz, who is remarkable here. The Weinsteins would have to serious fuck up the marketing if Cruz doesn't get an Oscar nod. You get excited every time she pops up, which often involves hilarious half English/half Spanish blow out tantrums. But Cruz also brings a real woman to Marie Elena, particularly when she calms down. When Cruz and Bardem's characters take on the confused Cristina in a three-way relationship (including a very brief three-way sex scene), Allen gets a chance to take down the severities of their characters, and in Marie Elena, show a woman with confused aspirations, battling some serious demons, and desperately seeking attention. And in doing so Cruz makes it look so easy, continuing to supplant herself as an international actress with serious range, as opposed to her ill-fated journey into American garbage that made even myself (now a serious Cruz fan) question her capabilities as an actress.

The film's few problems often come from Ms. Johannson. Her character gives a speech to her two lovers at one point in the film, arguing that she "has accepted she has no real talent." She can appreciate art or film or literature, but she herself has nothing to bring to the table. This is what finally brings Marie-Elena over to Cristina's side, insisting on being her muse as she takes on writing and photography. Except that speech still rings in your head, and you wonder: Whats so special about Cristina that these two - insane, yes - but incredibly interesting people take on someone so beige. And Johannson herself has the same problem in her performance. She barely gets by here, and the contrast between her and Bardem and Cruz's capabilities is so notable when they are all on screen. She's the only weak link of a very talented cast, but unfortunately that link is so intertwined (in usual Allen fashion) in the others that it puts a damper on everything else.

One other minor irritation is the narration, which is an anonymous voice detailing background information on the characters as well as their internal thoughts. What he's saying is often quite funny and perceptive, but his voice does not suit the film. One person after the screening noted how it sounded like something from a Wes Anderson film. Which might suit that just fine, but here, its just not quite calming enough, which is what is necessary when being given information about the neurotic and intense characters its describing.

Overall, though, I'm very glad this was my first (and only?) Cannes 08 screening, and was pleasantly surprised that Mr. Allen, every few movies or so, proves he's still capable of pulling this off. It also could be really marketable, more than any Allen movie in a longtime, and its nice to see a Fall release date (instead of the last few, all release end of December/January) to pamper its potential.

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May 17, 2008
Day 4 | Umbrellas, Plastic Furniture, and Bono

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Check this. Though perhaps the link (hopefully) changes in what it displays by the time its clicked, right now the next 10 days in Cannes will continue the oh-so-joyful trend of grey skies and 15 euro umbrella purchasing.

I've yet to see a film, which should change tomorrow. But am enjoying just being surrounded the daily ups and downs of first-hand hearsay. Basically, and in slight summary: Israeli animated documentary Waltz with Bashir is fantastic, Martina Gusman is amazing in Argentine film Leonara, Blindness sucks, and Vicky Cristina Barcelona actually doesn't, Penelope Cruz's performance in particular (I hope to see the film tomorrow, though hierarchies of badges will make this challenging).

I've continued to venture more extensively into the other side of Cannes: its varied and indescribable nightlife. Last night, as extremely tired and bagman-eyed as I was, I went to two parties: The first in honor of Alison Thompson's very well received The Third Wave. About 20 minutes in, Sean Penn and Bono waltzed in and found themselves a corner, where Penn's profuse smoking commenced. We sat outside beside the window in front of where they were sitting, and frankly Sean Penn's apparent tendencies to be very private and angry stopped me from playing mediocre-paparazzi. I did however, film his departure, which you can barely see in the following two videos:


The first one - in case you couldn't tell by the bad quality - is of Penn standing in the boat that Im assuming takes him to some island villa. The second came right after what WOULD have been a classic papparazatounity.. Penn held hands with a male friend and skipped up and down the pier that three days ago was used for the great panda promo (a wink to Milk?). I pressed record seconds after as him, his gay and Bono all got back in the boat.

