Woolf + Lapin at TIFF Screening of CUCHERA

Joseph Israel Laban’s debut film is based on a documentary he shot two years ago about the “grim fate of low-rent drug mules” in the Philippines.

But one has to wonder if a similar film had been submitted by a Canadian, or an American for that matter, would the entry have been selected for competition?

Is the Festival that concerned with its international selection? At the cost of quality?

The folks at TIFF are touting this as a watershed film.

The film is amateurish at best.

Kudos for those who took a risk. But maybe this should have stayed a documentary

See film description.

Woolf + Lapin at TIFF Screening of Canadian Biopic EDWIN BOYD

In his feature film debut, director Nathan Morlando chose to tell the disturbing life-story of the notorious Canadian bank robber from the 1940s and 1950s, set in post-war Toronto starring Scott Speedman.

Mostly shot in Sault Ste-Marie, the film is quite effective at portraying the troubling post-war years that Edwin Boyd wasn’t able to adjust to after returning from World War II duty. It would seem that being a part of stopping the spread of Nazism should come with some form of entitlement. In the dreary Toronto of the 1940s it does not. And Edwin Boyd is soon disillusioned.

Scott Speedman is Edwin Boyd. He plays this anti-hero caught in the allure of his own rising fame perfectly and without veneer. Edwin Boyd is a wannabe actor who can’t afford the fees for the Lorne Greene Acting School. After some unproductive meandering, he sets out to feed his family by donning makeup and playing another kind of role–public enemy number one.

The film chronicles how he became the head of the Boyd gang alongside small-time criminals he met in prison. Though this is a fast-paced bank heist flick, the tone is textured and unglamorous. It’s a distilled and compassionate portrait of a man who soon finds himself increasingly gratified by the attention he gets. The film is clear on this point. Boyd was drawn to fame and the excited press gave him the “moral validation” his criminal persona craved.

Even if his choices are far from enlightened, Boyd thrives on respect and gratification. And no one knows that more than his wife Doreen played wonderfully by Kelly Reilly. Especially during her radio address, publicly urging her husband to turn himself in.

This is where the film is at its unglamorous best. Never saccharine, Reilly plays the wife who soon finds herself in the conundrum of standing by the man she loves and leaving him to protect her children from cops invading their bedroom at gunpoint.

All to Nathan Morlando’s Credit.

This is not a good Canadian film. This is a very good film. Period.

See film description.

Woolf + Lapin at Late Night Screening of YOU’RE NEXT

This is an image by director Adam Wingard for his film You’re Next, which was part of TIFF’s Midnight Madness programme.

For the 1,200 or so horror aficionados gathered at Ryerson for last night’s late screening, there is no doubt the film had all it needed to please. The film was immense fun. And Sharni Vinson is stellar as she is forced into survival mode, the minute the first arrow flies through the window. This is great home invasion fare. It’s brilliantly funny and action packed. Wingard’s film is quite stylized. And writer Simon Barrett’s script rounds off some very cool, idiosyncratic characters before sending them to their deaths at the hands of a gang of killers in animal masks, armed with machetes, axes and a crossbow, who begin to hunt the family down with brutal precision.

Animals this Toronto crowd!

Must see.

Woolf + Lapin: Outside Satan by Bruno Dumont

Woolf + Lapin was at this morning’s screening of French filmmaker Bruno Dumont’s latest film, Outside Satan.

This film, like Life of Jesus and Humanity tackles religion with a philosopher’s lens. It explores the idea of the sublime. Dumont emphasizes that he intentionally placed his nameless drifter protagonist above morality. And well above the concerns of good and evil.

Dumont says that whatever “is religious is invisible.” To render what is invisible and internal is virtually impossible. It is in the realm of the mystical. And film is mystical in that regard. It allows filmmakers to show that invisibility through metaphor.

Much of the location of Outside Satan, Côte d’Opale, is used to show the internal struggle of his characters. To Dumont’s credit this location, where he spends most of his time, does in fact “direct” the action.

Côte d’Opale’s sky, the rich evocative landscape, and the elements battering it, help to sustain this low-lying tension throughout the film.

Dumont also talked about his creative process. He says he doesn’t write scripts. His approach is more literary. He begins instead by writing a novella. And then sets out to capture its essence on the screen. A description of a hand knocking at a door, for example, may take up to four pages to produce the desired effect and meaning. But again he refers to the usual conundrum of attempting to fully bring what is on the page to the screen. Impossible, he says. This same hand knocking on the door resulted in a measly three or four seconds onscreen.

However, this scene and the characters kneeling and praying before the awesomeness of the landscape is of a rare beauty. There’s a quality of otherness to his films, outside of everything.


See film description.

Woolf + Lapin at TIFF’s THIS IS NOT A FILM

“Iranian filmmakers Jafar Panahi and Mojtaba Mirtahmasb’s startling documentary depicts a day in Panahi’s life as he appeals his conviction for “propaganda against the system” — which carries with it a jail sentence and a twenty-year ban from writing or directing.”

Part of the masters programme, the film is free admission. Nice to see the festival putting aside its usual 22 odd bucks to serve a cause and support an artist that is forced into silence by an oppressive regime.

TIFF co-director, Cameron Bailey explained that the film was made under very special circumstances. It was smuggled out of the country on a USB key.  Its very special message has to reach as many people as possible, Bailey said.

The film is Jafar Panahi going through the day in his downtown Tehran apartment awaiting news on his upcoming trial. The ban preventing him to create weighs heavily on him. His impulse is too great and sets out to secretly make a film anyway. He calls his friend and documentarian Mojtaba Mirtahmasb and the film takes off.

With his iguana “Igi” meandering about the Persian rug and climbing a bookcase,  Panahi attempts to “tell” the film that resulted in his conviction with the help of masking tape. He creates the perimeter of the story’s location. The task gradually moves him to tears until he abandons it to watch the news, talk to a visiting neighbor, take a few more calls about his case to finally take an elevator ride down to the ground floor accompanied by an unemployed Art student taking out the trash. The story is simple. Very simple, but a rather telling portrait of his predicament.

Bailey said there was no Q&A as Mojtaba Mirtahmasb’s passport was revoked on his way to Toronto.

See description of film.