Hit So Hard

Hit So Hard
Limited theatrical release in select North American cities and available through video-on-demand starting April 13th; scheduled for DVD and Blu-ray release in June.

Hit So Hard (Director: P. David Ebersole): Screened a few weeks back as part of Toronto’s Canadian Music Week film program, Hit So Hard (subtitled The Life & Near Death Story Of Patty Schemel) explores the former Hole drummer’s career and struggles with addiction, set partially against the backdrop of the rise and fall of the Seattle grunge scene. Director P. David Ebersole combines interviews with Schemel filmed over a period of several years with archival footage, much of it shot by the drummer herself. Ebersole also features extensive interviews with Schemel’s former Hole bandmates Courtney Love (lead singer/guitarist), Melissa Auf der Maur (bassist), and Eric Erlandson (guitarist). The entertaining interview segments with the notoriously unpredictable Love show her at various points talking with her mouth full, sitting with her legs splayed over the arms of the chair she’s in, and generally just coming across as a train wreck. These portions scream out for Love to get her own feature-length documentary treatment.

Devout Hole fans will likely find much to enjoy in the wealth of behind-the-scenes footage of the band, most of which has never been seen before. For the rest of us, however, it isn’t terribly revealing, offering up the standard music visual document of mundane life in the recording studio and on the road in a variety of bus, backstage, and hotel room settings (there’s also some decent live footage). One of the subjects Schemel’s video camera captured is Kurt Cobain; she stayed at the residence he and Love shared for an extended period, and we see the Nirvana frontman in some private moments with his newborn daughter, as well as singing and playing an acoustic guitar during a brief snippet. These scenes aren’t particularly interesting and will only hold some value for Nirvana disciples.

Schemel joined Hole in 1992 and spent six years with the group, playing only on their lauded Live Through This album. The sections discussing the difficult recording sessions for its followup, Celebrity Skin, are some of the film’s most interesting, as we find out that all of Schemel’s parts were replaced by a studio drummer (although she is credited in the album’s liner notes). Despite battling a drug addiction at the time, Schemel maintains her playing was fine and that producer Michael Beinhorn played head games with her, ultimately turning the rest of the band against her (Beinhorn has a history of difficulties working with drummers). Erlandson, Auf der Maur, and Love all agree that working with Beinhorn was an unpleasant experience and now regret their decision not to show more support for their bandmate, who eventually quit. At a question-and-answer session following a Hit So Hard screening last year, Love said Beinhorn was “still a Nazi fuck” after curiously working with him again on Nobody’s Daughter, the 2010 Hole album that didn’t include Erlandson, Auf der Maur, or Schemel (read my review here). After leaving the band, Schemel descended further into drug addiction, unable to heed the cautionary tales of friends Cobain and original Hole bassist Kristen Pfaff (who fatally overdosed a couple of months after Cobain’s suicide). By the end of the 90s, Schemel’s heroin, crystal meth, and crack habits had left her homeless and turning tricks for drug money.

I found it interesting that whether by choice or not, Ebersole’s film doesn’t include any interviews with either of the surviving members of Nirvana, nor anyone from the other two biggest 90s Seattle bands, Soundgarden or Pearl Jam. A small collection of other 90s alt-rock contemporaries are interviewed, including Veruca Salt’s Nina Gordon, Luscious Jackson’s Kate Schellenbach, and Roddy Bottum from Faith No More and Imperial Teen. Ebersole also expands the doc’s focal point to probe the role of women drummers in rock history, although the fact that two of the principals interviewed are the drummers from The Go-Go’s and The Bangles doesn’t add much musical credibility to the discussion, quite frankly. In my eyes, a glaringly obvious omission to any discussion of women in rock, particularly because they’re actually from Seattle, are Heart’s Ann and Nancy Wilson. Through Schemel’s own experience as a lesbian in the music industry, Ebersole also briefly explores the history of gay women in rock and the adversity they’ve faced.