So nothing particularly candid in those regards. The second party, though sans Bono, was just as interesting. I wont say what it was for out of respect for whoever chose the venue and/or its aesthetics, but it was an extremely tacky igloo theme, with clear plastic chairs and tables and white feathers galore:

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In the 20 minutes I was there, I witnessed yet another failed attempts at "Cannes Cares," though this time was a bit more inspired than the signs for the earthquake in China. A rapper from Sudan- Emmanuel Jal, who is featured in the film War Child and as you can tell from this video, has had a rough time getting to where he is:

No disrespect to Jay or the horrors of Sudan that his story personalizes, but it seems like these contexts - where he performs in front of hundreds of overdressed, likely sloshed film folk who probably care very little about his story (unless its film sells to IFC) - it just heightens the shallowness of these events? Maybe Im being overly cynical, or over tired, but after Jay gave his initial performance, and I was in another room, I could hear his second song, titled "Vagina":

I was listening hard for a political context, and though I couldn't find one, I'm sure there is one?

Anyway.. despite my suggestions otherwise, I have actually attended a bunch of interesting events - mostly panels - that offer something other than "hey blog, this is what I did last night," and hopefully the winding down of Cannes post-weekend will allow me time to post some more significant entries. But perhaps its says something about my own shallowness that instead of doing that right now, I'm going outside among a few hundred locals and tourists to gawk at Woody Allen, Scar Jo and Penelope Cruz as they walk the red carpet.

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May 16, 2008
Day 3 | Shallow Gestures on the Beach

I survived my first Cannes 08 hangover, and now have about 10 seconds to try and keep up with this daily blogging ambition I misguidedly started. Its rainy here, and today was a blur of headaches, the Palais basement and holding newspapers over my head as I ran from place to place. Most notable is last night, though, where I went to the Cannes Market opening party, a lavish event on the beach with crepe stations and lobster, and some very elaborate fireworks:

The event was sponsored by the Chinese Film board, complete with montages of Chinese films playing on big screens and a party soundtrack of Chinese film scores. The weirdest thing, though were these:

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At every bar and food station. It was the only mention of the tragedy.. there were no suggestions of giving money, and it just seemed silly amid fireworks that must have cost thousands of dollars and free champagne by the hundreds of glass on tables all over. Im sure that all the people in China suffering from events unimaginable to the great majority of Cannes-goers appreciate such a ridiculously shallow gesture.

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May 15, 2008
Day 2 | Angelina Is Here

I'm beginning to rethink this numbered day format. I'm not sure how much time, or material, I'll have on a daily basis. Today, for example, was spent interviewing a bunch of Canadians (one for a piece on the Canadian Pavilion, another on Canadian distributor Seville), and the rest of it in the basement of the Palais, giving whatever Cannesian energy I might have toward Cannes Market Daily or indieWIRE focused work. But I guess I saw a few sights in between that mildly warrant blogging. Par example:

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A promotional item for I Love You Phillip Morris, the Jim Carrey-Ewan McGregor "love story" directed by the writers of Bad Santa. I am extremely curious how this is going to go down, and this poster seems to indicate its full speed ahead on the gay factor.

Other random Cannes sights? Some cheerful locals on the beach:

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And what I first mistook for a taping of a Christmas episode of Entourage, was actually just four random dudes dressed up like Santa Claus:

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But the biggest deal, of course, was the Kung Fu Panda premiere, and the lady it brought with it: Angelina Jolie, and the twins she brought with her: both her fetuses and breastuses.

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This press conference was in the same building as my office, and French paparazzi were outside as far as the eye could see.

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May 14, 2008
Day 1 | Jack Black's Great Panda Adventure

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There were pandas on the beach this morning in Cannes, as Dreamworks continued its tradition of extravagant promotions (Shrek 2, Dreamgirls, Bee Movie...) with its out of competition film Kung Fu Panda.

The scene was pretty hysterical, and not really because of Jack Black, who emerged from a sea of pandas to give his usual funny-face/loud-mouth act. It was the pandas - actually people in 150 pound suits - that got to me. In the vein of today's opening film Blindess, the pandas apparently couldn't see anything, and had to be assisted off the pier and basically needed some to hold their panda paws and lead them back into the beach house:

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Anyway... compared to last year's Jerry Seinfeld-flying-down-the-Croisette-in-a-bee-suit stunt, this was a bit disappointing. Speculation amongst peers yesterday ran from there being actual pandas (which would have been slightly cruel), to Angelina Jolie in a tiger outfit (she plays one in the film).. but alas, it was just Black and a bunch of panda suits. There were great photo opps though, and I managed a few shakily shot videos. Enjoy:

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May 11, 2008
Outre de moi vais

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I'm readying myself 15 hours of taxis, buses, customs, security, sitting in airport lounges, fearing for my life as I ascend over the Atlantic Ocean, and the effects of 2-4 Advil PMs.

