The Perfect Runner

The Perfect Runner
The Perfect Runner will be broadcast on CBC’s The Nature of Things here in Canada on Thursday March 15th at 8:00pm EDT. For more information on other screenings and to buy the DVD, visit the official site.

The Perfect Runner (Director: Niobe Thompson): If you like to run, filmmaker and anthropologist Niobe Thompson will take you on a journey to discover your running ancestors in his latest documentary. “What if we had to run before we had to think?” Thompson asks.

Beginning at the beginning, Thompson looks at humans’ ancestor, the ape. As this tree climber adapted to life on two feet, endurance beat out speed. Natural selection turned humans into endurance runners simply as a matter of survival. “We learned to outrun all the animals in our environment,” says Thompson. “Humans became nature’s best endurance runners.”

While many in North America are a long way now from hunting their own food, Thompson searches out some of these endurance runners in action. He travels to northern Russia to observe the reindeer herders of the Siberian tundra, who need to move at the same speed as their animals in order to survive. He investigates Bekogi, Ethiopia, home to many of that country’s best distance runners. And he looks at the phenomenon of ultrarunning, hearing from runners who’ve completed the gruelling 125-kilometre Canadian Death Race.

The Perfect Runner

He also takes a look at the barefoot running movement, interviewing Professor Daniel Lieberman of Harvard, whose research focuses on the biomechanics of the human body. Most runners these days wear cushioned running shoes. The shoes are meant to protect us, but they’re actually hurting us. Wearing shoes to run causes our heel to strike the ground first, something that barefoot runners never do. This change to our natural gait has resulted in many injuries, despite the continued “innovation” of the shoe designers.

It would have been interesting to see an interview with one of the shoe companies at this point; however, that might have switched the focus of the film too much, not to mention courted some controversy. Thompson prefers to keep the focus on humans as endurance runners, not humans as consumers of brand-name running shoes.

Runners (both recreational and elite) will find this documentary interesting and informative, with just enough information to whet the appetite for the science behind running. As for non-runners, it might just entice a few to rise from the couch and lace up.



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Cinéfranco 2012

Cinéfranco 2012

Celebrating its 15th edition from March 23rd through April 1st at the TIFF Bell Lightbox, Cinéfranco has established itself as one of the largest and most popular festivals for film in the French language. The breadth of Francophone cinema, in geography as well as in styles and genres, is well-represented every year, and this year is no different. 28 features, 2 documentaries and 11 short films make up a diverse program, with films from France, Canada (Québec and Ontario), Belgium, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Morocco and Cameroon. In a first, the festival is opening with a Franco-Ontarian film, La Sacrée, which depicts the life of a village where love and gossip intertwine in a very humorous way.

Here are a few other films that look worthy of your time:

Ni à vendre ni à louer (Holidays By The Sea) (France, Director: Pascal Rabaté) – screening Saturday March 24 at 1:45pm

A near-silent comedy in the tradition of Jacques Tati’s M. Hulot’s Holiday, featuring such memorable faces as Maria De Medeiros and Dominique Pinon. This promises lots of physical comedy on the sun-splashed Atlantic coast of France.


La guerre des boutons (The War of the Buttons) (France, Director: Yann Samuell) – screening Sunday March 25 at 4:00pm

In this family comedy set in 1960, the children of two rural villages in the south of France fight it out in mock battles for ultimate supremacy.


Les hommes libres (Free Men) (France, Director: Ismaël Ferroukhi) – screening Sunday March 25 at 6:30pm

During World War 2 in Nazi-occupied France, the Paris Mosque helps to conceal and shelter Jews. A young Algerian man, sent to infiltrate the mosque by the police, must decide whether to remain a spy or to join the resistance.


Les Géants (The Giants) (France/Belgium/Luxembourg, Director: Bouli Lanners) – screening Tuesday March 27 at 6:30pm

A coming-of-age story about three boys spending the summer in the countryside. Director Lanners was a painter before he turned to filmmaking and the film promises lush visuals to go along with its story of the bonds formed between friends at a crucial age.


L’art d’aimer (The Art of Love) (France, Director: Emmanuel Mouret) – screening Saturday March 31 at 9:00pm

No one can make romantic comedies like the French, and this sweet concoction promises romance and beautiful Parisian settings that a film like Love Actually just can’t approach. Plus, it has the wonderful Francois Cluzet (Tell No One, Little White Lies).