The documentary’s biggest negative is that it fails to present a fully-formed picture of the drummer’s post-Hole life. Schemel recounts calling Love for financial help while homeless, but there’s no sense or indication from the interviews with Love, Erlandson, or Auf der Maur of whether or not any of them currently have a relationship with her. They all speak warmly and caringly of Schemel; Auf der Maur, in particular, was quite close with her during their time in the band, and it would have been nice if Ebersole had defined this crucial element. One of the things I enjoyed about the movie was that it didn’t deliver a seen-it-before ending where Schemel makes a triumphant return to the music business. We see her sober, happily married, and fulfilled with a newfound career in the dog care business. As Ebersole tells it, Schemel essentially abandoned any serious pursuits in the music industry after getting her life straightened out, occasionally playing in a band with her brother and acting as a drum instructor/mentor to young women. Upon further research, however, I found that the director egregiously failed to include the facts that Schemel actually recorded with Juliette And The Licks (the punk band featuring actress Juliette Lewis), toured with Imperial Teen, and collaborated with Love a couple more times: in a short-lived band called Bastard and again on Love’s 2004 America’s Sweetheart solo album. On the latter, Schemel co-wrote five songs (incorrectly listed as ten songwriting credits on the album’s Wikipedia page) and contributed drum tracks to the project.

Schemel’s story should make for a more compelling viewing experience than Hit So Hard delivers. The highly likeable musician’s colourful and harrowing tale make her a primo documentary subject, but the film’s incompleteness undermines the end result.

Official site of the film


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hpLIhDHnw0U&ob=av3e
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Toutes nos envies (All Our Desires)

Toutes nos envies (All Our Desires)
Toutes nos envies (All Our Desires) screens as the closing film of Cinéfranco 2012 on Sunday April 1st at 6:30pm at the TIFF Bell Lightbox.

Toutes nos envies (All Our Desires) (Director: Philippe Lioret): I’m confident in declaring that Philippe Lioret is France’s answer to Ken Loach. Reteaming with Vincent Lindon from his last film Welcome (review), Lioret crafts an intelligent tearjerker with a conscience.

The delicately beautiful Marie Gillain plays Claire, a young magistrate in the city of Lyon. Day after day she’s confronted with cases of people burdened by unsustainable levels of consumer debt, now being sued by the predatory loan companies who have taken advantage of their desperation. Coming from a similar upbringing, it’s no surprise that she wants to help these people rather than see them humiliated any further. Things reach a breaking point when the mother of her daughter’s school friend appears before her in court. After dismissing the woman’s case, she is placed on suspension due to her undisclosed relationship with the woman (she’d lent her the princely sum of 12 Euros so that their daughters could attend a school excursion together) and the case is thrown back into the court system. Desperate to help Celine, with whom she’s begun to form a friendship, she turns to Stéphane (Lindon), an older judge who has been known to fight the system for cases just like this one. He’s pessimistic and at first turns down the case, but he relents, just as Claire is diagnosed with an aggressive and terminal brain tumour. She decides to refuse treatment and keep her condition secret, even from her husband, while she tries to help Stéphane with the case.

As described, it sounds incredibly melodramatic, but Lioret is able to keep things at a low simmer, mostly due to the strong performances of Gillain and Lindon. It’s wonderful to watch Stéphane’s relationship with his younger colleague proceed effortlessly from the professional to the personal. In the end, he becomes a father figure to her. And Gillain’s scenes where she watches her husband interact with Celine are heartbreaking. She tries to nudge them together so that her own impending absence won’t be so traumatic on her husband and children, even giving Celine her own dresses and perfume.

If the film has any major flaws, it’s that the supporting characters aren’t nearly as fleshed out as they need to be. Claire’s husband Christophe is far too passive, as is Celine, the woman who at the beginning of the film is too proud to accept 12 Euros from Claire but who later moves into her house and seems willing to accept anything the couple can provide. Claire’s mother, with her own credit problems, seems to hover on the periphery of the story as well, even after she discovers that her daughter has terminal cancer.

There aren’t really any big surprises in the story, but it’s finely acted and injects potentially dry material with genuine humanism. The title Toutes nos envies slyly refers to those advertisements for cheap credit that promise us a lifestyle where we can have everything we want. Each one of our characters comes to realize the lie behind that promise, and yet the film ends hopefully.