Expect Cannesian posts for the next 2 weeks.

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May 02, 2008
Escape From New York

I've returned from Tribeca (actually, I returned two days ago), and am now somehow going to write the last rough draft chapter of my thesis in 8 days and counting. I'd love to offer some retrospective on the film festival, but honestly, those 10 days just felt like any other trip to New York, aside from spending a few hours of everyday at the Apple Store in SoHo for indieWIRE's talk series (some clips from two more talks, Savage Grace director Tom Kalin and Superbad director Greg Mottola, are after the jump).

I'm gonna try to up my festival blogging anty next week at Cannes, but in the meantime, expect a few uninspired postings as I attempt to hold together the neglected half of my double life.

» Continue reading "Escape From New York"

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April 28, 2008
Guy Maddin at Apple Store Soho

Guy Maddin was part of indieWIRE's Apple Store talks yesterday, here in New York promoting Tribeca screenings of My Winnipeg. Maddin was very charismatic and had a lot of really insightful things to say, particularly about Canadian identity construction when the cultural mammoth of America lies beneath us. But one thing that I must note, because its too funny not to.. During the talk, I noticed a really intense odor. At first I thought maybe it was someone near me who maybe accidentally farted. But then the smell got worse, and I noticed people going into the bathroom (located about ten feet from where Maddin was sitting) and then turning around within seconds with a disgusted look on their face. Maddin and moderator Dennis Lim must have noticed it, but continued on without flinching. Then custodial staff went in with buckets of water, holding their hands over their faces. 10 minutes later, they came out with a giant bag of garbage and the whole room smelt like that horrible mix of air freshener and human excretion. I still don't know what happened in there. The custodial staff get a cameo in my fourth clip, but otherwise, enjoy 5 clips from the talk, smell o vision free:







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April 27, 2008
Amy Poehler and Fred Armisen at Apple Store Soho

The indieWIRE produced Apple Store talks continued yesterday with Tony Gilroy at 6:30 and Amy Poehler at 8. I only had time to catch Poehler, which I'll admit was one of the most entertaining live events I'd seen in a long while. The talk was moderated by her SNL co-star Fred Armisen, though neither seemed to have anything prepared, which resulted in a hilariously improvised hour of chits and chats that strayed in all directions. Both actors were very warm and inviting, bringing an energetic audience to seemingly each have a question for them. One highlight was when Amy said "fuck" in front of two 10 year old girls in the front row, leading both Amy and Fred into a sketch that contained the word a few dozen times.. Anyway, check out some clips:





Oh, and another great moment (for us at indieWIRE at least), was when an audience member suggested (erroneously, as far as I'm concerned), that indieWIRE editor in chief Eugene Hernandez looks just like Fred. Amy pulled Eugene (who was sitting beside me) up on stage to test the comparison:


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April 26, 2008
Squeezebox!

I caught the premiere of Zach Shaffer and Steve Saporito's Squeezebox! last night. The film chronicles the 7 year New York queer rock and roll night, Squeezebox!, which was held from 1994 to 2001 and was linked to many performers, including The Toilet Boys, John Cameron Mitchell, Jayne County, Justin Bond, etc.. Obviously I never was a part of it, but definitely saw its influence when I first moved to Toronto in 2002 and attended the monthly Vazaleen. It was also so fantastic to watch the film with a crowd of many Squeezebox fixtures, who emotionally cheered on the doc's interviewees.

Post-movie, the mood of Squeezebox was recreated at the Blender Theatre on 23rd street, with extreme debauchery rampant and a slew of performers, including Mistress Formika, Justin Bond, John Cameron Mitchell, Karen Black and Debbie Harry. It was the most worth-it hangover I ever had, even if its made me a bit behind on Tribeca tasks (including blogging). Ill post some photos later, but for now here's a drunkenly filmed clip from one of the night's highlights, Bond and Lily of the Valley performing Bowie's "Under Pressure."

and John Cameron Mitchell...