Toutes nos envies (All Our Desires) (France, Director: Philippe Lioret) – screening Sunday April 1 at 6:30pm

Director Lioret has a way of dealing with heavy subjects with a deftly humane touch, much like English filmmakers Mike Leigh and Ken Loach, or Belgians Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne. I very much enjoyed his last film, Welcome (review), which dealt with “illegal” immigration, and he has re-teamed with actor Vincent Lindon in another human-interest story. This time, it’s about two judges who deal head-on with cases of people with extreme levels of debt. On paper, it doesn’t sound exciting, but I’m confident Lioret, Lindon and the rest of the cast will tell a very moving story to bring this issue to mind.


All screenings take place at the TIFF Bell Lightbox and tickets are available there for $12 each.

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Canadian Music Week Film Festival 2012

I love music and am a big fan of music films, but have to confess that I didn’t know until quite recently that in addition to filling every live music venue in the city, Canadian Music Week also screens films. Programmed this year by my friend Jeff Wright (of Refocus fame), the film lineup looks particularly interesting. It helps that at my age, I find it easier to watch films about musicians (where I can control the volume) than to actually see many bands live. I’m kidding. Mostly.

In any case you can get more information over at the CMW site.

Under African Skies

Under African Skies (USA, Director: Joe Berlinger) – screening Wednesday March 21 at 7:00pm at TIFF Bell Lightbox

Director Joe Berlinger (Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory, Metallica: Some Kind of Monster) accompanies Paul Simon as he returns to a very different South Africa than the one he visited in 1985 to record his best-selling album Graceland. What makes this interesting is the political subtext; Simon broke a UN cultural boycott in 1985, visiting the country while it was still under apartheid rule. As he revisits some of the musicians he worked with on Graceland, they discuss politics and how South Africa has changed since the end of white rule. Oh, and they play a little music as well.

Sound It Out

Sound It Out (UK, Director: Jeanie Finlay) – screening Thursday March 22 at 7:00pm at TIFF Bell Lightbox

A charming and idiosyncratic portrait of one of the last remaining record stores in Stockton-on-Tees, a struggling industrial town in England’s economically depressed Northeast. Full of sympathetic characters discussing their love of music, Sound It Out will have you yearning for the days when a record store clerk complimented you on your taste. I saw it when it showed at South by Southwest last year, and you can read my review, if you dare.

Last Days Here

Last Days Here (USA, Directors: Don Argott and Demian Fenton) – screening Thursday March 22 at 9:15pm at TIFF Bell Lightbox

I missed this one at South by Southwest in 2011, but plan to catch it this time. Pentagram’s lead singer Bobby Liebling has been at it for more than 35 years, and yet his band has achieved little in the way of commercial success. When young heavy metal fans finally discover the band, Liebling is living in his parents’ basement, struggling with addiction and the many disappointments of his life. Can the young fans help him overcome his despair?

Hit So Hard

Hit So Hard (USA, Director: P. David Ebersole) – screening Friday March 23 at 9:00pm at NFB Mediatheque

Hole drummer Patty Schemel is under the spotlight in this documentary, which also features home movie footage of Nirvana’s Kurt Cobain. Patty recalls the rise and fall of Hole, her relationships with other members of the seminal Seattle grunge scene (most notably, Hole’s singer Courtney Love) and her own struggles with the band’s success and then its dissolution.

Girl Walk // All Day

Girl Walk // All Day (USA, Director: Jacob Krupnick) – screening Saturday March 24 at 9:15pm at NFB Mediatheque

This is without a doubt the one I’m looking forward to the most. Created as a 71-minute music video for Girl Talk’s recent album All Day, Krupnick’s film evokes my favourite dance film of recent years, NY Export: Opus Jazz. Featuring the work of several modern dancers, most notably Anne Marsen, and shot completely “guerrilla-style” on the streets of New York, it’s both a love letter to the city and to the spontaneous joy of dancing in public spaces. The film was also completely funded on Kickstarter. It was so successful, in fact, that it received more than 500% of its requested budget. Do not miss this chance to see (and hear) it on a big screen. Even watching the trailer fills me with giddy delight.