Apologies in advance for the lack of subtitles on the trailer. I hope the synopsis will help you to figure out what’s going on.


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XG1ujGF-Frw
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Cinéfranco 2012: Shorts

A few weeks ago, I previewed some of the features playing at this year’s Cinéfranco festival, which kicked off tonight. Now I want to turn your attention to some of the notable short films, which screen in two programs this weekend. I will indicate after each film whether it screens in program I (Saturday March 24, 11am, 62 minutes, followed by a 45-minute roundtable in English about making a short film) or program II (Sunday March 25, 11am, 80 minutes). All screenings take place at the TIFF Bell Lightbox.

Bip Bip (Beep Beep)

Bip Bip (Beep Beep) (Director: Philippe Grégoire, 5 minutes) – Program II

Francis wants to fall asleep beside the woman he loves, but Caroline’s watch goes “beep beep.” This short bursts into life inside a car as Francis reacts to the rhythmic beeping with crazy dance moves which are all the funnier for not disturbing Caroline’s blissful sleep.

Mauser

Mauser (Directors: Marc-André Girard and Chantale Jean, 11 minutes) – Program II

Ranger, a World War II veteran, meets a delivery boy, Simon, who is an avid player of a video game inspired by the Normandy landings. Still reliving the war years later, Ranger has no patience for the kid who thinks it’s all so “cool.” When they discover one of Ranger’s “souvenirs,” things take a dark turn. Excellent performances by the actors give this the feeling of an intense one-act play.

Sheket!

Sheket! (Director: Andrea Cohen-B, 23 minutes) – Program II

Salome is a ten-year-old girl staying with her grandparents. As she waits for her mother to come and pick her up, she observes their hostile and often silent relationship. There are lots of secrets about their previous life in Tunisia that they refuse to divulge, and unfortunately, we end up as frustrated as Salome watching this bitter old couple argue and sulk.

Tinye So

Tinye So (Director: Daouda Coulibaly, 25 minutes) – Program I

In Bambara tradition, the ancestors are the guardians of the truth and guide the living on the path of knowledge. Today the ancestors watch over the city of Bamako from above and are not pleased. They speak for the last time in the hope that the living listen to them. This short film from Mali has extra resonance right now in light of the very recent military coup in one of the continent’s oldest democracies. Let’s hope people do listen to the ancestors.

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Canadian Film Fest 2012: Shorts

After a three-year hiatus, the Canadian Film Fest returns from March 28-31 at the Royal Cinema. Featuring a homegrown lineup of 9 features and 10 shorts, this year’s edition is a welcome return for festival director Bern Euler. “I am overjoyed to be back on the festival circuit,” said Euler. “Torontonians’ appetite for cinema has grown and become even more sophisticated over the past four years.”

Despite the presence of some fairly high-profile features (including festival opener Cloudburst from director Thom Fitzgerald), I’ve decided to focus my attention on a few of the short films. You can see these films as part of the shorts program on Saturday March 31st at 1pm, with one exception. Sci-fi short My Loss, Your Gain will screen ahead of the feature Below Zero on Thursday March 29th at 9:55pm. You can check out trailers for some of the films on the festival’s YouTube channel.

Long Branch

Long Branch (Directors: Dane Clark and Linsey Stewart, 14 minutes)

On a cold winter’s night, Lynn’s quest for a one-night stand is complicated when the guy she goes home with lives two hours away via public transit. A potential one-note comedy turns out to be unexpectedly tender, as well as lovingly shot. My favourite of the shorts by a long way.

Onion Skin

Onion Skin (Director: Joseph Procopio, 11 minutes)

A high school student turns heads when he decides to avoid text-messaging a girl in this comedy-turned-romance about the power of letter writing. Directed by 16-year-old Joseph Procopio, the film certainly bears witness to a precocious talent, but I found the high-concept premise a bit hard to swallow. It strains credibility when the girl’s friends are actively hostile to the idea of receiving love notes on paper, like the film was set in 2111 rather than 2011, but by the end, Procopia and his young leads manage to create a genuine sense of romantic discovery.