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Clive Owen at Apple Store Soho

indieWIRE event yesterday... mediocre flip footage:






April 24, 2008
New York

I've arrived in New York for 10 days of the Tribeca Film Festival. I survived the nearly 12 hour train ride yesterday (which I actually prefer over flying or driving only because there is something really calming about being locked in a train berth with no internet and no people, though others may disagree). One highlight was these two dudes that got on in Plattsburgh. One was named Bubbs, (as far as I knew.. he asked me if I could charge his ipod for him and it was titled "Bubb's Toons") and they both stereotypical scary jock types. Bubbs was going on and on to his friend about he cheated on his girlfriend the night before with some girl he'd "been trying to fuck for months." When his friend got off in Albany and he continued on to New York City, I listened as he spent an hour convincing his girlfriend via his cellphone that "that fag Chris is lying" about him having cheated on her, and that he loves her, always and always, etc, etc. So that was my main Amtrak entertainment...

I finally got into the city and headed straight to the Baby Mama opening party at the MoMA, where I was totally underdressed and enjoyed "pregnant lady" themed food offerings (think lots of chocolate). I mostly just stared awkwardly and nervously at Tina Fey until she noticed. Most of the 30 Rock cast was there, which was pretty amazing for I who am obsessed with the show. I then ended up actually conversing with some New York icons instead of just making them think I was creepy, when I headed to New York's oldest gay bar, Julius. It turned out John Cameron Mitchell was having his birthday party there. By that point, I had drank enough that I had no issue talking to him, or, in an equally fantastic moment, Justin Bond.

Anyway, so that was my (perfect) introduction to this trip to New York, which is currently being spent indoors transferring my old mac onto my new mac, which I got yesterday. Yes, my old iBook G4, 40 GB and 2 years of servicing me, is now a thing of the past. And though I'm obviously all about my upping the anty with my MacBook Pro, I'm gonna miss the old one...

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It feels like I'm draining the life from a old friend.

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April 22, 2008
Hot Docs, Part Deux

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More from Hot Docs here.

April 19, 2008
Hot Docs

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I'm in the middle of third day in Toronto enjoying Hot Docs. My first dispatch is posted on the main site, and I'll likely not end up posting much additionally on this blog (I'm only here for 4 days, and all I get out of it will be saved for the dispatches). But being here is wonderful. Besides the it-feels-like-Miami weather (80 degrees in Toronto in April is not normal), the whole festival has a great homecoming vibe. Hot Docs was one of my first jobs in the industry (I was their volunteer coordinator in '06), and my experience working there was totally influential in my decision to keep going in this direction (It helps that the staff were, and from I can tell this time around, still are, really lovely and passionate people). The festival runs for another 8 days, and there a ton of events in addition to the screenings, all of which seem very worthwhile. So check out their schedule if your in or around Toronto.

April 13, 2008
Coca-Cola, CNN, and the Sea Inside

After a few days of seeing just how Atlantans viewed Canadians (healthcare, the weather and hockey are honest points of reference for most I met), I was very curious to see what an average group of Canadians traveling from Atlanta were like. In the lineup for international check-in, I played "spot the Canadian" in my head to kill time (and this, before you might start thinking, was not an act of racial profiling.. Canadian's multiculturalism disallows any sort of common racial attributes as being part of said game.. I mostly looked for Roots items, accents - which apparently I have, and patience). What I discovered, most evidently at the gate for my flight, is most Canadians who head South went a bit like this:

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Seniors looking for some sun. Usually couples. Who don't talk to each other during two hours in a waiting area. And are so enthralled by their Mary Higgins Clark novels that they don't notice you taking pictures of them. Which I guess isn't that surprising. Or really that interesting. But it was pretty much the notable anything of today's big long plane, train and automobile venture back to Montreal.

Yes, after a ride on the Atlanta MARTA train, hours in various line-ups at the airport, a tense 2 hour flight (I went sedative free for the first time in my life), and a cab, I have returned from my 3 day stint in Atlanta. The trip was capped off in great style this morning, with panelists and jurors and other festivalgoers treated to a full on Southern brunch at the impressive home of a festival friend, at which time I experienced grits for the very first time (I mistook them for mashed potatoes and tried not to give a horrified look when I tasted something that was very much not mashed potatoes). And, overall, I was similarly impressed with the festival's organization and friendliness (it still ongoes through the week).

Atlanta itself, which was a bonus to be able to discover on the side, was an interesting experience. Some obviously under-exemplified (I only had a few days) observations after the jump.