Tickets for all screenings are now on sale. The best place to find out how to get them is on the CMW Film Fest’s Facebook page.

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This Must Be The Place

This Must Be The Place
This Must Be The Place will receive a limited theatrical release in the US through The Weinstein Company. Distribution and theatrical plans in Canada are unknown at the moment. Canadians may have to wait to see this one on DVD in a few months.

This Must Be The Place (Director: Paolo Sorrentino): Before I even knew a thing about this film, I knew I wanted to see it, based purely on the movie’s enticing poster. Sean Penn playing a character obviously inspired by The Cure’s Robert Smith? I’m so there. The film’s Italian director and co-writer, Paolo Sorrentino, came up with Penn’s “Cheyenne” character after meeting Smith and being struck by the fact that the musician, then in the 50ish age range, maintained his onstage visual persona (featuring the big hair, heavy makeup, and black clothing) offstage as well.

Penn, Sorrentino, and co-writer Umberto Contarello add further quirks to Cheyenne by making him occasionally wear granny-style glasses, walk with a stooped shuffle, and speak in a pinched, timid tone, while setting him up as a wealthy, faded American 80’s rock star retired in Ireland who is seemingly in a constant state of depression. Notified that his father is dying back in the US, Cheyenne returns home, but arrives too late. While filling in some of the gaps from the thirty year estrangement in their relationship, he discovers that his dad, a Holocaust survivor, maintained an interest in the SS officer who tortured him. This spurs Cheyenne to undertake a road trip in search of his dad’s tormentor, last thought to be living somewhere in the US. Yes, this would correctly be categorized as a “high concept” movie.

Penn taking on risky roles isn’t anything new – he did it most recently in Milk and, of course, I Am Sam. I had mixed reactions to those performances, but he’s fantastic here in a demanding role that, as per my initial reaction, threatens to be consumed by the novelty of his character’s eccentricities. That, no disrespect, Penn’s face looks every one of its 50 years only adds to the fascinating and sad sight of his aging goth character caked in makeup, which Sorrentino takes advantage of by giving us multiple shots of Penn’s mug in unflinching, extreme close-up. Cheyenne is a study in contradiction: his behaviour mostly suggests a subdued and withdrawn damage case, yet he doesn’t shy away from meeting new people and engaging them in conversations that predictably take a turn for the weird. Call him a highly functioning recluse. The supporting cast includes excellent performances from Frances McDormand as Cheyenne’s longtime wife, Kerry Condon as widowed waitress, Judd Hirsch as a Nazi hunter, Harry Dean Stanton as a character met during Cheyenne’s road trip (Stanton seems right at home in this strangle little film world), and relative newcomer Eve Hewson as Cheyenne’s Dublin friend (Hewson also happens to be Bono’s daughter).

Penn, who appears in almost every scene, may bring his acting A-game to This Must Be The Place, but that’s not enough to overcome the film’s often glaring deficiencies. Quirkiness abounds in this movie; frequently, its peculiarities feel forced and serve little purpose, other than to seemingly up the weirdness quotient. Example: one scene shows an elderly Native American man mysteriously showing up as a passenger in Cheyenne’s vehicle and then soon exiting in a similarly head-scratching manner, with no explanation given. Any intended symbolism went over my head. Other scenes, such as the one where Cheyenne takes on some town locals in a game of ping pong, don’t add much to the story other than being “slice of life” vignettes, but they come at the expense of the movie’s pacing, which can be quite slow. Additionally, the ambiguous ending may disappoint, plus the role of one of the film’s characters (Olwen Fouere’s “Mary”) doesn’t quite feel fully developed.

Sorrentino, making his English-language debut after garnering wide acclaim for 2008’s Il Divo, impresses with a visually compelling film. There’s some beautiful sweeping shots, as well as many that employ an odd, but interesting framing structure. He also mines more unexpected comedic moments than you would expect from the weighty topics the film tackles. Music, not surprisingly, also plays a big factor in the film, which takes its title from the Talking Heads song. The track shows up in numerous incarnations throughout, including one great art-rock set piece that features Talking Heads singer David Byrne performing it with his solo group, set to a visual art accompaniment. Byrne also has a few lines of dialogue and contributed original music to the film’s soundtrack, which proves to be a fairly mixed bag of material.