Everybody Wing Chun Tonight

Everybody Wing Chun Tonight (Director: Karen Suzuki, 3 minutes)

Legend has it that Wing Chun Kung Fu was developed by a woman in China during the Ming Dynasty. Though it does not rely on strength, it can be brutal in its efficiency. The instincts that are developed through its study gives great confidence to its practitioners to the point that fighting may not be necessary. It becomes a way of being. A short but highly-choreographed action film that impresses technically but has no real characters or story.

Rosie Takes the Train

Rosie Takes the Train (Director: Stephen Scott, 10 minutes)

In 1930, a young girl named Rosie boards a train and befriends a kind yet mysterious conductor. What unfolds is the journey of a lifetime as Rosie speeds toward an unknown destination experiencing love, loss, fear and ultimate courage along the way. Impressively cast (Linda Kash and Patrick McKenna will be familiar to many Canadians) and with an eye for period detail, this crowd-pleasing fable about our “journey through life” lays the metaphors on a little thick for me.

My Loss, Your Gain

My Loss, Your Gain (Director: Elli Raynai, 4 minutes)

A scientist’s obsession with experimentation leads him to the edge of madness as one of his aborted failures pushes him past the limits of his own imagination. Stylish but narratively confusing, with an ending that left me scratching my head.

The Perfect Vacuum

The Perfect Vacuum (Director: Alana Cymerman, 6 minutes)

Opera singer Mona left her war-torn homeland and vowed never to sing again. Now she is visited by her lonely neighbours who seek an intimate connection in regular “vacuum dances.” From the punny title to the heavy-handed voiceover, this left me a bit cold, despite the presence of song and dance.

Sonata for Christian

Sonata for Christian (Director: Stéphane Oystryck, 8 minutes)

Christian is a young suburban boy who learns more about himself than he expects when a risky relationship between him and his piano teacher begins to bloom. Despite clumsy dialogue, this short film is able to create a tangible mood of sexual longing between its main characters.

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Last Days Here

Last Days Here
Last Days Here screens as part of the Canadian Music Week Film Festival on Thursday March 22, 2012 at 9:15pm at TIFF Bell Lighbox. Buy tickets here.

Last Days Here (Directors: Don Argott and Demian Fenton): As soon as I’d finished watching, I had to go back and watch the first few minutes of Last Days Here again. You see, the subject of the film, heavy metal singer Bobby Liebling, begins the film looking at least a decade older than his 53 years. Decades of drug abuse have left him covered in sores, suffering from delusions and living in his elderly parents’ basement. He speaks as someone who is very near death, and whether that death will be accidental or intentional is up for grabs. In an early heartbreaking scene, he tells the filmmakers he’ll stick around as long as they want him to.

Liebling founded the band Pentagram as a teenager in the late 1960s. Through a combination of bad decisions, bad luck, and in the case of Liebling, simply bad behaviour, the band was never able to reach the levels of commercial success that many of their contemporaries achieved. Despite that, Pentagram maintained a small but devoted following even as all of the original members, fed up with Liebling’s drug problems, gradually drifted away.

One of these fans, Sean “Pellet” Pelletier, makes it his personal mission to help Bobby get clean, get out of his parents’ basement, and take his music to the next level. At great personal cost, Pelletier tries to get Liebling motivated to record some new material and perform live again. He even gets some interest from some of heavy metal’s heavy hitters.

The filmmakers followed Liebling over a period of three years, an incredibly eventful period during which he kicks his drug habit, relapses, kicks it again, falls in love, has his heart broken, goes to jail, and finally reaches for the adult life that has eluded him for decades. It’s a wonderfully sweet and redemptive tale that, based on the first few minutes, could have ended so much differently.

Ultimately, Last Days Here reinforces my belief that, contrary to appearances, heavy metal fans and musicians are often among the most tender-hearted human beings alive. It’s sweetly ironic that a man whose image as a tough guy singing about dark subjects is ultimately saved by the simple love of his friends and family. By the end of the film, Liebling seems both ten years younger and about thirty years wiser.


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ffK5_iHXBwI
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