» Continue reading "Coca-Cola, CNN, and the Sea Inside"

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April 12, 2008
Jury Duty

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48 or so hours into my trip to Atlanta to partake in the Atlanta International Film Festival, I have completed duties as both a jurist and a panelist. A first time experience on both ends, I am grateful to have had such a cherry popped within the warm arms of Atlanta's southern hospitality. My time in the U.S. South is limited to Florida-with-family vacations, so this trip was a first on that end is well. And I have to say - even if in just 2 days - I was pretty happy with the outcome: 27C (80F?) temperatures that make going back to Montreal extremely unappealing; $3 packs of cigarettes, and the ability to smoke said cigarettes in bars; friendly faces pretty much everywhere that didn't at all come across as film-festival-pseudo-hospitality (not to judge that, as I've exhibited it myself when on the other side of the fence); and, lastly but (not?) leastly, late night ventures to an (ironic?) strip club with a very mixed crowd celebrating a fifty-plus stripper named Blondie who likes to demonstrate her ability to crush beer cans with only her breasts.

On the actual film festival front, my screening time was limited (beyond the 40+ short films I saw for the jury duties), and I'll save any energy regarding that for a dispatch on the main indiewire site next week. The actual jury deliberations were smooth (but, again, that's all I'll note as the awards won't announced until next week), and my panel - which I just returned from - was not at all the disaster I expected it to be, in regard to myself and my public speaking capabilities that is, so I'd say Atlanta was a success.

I also ventured off into the city itself, and I'll save those observations for a photo post when I return to the land of as-yet-unmelted snow. Until then, I'm off to enjoy my last night in the south.

March 02, 2008
No "Titty" In Upstate New York

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The Watertown Daily Times is reporting that a little uproar has come about from St. Lawrence County officials removing a poster for the Out at the Movies Film Festival in Upstate New York. Allegations of homophobia ensued:


St. Lawrence County was accused Monday night of homophobia for removing a poster advertising the Out at the Movies film festival.

More than 20 gay and lesbian residents and their supporters slammed the county at Mondays Legislature meeting over the administration's decision to remove the poster from a public bulletin board in the Department of Social Services building.

"The real issue is that we know in our society there is homophobia," said David R. Weissbard, Canton. "County policy cannot be that we give into that ignorance."

A poster advertising the movies at the festival was taken down two weeks ago after about six employees complained that they found words in them offensive.

The words? The titles of three films: Itty Bitty Titty Committee, Butch Jamie and Out at the Wedding.

Out at the Wedding??? But seriously, "Titty" and "Butch" are hardy something to freak out over. I'm glad the festival folk gave those tight ass complainers a little fight, even if it is questionable whether it was homophobia at play or just extreme lameness.

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January 30, 2008
Reflections On A Sundance Virginity Lost

A day or two has passed as I transition comfortably from the dry, snowy cold of Utah to the wet, not-quite-as-snowy cold of Ontario (and on Saturday, the wet, not-quite-as-snowy, but definitely more cold Quebec), and I figure its time to consider the past two weeks...

Its kinda perfect that my Sundance soundtrack consisted of a never-turned-to-another satellite radio station playing 80s new wave in the SUV rented my colleagues. Because the kind of false nostalgia I always got when I listened to The Smiths or The Cure or watched Heathers... I knew where it came from, I knew what it all meant, but I was never there to experience it and thus was sort of at a loss in comparison to those who did... was the same false nostalgia I felt when listening to - or worse, attempting to engage in - the constant reflective thought expressed by pretty much everyone I was around. As a Sundance virgin, my only real nostalgia was for what had happened in the days prior to that one.

This reflection was usually surrounding two topics: The first, and less personally interesting, involved Sundance as a new-found clusterfuck. My colleague Eugene sent me a random post-Sundance article from a blogger I'd never heard of that kinda summed up all the talk exactly:


There are two Sundance Film Festivals. One hosts several thousand film enthusiasts, movie industry professionals and others with passion for and/or professional interest in independent films. The other Sundance plays hosts to thousands of guests who have marginal interest in films or even relevance to the independent film community. While hundreds of stars turn out for Sundance, only a handful actually attend the screenings, and then it's usually only for the films they have direct involvement in. Several dozen corporations host clients for skiing the Deer Valley slopes, drinking at hospitality suites, expensive dinners and overly-hyped parties featuring "B" list talent.