Between Penn’s captivating portrayal and the film’s shortcomings, I’d characterize the ambitious This Must Be The Place as a fascinating mess, but one worth your time.


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q0ryRwKkKI4
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Blind Spots: Blue Velvet

Blue Velvet
This post is part of the Blind Spots 2012 series. For background on the series, read the original post

Blue Velvet (Director: David Lynch): For my second Blind Spots post of the year, I chose David Lynch’s 1986 film noir freakout Blue Velvet, partially because I’d just read some good reviews of the Blu-ray, including “lost” footage left out of the final version of the film. For the record, I haven’t yet watched any of this footage, nor any of the other supplements, including the “making-of” documentary. I think it’s best if I record my first impressions while they’re fresh and unsullied by too much analysis. There will be plenty of time for that later, I assure you.

I haven’t seen very many Lynch films at all, but I’m familiar enough with his style that nothing in Blue Velvet really came as a surprise. I did notice how the art direction is intentionally evasive when it comes to locating the film in a particular time and place. The town of Lumberton is really an amalgam of various periods in American history from the 50s to the 80s, but the opening shots of a literal white-picket fence evokes the period of the 1950s most obviously. We begin with Jeffrey Beaumont (Kyle MacLachlan) returning home from college to help run the family hardware store after his father suffers what appears to be a stroke. He’s a clean-cut kid, but the presence of an earring in his left ear hints at some submerged non-conformity (and tips us off that we’re not actually in the 1950s). When he finds a severed human ear in a field near his home, he reports the find to the police. Detective Williams treats him a bit like a child and tells him to forget about the case, but Jeffrey has a morbid fascination with figuring out what happened.

So does Detective Williams’ pretty daughter Sandy (Laura Dern), who tips Jeffrey off to the police department’s ongoing surveillance of a singer named Dorothy Vallens (Isabella Rossellini). Soon Jeffrey is breaking into Dorothy’s apartment and seeing things he shouldn’t be seeing. As he continues to pursue the mystery, he tries to keep Sandy out of danger even as he’s drawn into ever-darker scenarios.

At one point, Sandy expresses her worry and says, “you must really love mysteries.” Jeffrey tells her he loves being “wrapped up” in a mystery. Then he says, “you’re a mystery, and I like you.” Compare this “aw shucks” Andy Hardy behaviour with his growing obsession with the unstable Dorothy. It’s like the two women represent two kinds of mystery. Sandy is an unknown, but at some point, he’ll discover the limits of her depths and touch bottom. With Dorothy, who just might be insane, the mystery is unsolvable. She’s an endless riddle and so a perfect object for obsession. Jeffrey can explore the mysteries of his own dark side when he’s with Dorothy or the strange and violent people around her.

Later in the film, our apparent villain Frank Booth (Dennis Hopper) mutters to Jeffrey, “you’re like me.” Which makes the circularity of the ending (including the repetition of the shot of the white picket fence) interesting as an obsuring device. It’s like we’ve fallen into deep sleep, confronted our nightmares, then resurfaced only to forget everything we’ve seen.

I find it interesting that I’ve used “deep water” metaphors in each of the preceding two paragraphs in attempting to describe the film’s puzzlements.

Apart from those thoughts, I enjoyed the film’s extremely mannered style. When characters are being “good,” the acting is melodramatic, but when they’re bad, they’re often incoherent and loud, or the film heightens the viscerality by the use of repetition or odd sound design. The score even uses dramatic cues at key moments, making the whole thing seem like a Douglas Sirk-directed Sam Spade caper, if Sam Spade was played by one of the Hardy Boys.

While I enjoyed the film’s style, I feel that Blue Velvet won’t give up all or even most of its secrets on one, or even two viewings. So it’s a good thing that the Blu-ray transfer is so gorgeous to look at. And while I want to resist, I’ll probably take a look at the supplemental features and extra footage at some point.

And now that I’ve finally watched the film, I can go and enjoy my friend Nicholas Rombes’ fascinating project over at Filmmaker Magazine, in which he’s writing about the film, one frame at a time. He’ll likely have more to say about one image than I do about the whole film at this point, but I’m looking forward to digesting his insights now to see how they affect my appreciation.


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGzc5PYgOtc
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