To me and my experiences, this has always been any major festival. Toronto, Cannes.. in their own way, present that same dichotomy in their own unique and varying formations. Smaller fests, of which I would have never considered Sundance anyway (I who was 8 when Reservoir Dogs played there), have always fulfilled that first notion (almost) solely, and I've enjoyed them for what they were. Personally, for someone sorta new to all of this, the second "Sundance" presents a really interesting study in the state of celebrity culture; the state of humanity; and the state of those with a bit of money. I found it fun to attend Paris Hilton's publicity dinner or watch as hundreds of Utahians desperately roamed Main Street in search of celebrity. Maybe in five years, I'll sing a more bitter tune... But it seems to me that the first Sundance needs the second Sundance to thrive financially, and that they both exist just fine as long as people from either side mind the other's motiviations?

Either way... the second nostalgia was a bit more specific. I'm currently doing my thesis on queer film marketing campaigns post-2000... so I obviously made a point to take in all the GLBT festivities, whether panels, films or etc. I won't go into the specifics of the queer festivities (because I wrote about it here), but in general: There were a lot of queer films at Sundance this year, many of them by directors who were present during Sundance's "new queer cinema" moment in the early 1990s, and thus a "reunion" was sort of make-shiftingly created and there was a lot of talk of the past.

Tom Kalin spoke at one of the panels and pinpointed my position:


I can only see the early 90s and that first wave really coming out of a very specific historical moment.. the movies coming out of a specific moment. Its difficult to conjure for people that weren't alive or around during the time what it was like without AIDS medication and that kind of atmosphere of despair and frustration that people had politically and socially in their lives.

Christine Vachon, a the same panel, seconded it:

I mean I do think that term did come out of a sense of urgency that's very hard to reconstruct for people that weren't there and Im not trying to be like one of those people who was at Woodstock...

Its amazing to me that I can even say it with a smile now cause honestly at the time it really felt like it was such an atmosphere of death and despair.

Honestly, be around all this talk gave me a twofold emotional high: One of extreme amazement in watching these people - Kalin, Vachon, Gregg Araki, Bruce LaBruce, Isaac Julien, etc - in action.. These people whose early 90s films were my adolescent homosexual education and occasionally even brought on seminal autoerotic experiences (LaBruce...). These people - these artists - played a considerable role in assisting in my own identity, as well as the identity politics of the world I eventually came to exist in as an young, queer adult.

This was most notable during a screening of my "favourite" Sundance film (though, I must admit, there only were seven - and before you hiss, please note my actual job did not require me to see films and thus this is understandable)... Isaac Julien's Derek. At its core a poignant documentary about an artist whose life was cut too short.. the film intertwines archival interviews Derek Jarman with thought provoking prose written and performed by the goddess Tilda Swinton. Swinton was just as reflective in her words as anyone at Sundance: She spoke of today as a time of too much talk and not enough action. She spoke of too much focus on numbers and not enough films. She spoke of how Jarman wanted to evaporate with his work and how paradoxically this didn't happen - and given today's societal state - also did.

Though during the screening I was pretty much engulfed in Julien's artful representation of an endlessly charming, interesting and unpretentious man.. After I wiped away my supergay tears and left the Q & A, I was left feeling a bit like Kalin and Vachon suggested in that panel - clueless and ignornat. Just like 80s new wave or the Sundances where Paris Hilton wasnt running amuck, I never got to experience any of this firsthand. I never saw what Derek saw. I was never there to see the beginnings of AIDS or Reagan or riots or emotional despair I personally can't even fathom. What was I really the survivor of? What story did I really have to tell? I can get gay married. I could come out in high school to minimal fanfare. My parents wouldn't even flinch at the sight of me kissing another man. AIDS, though present, is something I'm educated on to the point that I can resite the components of an HIV replication cell. And while I realize I'm uniquely privileged, even in Western society... And thank god for that.. but lets accept: "We" don't have that urgency, and as Kalin & Vachon suggested, we will (hopefully) never know its horrors. But many of us seem to be ready to sit down an accept that this is as good as it may get. And thats maybe why the nominees for the GLAAD Media Award for best feature film this year were Stardust, Across The Universe and The Jane Austen Book Club.

I just wonder if this relative spoil is to blame for my potentially lesser generation of queer artists. Maybe its time that "we" just step out from under some queer niche and realize "we" have less sexual-identity specific stories to offer? Or maybe its not? Maybe "we" need to find our own voices, our own less urgent, but still necessary, voices.

Now I know I'm generalizing a generation, and especially generalizing a generation that hasn't even been given a chance yet.. and really all I'm saying despite my longwinded rantiness is that all this nostalgia just left me wondering..

I'm not going to go any farther in that regard (I have four months of thesis writing for that), but essentially, thats where my Sundance mind wandered.

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January 29, 2008
The Long Walk Home

So after 14 nights in Utah, I am finally back amongst the gunless and free health cared.

I almost didn't make it, and the past 24 hours are a blur of planes, trains and automobiles. Yesterday morning I got up at 6am to await my 6:45 Park City shuttle to take me to the airport. Reports of a storm almost made me switch my flight, but later news suggested the storm wouldnt hit Salt Lake City until later in the day so I took a chance. The shuttle was 45 minutes late, which left me with 2 hours and 30 minutes until my flight left. Which I figured would be fine. But the snow was very intense, and the driver still had 3 more pickups, all of which result in spinning nearly out of control on side roads. Everyone that was picked up was a party of one, and I luckily sat in the front seat. After 14 days of this (and 3 hours sleep), I wasn't in the mood for socializing. They tried anyway.. each of them with their business cards and their choices for favourite Sundance films and thoughts on whether Paris Hilton-esque celebs should be banned from Park City. Excessive and loud rants of self-promotion eventually led them to ask me what my thoughts on Sundance were to which I... tired, without coffee, and anxious that I might miss my flight.. bitchily replied I didn't attend. "Why were you here then," the budding filmmaker who talked up a horrendous sounding short film about the ghosts of Osama Bin Laden and George W meeting 50 years from now, asked me. "I like to ski."

I finally got into the terminal at 9:00. The shuttle driver warned me the storm was about to hit and I'd be lucky if my flight wasn't delayed. I checked inside and so far, so good, though I could have used some time at this point as my flight was at 9:45. First, checked in. 9:10. I walk upstairs to go through security and see the longest fucking line I've ever seen in an airport. Honestly hundreds of anxious people in a line that looped around hallways that weren't intended for lines. I overheard an angry man ask an employee: "Is this usual?" She said it was very unusual and they didn't staff thinking this would happen. "How long is the wait?" She said at least an hour. My flight, at this point, left in half an hour. I hate people that do this and I swear its my one get-out-of-jail-free card, but I butted. I went to near the front of the line and said I needed to get home as there was a death in the family. And played up my Canadian-naive-young thing with the saddest eyes I could mount. I know. I'm horrible. But I'm also an idiot because I realized then and there, with 10 people in front of me, I had not checked my toiletry case and that an expensive array of aerosol cans and face gels would soon either go in the garbage or lead me to a security room where some Mormon security officer would strip search me. I put the small ones in a plastic bag and threw out about $100 worth of vanity. I made it through (and realized I still had cologne in my bag and nothing had happened). 9:38. I'm the last person they board. I'm magazineless and coffeeless and gumless and the storm is starting and I fucking hate flying. The plane starts moving and I ask the woman next to me to shut the window because I'm afraid of flying. "I like to look, thats why I got a window seat," says the bitch. I take a sedative and read that stupid "Air Store" catalogue thing and think of meadows and babies as the plane has a turbulent time getting to 40,000 feet.

But I made it back. And actually had a much easier time than others.

I'll do the whole reflections-on-a-sundance thing by day's end. But for now I'm just happy to be home.

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January 28, 2008
Sundance Awards Ceremony Videos

Heres some of the aforementioned videos from Saturday night's Sundance awards ceremony... William H. Macy, Felicity Huffman, Quentin Tarantino, Diego Luna, Tony Hale.. Excuse the quality.. i just set down my flip and hit record at what seemed like interesting moments while I helped released the winners on the main site.






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January 27, 2008
Closing Night

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Last night Sundance shut down with their closing night awards ceremony and party (indieWIRE has all the winners here). The winners ranged from well-deserved to questionable (I had been personally rooting for Derek, and felt the cast of Sunshine Cleaning kicked the ensemble cast winner Choke's acting ass), and the Western themed proved campy fun (bartenders in western shirts; giant ca